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{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}) was an Template:Sclass heavy cruiser, the third of a class of five vessels. She served with Nazi Germany's {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} during World War II. The ship was laid down in April 1936, launched in August 1938, and entered service after the outbreak of war, in August 1940. She was named after Prince Eugene of Savoy, a distinguished 18th-century general in the service of the Holy Roman Empire. She was armed with a main battery of eight Template:Cvt guns and, although nominally under the Template:Convert limit set by the Anglo-German Naval Agreement, actually displaced over Template:Convert.

{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} saw action during Operation Rheinübung, an attempted breakout into the Atlantic Ocean with the battleship Template:Ship in May 1941. The two ships destroyed the British battlecruiser Template:HMS and moderately damaged the battleship Template:HMS in the Battle of the Denmark Strait. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was detached from {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} during the operation to raid Allied merchant shipping, but this was cut short due to engine troubles. After putting into occupied France and undergoing repairs, the ship participated in Operation Cerberus, a daring daylight dash through the English Channel back to Germany. In February 1942, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was deployed to Norway, although her time stationed there was curtailed when she was torpedoed by the British submarine Template:HMS days after arriving in Norwegian waters. The torpedo severely damaged the ship's stern, which necessitated repairs in Germany.

Upon returning to active service, the ship spent several months training officer cadets in the Baltic before serving as artillery support for the retreating German Army on the Eastern Front. After the German collapse in May 1945, she was surrendered to the British Royal Navy before being transferred to the US Navy as a war prize. After examining the ship in the United States, the US Navy assigned the cruiser to the Operation Crossroads nuclear tests at Bikini Atoll. Having survived the atomic blasts, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was towed to Kwajalein Atoll, where she ultimately capsized and sank in December 1946. The wreck remains partially visible above the water approximately two miles northwest of Bucholz Army Airfield, on the edge of Enubuj. One of her screw propellers was salvaged and is on display at the Laboe Naval Memorial in Germany.

DesignEdit

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The Template:Sclass of heavy cruisers was ordered in the context of German naval rearmament after the Nazi Party came to power in 1933 and repudiated the disarmament clauses of the Treaty of Versailles. In 1935, Germany signed the Anglo–German Naval Agreement with Great Britain, which provided a legal basis for German naval rearmament; the treaty specified that Germany would be able to build five Template:Convert "treaty cruisers".Template:Sfn The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}s were nominally within the 10,000-ton limit, though they significantly exceeded the figure.Template:Sfn

{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was Template:Convert long overall, and had a beam of Template:Convert and a maximum draft of Template:Convert. After launching, her straight bow was replaced with a clipper bow, increasing the length overall to Template:Convert. The new bow kept her foredeck much drier in heavy weather.Template:Sfn The ship had a design displacement of Template:Convert and a full-load displacement of Template:Convert. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was powered by three sets of geared steam turbines, which were supplied with steam by twelve ultra-high pressure oil-fired boilers. The ship's propulsion system was rated for a top speed of Template:Convert from Template:Convert.Template:Sfn As designed, her standard complement consisted of 42 officers and 1,340 enlisted men.Template:Sfn

The ship's primary armament was eight [[20.3 cm SK C/34 naval gun|Template:Cvt SK L/60]] guns mounted in four twin turrets, placed in superfiring pairs forward and aft.Template:Efn Her anti-aircraft battery consisted of twelve Template:Convert L/65 guns, twelve Template:Convert guns, and eight Template:Convert guns. The ship also carried four triple Template:Cvt torpedo launchers. For aerial reconnaissance, she was equipped with three Arado Ar 196 seaplanes and one catapult.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s armored belt was Template:Convert thick; her upper deck was Template:Convert thick and her main armored deck was Template:Convert thick. The main battery turrets had Template:Convert thick faces and 70 mm thick sides.Template:Sfn

