Operation Catapult

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A01=Bill Whiteside
Algerian port operations WWII
Allied naval tensions
Allied political tensions
Anglo-French naval history
Anglo-French naval tensions WWII
Anglo-French relations 1940
Author_Bill Whiteside
British naval decisions
British naval strategy World War II
British war cabinet strategy
British war strategy 1940
Category=JWCK
Category=NHD
Category=NHW
Category=NHWR7
Churchill biography WWII
Churchill military decision-making
Churchill wartime leadership
Churchill's wartime speeches legacy
controversial war decisions
early WWII diplomacy
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
fleet internment aftermath
fleet neutralization strategy
French British rivalry
French fleet controversy
French fleet scuttling controversy
French naval command
historical naval standoffs
Mediterranean fleet actions
Mediterranean naval conflict
military alliances under strain
military command authority in crisis
naval betrayal and leadership crisis
naval betrayal history
naval blockades and ultimatums
naval bombardment Algeria
naval command biography
naval diplomatic crisis
naval ethics in war
Operation Catapult naval history
Parliament wartime speeches
preemptive strikes in military history
Royal Navy moral dilemmas
Royal Navy operations 1940
Royal Navy wartime ethics
rules of engagement historical case study
strategic risk decisions
Vichy France crisis
wartime alliance breakdown
wartime decision-making under pressure
wartime diplomacy gone wrong
Winston Churchill controversial orders
World War II leadership
WWII command decisions
WWII Mediterranean theater

Product details

  • ISBN 9781682479698
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: Naval Institute Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In July 1940, just weeks after France signed an armistice with Germany, Winston Churchill made one of World War II’s most shocking and controversial decisions: he ordered the Royal Navy to open fire on the French fleet at Mers-el-Kébir, killing more than 1,200 of Britain’s recent allies. The Associated Press called it “the strangest of all naval actions in the world’s history.” Churchill feared that Hitler would seize the powerful French fleet and turn it against Britain, so when French commanders refused British demands to move their ships to Allied ports, he gave the order to strike. The bombardment stunned the world, strained relations between Britain and France, and resonated through Churchill’s speech to Parliament, which, according to one observer, “echoed like no other ever heard in its ancient halls.” 

The fallout reached far beyond the Algerian coast. In Alexandria, British and French admirals negotiated a fragile truce, but trust between the two navies was shattered. Many Royal Navy officers were tormented by the attack, forced to fire on men they had fought beside only weeks earlier. Even Churchill, who deeply admired France, was anguished by his decision. Through the intertwined stories of French admiral Jean Louis Xavier François Darlan and British vice admiral Sir James Somerville—leaders tested by loyalty, duty, and the chaos of war—this dramatic episode reveals the tension, sacrifice, and unflinching resolve that defined Churchill’s wartime leadership.
 

Bill Whiteside, a member of the International Churchill Society, is a writer and researcher focused on Winston Churchill and the Royal Navy. He holds a BS in management from the University of Notre Dame and lives in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
 

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