• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Naval Historical Society of Australia

Preserving Australia's Naval History

  • Events
  • Account
  • Members Area
  • Volunteer
  • Donate
  • Contact us
  • Show Search
  • 0 items
Hide Search
Menu
  • Home
  • Research
    • Where to start
      • Research – We can help!
      • Self help
      • Naval Service Records
      • Library
      • Related Maritime websites
    • Resources
      • Articles
      • Videos
      • On This Day
      • Podcasts
      • Australian Military Ship Losses
      • RAN events on a  Google Earth Map
      • RAN Vessels – Where are they now?
      • Related Maritime websites
    • Other
      • Newsletters: Call The Hands
      • Occasional Papers and Historical Booklets
      • Books
      • HMAS Shropshire
      • Book reviews
    • Close
  • Naval Heritage Sites
    • World Heritage Listings
      • Cockatoo Island
    • National Heritage Listings
      • HMAS Sydney II and the HSK Kormoran Shipwreck Sites
      • HMVS Cerberus
    • Commonwealth Heritage Listings
      • Garden Island NSW
      • HMAS Watson
      • HMAS Penguin
      • Spectacle Island Explosives Complex NSW
      • Chowder Bay Naval Facilities
      • Beecroft Peninsula NSW
      • Admiralty House, Garden and Fortifications
      • HMAS Cerberus
      • Naval Offices QLD
      • Garden Island WA
      • Royal Australian Naval College ACT
      • Royal Australian Naval Transmitting Station ACT
    • NSW Heritage Listings
      • HMAS Rushcutter
    • Close
  • Naval Art
  • Tours & Cruises
    • Navy in Sydney Harbour Cruise, East
    • Navy in Sydney Harbour Cruise, West
    • Anniversary Cruise: Sydney under Japanese Attack
    • Tour Bookings
    • Close
  • About us
    • About Us
      • What we do
      • Our People
      • Office Bearers
      • Become a volunteer
      • Our Goals and Strategy
    • Organisation
      • Victoria Chapter
      • WA Chapter
      • ACT Chapter
    • Close
  • Membership
  • Shop
  • Become a volunteer
  • Donate
You are here: Home / Article topics / Publications / Naval Historical Review / Further Reflections on the Sydney/Kormoran Battle, 1941

Further Reflections on the Sydney/Kormoran Battle, 1941

Arundel, Richard, Captain, RAN Rtd · Jun 4, 2007 · Print This Page

Author
Arundel, Richard, Captain, RAN Rtd
Subjects
RAN operations, Ship histories and stories, WWII operations, History - WW2
Tags
HMAS Sydney II, Kormoran
RAN Ships
None noted.
Publication
June 2007 edition of the Naval Historical Review (all rights reserved)

The article ‘Reflections on the Sydney/Kormoran Battle 1941‘ in the December 2006 Naval Historical Review, referring to an interview with the now ninety-two year old Radio Communications Officer of the German raider, invites me to respond with another, and as yet unresolved, aspect of the engagement.

When an ex-Director of Naval Communications, CDRE Ian Nicholson, CBE RAN Rtd., became ill in the early 1990s, he bequeathed to me a request for further research into his belief that Sydney’s deception and loss was based upon the compromise of the Allied Mership Secret War Callsign Book.

The German Admiralty had gained considerable tactical experience with their raiders in WWI, and this was put to good use in the early days of WWII. By the end of 1940 six raiders had disposed of 54 Allied merchant ships. Prior to the outbreak of that war, the German Naval Intelligence Service was fully aware of Allied code and cipher systems and consistently read and deciphered most British circuits until machine ciphers were introduced later in the war. There is ample evidence that the German navy trained its specialist signal officers, in particular those selected for its HSK raiders, in merchant ship intercept plot techniques, warship radio signal identification, evasion tactics and signal deception. Evasion and deception would have been the most vital tactical radio skill that Fregattenkapitan Detmers would have rehearsed with the many intercept scenarios in his raider survival armoury. Furthermore his ship’s complement included 24 communicators.