Service historyEdit

{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was ordered by the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} from the Germaniawerft shipyard in Kiel.Template:Sfn Her keel was laid down on 23 April 1936,Template:Sfn under construction number 564 and the contract name "{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} J".Template:Sfn She was originally to be named after Wilhelm von Tegetthoff, the Austrian victor of the Battle of Lissa, though considerations over the possible insult to Italy, defeated by Tegetthoff at Lissa, led the Kriegsmarine to adopt Prinz Eugen as the ship's namesake.Template:Sfn She was launched on 22 August 1938,Template:Sfn in a ceremony attended by the Governor ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) of the Ostmark, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, who made the christening speech. Also present at the launch were Adolf Hitler, the Regent of Hungary, Admiral Miklós Horthy (who had commanded the battleship Template:SMS from 24 November 1917 to 1 March 1918), and his wife Magdolna Purgly, who performed the christening.Template:Sfn As built, the ship had a straight stem, though after her launch this was replaced with a clipper bow. A raked funnel cap was also installed.Template:Sfn

Commissioning was delayed slightly due to light damage sustained during a Royal Air Force attack on Kiel on the night of 1 July 1940. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} suffered two relatively light hits in the attack,Template:Sfn but she was not seriously damaged and was commissioned into service on 1 August.Template:Sfn The cruiser spent the remainder of 1940 conducting sea trials in the Baltic Sea.Template:Sfn In early 1941, the ship's artillery crews conducted gunnery training. A short period in dry dock for final modifications and improvements followed.Template:Sfn In April, the ship joined the newly commissioned battleship Template:Ship for maneuvers in the Baltic. The two ships had been selected for Operation Rheinübung, a breakout into the Atlantic to raid Allied commerce.Template:Sfn

On 23 April, while passing through the Fehmarn Belt en route to Kiel,Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} detonated a magnetic mine dropped by British aircraft. The mine damaged the fuel tank, propeller shaft couplings,Template:Sfn and fire control equipment.Template:Sfn The planned sortie with {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was delayed while repairs were carried out.Template:Sfn Admirals Erich Raeder and Günther Lütjens discussed the possibility of delaying the operation further, in the hopes that repairs to the battleship Template:Ship would be completed or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s sistership Template:Ship would complete trials in time for the ships to join {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. Raeder and Lütjens decided that it would be most beneficial to resume surface actions in the Atlantic as soon as possible, however, and that the two ships should sortie without reinforcement.Template:Sfn

Operation RheinübungEdit

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By 11 May 1941, repairs to {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} had been completed. Under the command of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (KzS—Captain at Sea) Helmuth Brinkmann, the ship steamed to Gotenhafen, where the crew readied her for her Atlantic sortie. On 18 May, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} rendezvoused with {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} off Cape Arkona.Template:Sfn The two ships were escorted by three destroyers—Template:Ship, Template:Ship, and Template:Ship—and a flotilla of minesweepers.Template:Sfn The Luftwaffe provided air cover during the voyage out of German waters.Template:Sfn At around 13:00 on 20 May, the German flotilla encountered the Swedish cruiser Template:HSwMS; the cruiser shadowed the Germans for two hours in the Kattegat.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} transmitted a report to naval headquarters, stating: "Two large ships, three destroyers, five escort vessels, and 10–12 aircraft passed Marstrand, course 205°/20'."Template:Sfn The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (OKM—Naval High Command) was not concerned about the security risk posed by {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, though Lütjens believed operational security had been lost.Template:Sfn The report eventually made its way to Captain Henry Denham, the British naval attaché to Sweden, who transmitted the information to the Admiralty.Template:Sfn

The code-breakers at Bletchley Park confirmed that an Atlantic raid was imminent, as they had decrypted reports that {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} had taken on prize crews and requested additional navigational charts from headquarters. A pair of Supermarine Spitfires were ordered to search the Norwegian coast for the German flotilla.Template:Sfn On the evening of 20 May, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and the rest of the flotilla reached the Norwegian coast; the minesweepers were detached and the two raiders and their destroyer escorts continued north. The following morning, radio-intercept officers on board {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} picked up a signal ordering British reconnaissance aircraft to search for two battleships and three destroyers northbound off the Norwegian coast.Template:Sfn At 7:00 on the 21st, the Germans spotted four unidentified aircraft that quickly departed. Shortly after 12:00, the flotilla reached Bergen and anchored at Grimstadfjord. While there, the ships' crews painted over the Baltic camouflage with the standard "outboard gray" worn by German warships operating in the Atlantic.Template:Sfn

