The Battle of the Atlantic: Allied Naval Intelligence in World War II


U-Boat Transmitting Center Ashore in France, circa 1944
Courtesy of Horst Bredow

Throughout World War II, German naval leaders used radio communications extensively to maintain constant contact with the forces at sea. As a result, Allied radio intercept stations had almost constant access to the flow of signals being transmitted between U-boats and shore-based headquarters. At far left, a signalsman monitors the "Afrika II" Communication Circuit in the main radio transmitting and receiving center in the Commander of U-Boats headquarters near Lorient in occupied France.