Several visits to the German War Archives in Freiburg and the extensive Public Record Office in Kew, London, indicated that the German High Command, through its agencies, had briefed its raiders in depth about Allied single and multiple ship convoy systems and in particular communication arrangements. The use of secret war callsigns would have been further confirmed through interceptions of broadcast and ship-shore radio communications. Quite obviously it would have been a top priority to obtain a copy, or extracts, of the Allied merchant ship secret callsign book for selective use by raiders as part of their in extremis disguise if trapped and challenged by a more powerful enemy. That such a compromise existed would have been one of the German navy’s most highly protected and never-to-be-revealed secrets, since every raider’s survival depended upon the secrecy of such a compromise. Only a select few officers would have been privy to this crypto secret.

Merchant ships would have been given their individual war callsigns in sealed orders. Only major warships would have been issued a complete merchant ship code/decode secret Callsign book that would be amended periodically with issues of strictly controlled sealed orders and confidential book amendments. These issues would be sent to area Distributing Offices for onward despatch to warships whilst merchant ship sealed orders would be routinely checked at War Ports. Thus how could a compromise of the Master Mership Secret War Callsign book, or extracts, occur?

Other than the rare instance of cryptographic book recovery from sunken ships such as a submarine in close proximity to enemy territory, e.g. HM S/M Seal, a likely example could be as follows. Merchant ships were often fitted with a special vault to transport classified materials to Distributing Offices, such as Singapore, when a King’s Messenger would accompany vault material. So far as the writer knows, GCHQ has never released details of merchant ships captured by German raiders where there may have been a compromise of classified material. Take the case of MV Automedon captured and sunk close to Singapore by HSK Atlantis on 11 November 1940.

Atlantis was also disguised as a Dutch vessel. Automedon accompanying King’s Messenger, Captain M. F. L. Evans, a ship’s master, was knocked unconscious by Atlantis’s gunfire and when he had recovered, found his vault had been blown open. Atlantis’s English interpreter realized he had unearthed a treasury of highly classified documents including some codes and ciphers that were spirited to Tokyo and thence to Berlin. (Curiously the cache included a Chiefs of Staff report approved by the War Cabinet and destined for Air Marshall Brook-Popham, C-in-C Malaya, on how to conduct a likely campaign in South East Asia against the Japanese should they invade Malaya! Brook-Popham was not told of this report until after the war. That British Intelligence eventually knew of the compromise was never released to, inter alia, Australia, until well after the attack on Pearl Harbour. This document was traded with the Japanese for better liaison with German shipping and may have contributed strategically to the attack on Pearl Harbour. If the Australian Government had known about this compromise, one also wonders whether our troops would have been so sacrificed in Malaya.)

Pages: Page 1 Page 2

Naval Historical Review, RAN operations, Ship histories and stories, WWII operations, History - WW2 HMAS Sydney II, Kormoran

Primary Sidebar

SUBSCRIBE

Sign up for our monthly e-newsletter.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Categories

Latest Podcasts

  • The Fall of Singapore
  • HMAS Armidale
  • Napoleon, the Royal Navy and Me
  • The Case of the Unknown Sailor
  • Night of the midget subs — Sydney under attack

Links to other podcasts

Australian Naval History Podcasts
This podcast series examines Australia’s Naval history, featuring a variety of naval history experts from the Naval Studies Group and elsewhere.
Produced by the Naval Studies Group in conjunction with the Submarine Institute of Australia, the Australian Naval Institute, Naval Historical Society and the RAN Seapower Centre

Life on the Line Podcasts
Life on the Line tracks down Australian war veterans and records their stories.
These recordings can be accessed through Apple iTunes or for Android users, Stitcher.

Video Links

  • Australian War Memorial YouTube channel
  • Royal Australian Navy YouTube Channel
  • Research – We can help!
  • Naval Heritage Sites
  • Explore Naval Art
  • Dockyard Heritage Tour
  • About us
  • Shop
  • Events
  • Members Area
  • Volunteer
  • Donate
  • Contact us

Follow us

  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Members Area
  • Privacy Policy

Naval Historical Society of Australia Inc. Copyright © 2025