File:Map Rheinuebung.svg
lang}} and Template:Ship and the ships that pursued them

While in Bergen, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} took on Template:Convert of fuel; {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} inexplicably failed to similarly refuel.Template:Sfn At 19:30 on 21 May, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and the three escorting destroyers left port.Template:Sfn By midnight, the force was in the open sea and headed toward the Arctic Ocean. At this time, Admiral Raeder finally informed Hitler of the operation, who reluctantly allowed it to continue as planned. The three escorting destroyers were detached at 04:14 on 22 May, while the force steamed off Trondheim. At around 12:00, Lütjens ordered his two ships to turn toward the Denmark Strait to attempt the breakout into the open waters of the Atlantic.Template:Sfn

By 04:00 on 23 May, Lütjens ordered {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to increase speed to Template:Convert to make the dash through the Denmark Strait.Template:Sfn Upon entering the Strait, both ships activated their FuMO radar detection equipment sets.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} led {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} by about Template:Convert; mist reduced visibility to Template:Convert. The Germans encountered some ice at around 10:00, which necessitated a reduction in speed to Template:Convert. Two hours later, the pair had reached a point north of Iceland. The ships were forced to zigzag to avoid ice floes. At 19:22, hydrophone and radar operators aboard the German warships detected the cruiser Template:HMS at a range of approximately Template:Convert.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s radio-intercept team decrypted the radio signals being sent by Suffolk and learned that their location had indeed been reported.Template:Sfn

Admiral Lütjens gave permission for {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to engage Suffolk, though the captain of the German cruiser could not clearly make out his target and so held fire.Template:Sfn Suffolk quickly retreated to a safe distance and shadowed the German ships. At 20:30, the heavy cruiser Template:HMS joined Suffolk, but approached the German raiders too closely. Lütjens ordered his ships to engage the British cruiser; {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} fired five salvoes, three of which straddled Norfolk and rained shell splinters on her decks. The cruiser laid a smoke screen and fled into a fog bank, ending the brief engagement. The concussion from the 38 cm guns disabled {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s FuMo 23 radar set; this prompted Lütjens to order {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to take station ahead so she could use her functioning radar to scout for the formation. The British cruisers tracked {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} through the night, continually relaying the location and bearing of the German ships.Template:Sfn

Battle of the Denmark StraitEdit

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The harsh weather broke on the morning of 24 May, revealing a clear sky. At 05:07 that morning, hydrophone operators aboard {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} detected a pair of unidentified vessels approaching the German formation at a range of Template:Convert, reporting "Noise of two fast-moving turbine ships at 280° relative bearing!".Template:Sfn At 05:45, lookouts on the German ships spotted smoke on the horizon; these turned out to be from Template:HMS and Template:HMS, under the command of Vice Admiral Lancelot Holland. Lütjens ordered his ships' crews to battle stations. By 05:52, the range had fallen to Template:Convert and Hood opened fire, followed by Prince of Wales a minute later.Template:Sfn Hood engaged {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, which the British thought to be {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, while Prince of Wales fired on {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Efn

The British ships approached the Germans head on, which permitted them to use only their forward guns, while {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} could fire full broadsides. Several minutes after opening fire, Holland ordered a 20° turn to port, which would allow his ships to engage with their rear gun turrets. Both German ships concentrated their fire on Hood. About a minute after opening fire, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} scored a hit with a high-explosive 20.3 cm shell, detonating unrotated projectile ammunition and starting a large fire on Hood, which was quickly extinguished.Template:Sfn Holland then ordered a second 20° turn to port, to bring his ships on a parallel course with {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. By this time, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} had found the range to Hood, so Lütjens ordered {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to shift fire and target Prince of Wales to keep both of his opponents under fire. Within a few minutes, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} scored a pair of hits on the battleship and reported that a small fire had been started.Template:Sfn

