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NAVIES OF SIX POWERS

Current Estimates WAR LOSSES AND EXPANSION Increases In Capital Ships (By Telegraph.—Press Assn.—Copyright.) (Received March 5, 8.15 p.m.) LONDON, March 4. Ever-growing naval expansion of the great Powers is evident in the new edition of Janes’s “Fighting Ships.” It is estimated that 40 capital ships are under construction or on order in various parts of the world. Ah except four Japanese pocketbattleships are of at least 35,000 tons, and at least 20 of them are over 40,000 tons, including four British battleships of the Lion class, two of which are due for completion in 1943. The United States has 17 battleships building or ordered, and it is suggested that some of these will reach a displacement of 52,000 tons. The American programme includes' 12 aircraftcarriers, 54 cruisers, 200 destroyers, and 80 submarines. There is a paucity of official information from Japan, but apparently at least three 40,000-ton battleships, and three pocket-battleships were launched in 1939-40, plus several new cruisers. Other capital ships are under construction, and destroyers, submarines, and light mine-layers continue to accumulate. It is impossible to guess the number of German submarines laid down. An American estimate of 300 is believed to be by no means unreasonable. The German capital ships under construction are reported to include two of 40,000 tons, namely the Friedrich der Grosse and Hindenburg. Reports that the battleships Bismarck and Tirpitz are fully commissioned must be treated with caution. Losses in Action. The war losses section shows that Britain’s losses of big ships have been comparatively slight, but there have been heavy losses in small craft like drifters and trawlers, which have been lost in mine-sweeping and assisting in such hazardous operations as at Dunkirk. More than IQO of these have been sunk, some without trace. Britain has also lost 36 destroyers, including two Canadian, and 23 submarines (these figures have reached 38 and 24 respectively since the volume went to press). Germany has lost a pocket-battleship, four cruisers and 13 destroyers, and it is estimated that few of the 70 U-boats with which the Germans began the war have survived. Italy, excluding the damage done at Taranto, has lost one cruiser,- seven destroyers and at least 30 submarines. The “Daily Telegraph,” reviewing Janes, says it is assumed that one of the Italian battleships torpedoed at Taranto cannot be repaired. Three French battleships have been badly damaged. Two are in British ports and one is at Alexandria. The principal navies, including the

‘■lncluding pocket-battleships. tNumber speculative.

completions this year, are given as follows:— Brit. U.S. Jap. Fr. It. Ger. Battleships . 19 17 10 7 5 4 or 12 Aircraft- •— carriers S 6 9 1 0 o Cruisers <• > 37 38 18 20 12* Destroyers .. 256 180 106 51 52 150 Submarines . 50 114 74 69 90 T

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19410306.2.34.14

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 34, Issue 137, 6 March 1941, Page 7

Word Count
466

NAVIES OF SIX POWERS Dominion, Volume 34, Issue 137, 6 March 1941, Page 7

NAVIES OF SIX POWERS Dominion, Volume 34, Issue 137, 6 March 1941, Page 7