Lütjens then ordered {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to drop behind {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, so she could continue to monitor the location of Norfolk and Suffolk, which were still some Template:Convert to the east. At 06:00, Hood was completing her second turn to port when {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s fifth salvo hit. Two of the shells landed short, striking the water close to the ship, but at least one of the 38 cm armor-piercing shells struck Hood and penetrated her thin upper belt armor. The shell reached HoodTemplate:'s rear ammunition magazine and detonated Template:Convert of cordite propellant.Template:Sfn The massive explosion broke the back of the ship between the main mast and the rear funnel; the forward section continued to move forward briefly before the in-rushing water caused the bow to rise into the air at a steep angle. The stern similarly rose upward as water rushed into the ripped-open compartments.Template:Sfn After only eight minutes of firing, Hood had disappeared, taking all but three of her crew of 1,419 men with her.Template:Sfn

After a few more minutes, during which Prince of Wales scored three hits on {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, the damaged British battleship withdrew. The Germans ceased fire as the range widened, though Captain Ernst Lindemann, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s commander, strongly advocated chasing Prince of Wales and destroying her.Template:Sfn Lütjens firmly rejected the request, and instead ordered {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to head for the open waters of the North Atlantic.Template:Sfn After the end of the engagement, Lütjens reported that a "Battlecruiser, probably Hood, sunk. Another battleship, King George V or Renown, turned away damaged. Two heavy cruisers maintain contact."Template:Sfn At 08:01, he transmitted a damage report and his intentions to OKM, which were to detach {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} for commerce raiding and to make for St. Nazaire for repairs.Template:Sfn Shortly after 10:00, Lütjens ordered {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to fall behind {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to discern the severity of the oil leakage from the bow hit. After confirming "broad streams of oil on both sides of [{{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s] wake",Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} returned to the forward position.Template:Sfn

Separation and return to FranceEdit

With the weather worsening, Lütjens attempted to detach {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} at 16:40. The squall was not heavy enough to cover her withdrawal from Wake-Walker's cruisers, which continued to maintain radar contact. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was therefore recalled temporarily.Template:Sfn The cruiser was successfully detached at 18:14. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} turned around to face Wake-Walker's formation, forcing Suffolk to turn away at high speed. Prince of Wales fired twelve salvos at {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, which responded with nine salvos, none of which hit. The action diverted British attention and permitted {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to slip away.Template:Sfn

On 26 May, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} rendezvoused with the supply ship {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to refill her nearly empty fuel tanks.Template:Sfn She had by then only 160 tons fuel left, enough for a day.Template:Sfn Afterwards the ship continued further south on a mission against shipping lines.Template:Sfn Before any merchant ship was found, defects in her engines showed and on 27 May, the day {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was sunk, she was ordered to give up her mission and make for a port in occupied France.Template:Sfn On 28 May {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} refueled from the tanker {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. The same day more engine problems showed up, including trouble with the port engine turbine, the cooling of the middle engine and problems with the starboard screw, reducing her maximum speed to 28 knots.Template:Sfn The screw problems could only be checked and repaired in a dock and thus Brest, with its large docks and repair facilities, was chosen as destination. Despite the many British warships and several convoys in the area (at least 104 units were identified on the 29th by the ship's radio crew) {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} reached the Bay of Biscay undiscovered, and on 1 June the ship was joined by German destroyers and aircraft off the coast of France south of Brest;Template:Sfn and escorted to Brest, which she reached late on 1 June where she immediately entered dock.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Operation Cerberus and Norwegian operationsEdit

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File:Operation Cerberus-fr.svg
lang}} during Operation Cerberus

Brest is not far from airfields in southern England and during their stay in Brest {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and the battleships {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and Template:Ship were repeatedly attacked by Allied bombers.Template:Sfn The Royal Air Force jokingly referred to the three ships as the Brest Bomb Target Flotilla, and between 1 August and 31 December 1941 it dropped some 1200 tons of bombs on the port.Template:Sfn On the night of 1 July 1941,Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was struck by an armor-piercing bomb that destroyed the control center deep down under the bridge. The attack killed 60 men and wounded more than 40 others.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The loss of the control center also made the main guns useless and repairs lasted until the end of the year.Template:Sfn

The continuous air attacks led the German command to decide {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} would have to move to safer bases as soon as they were repaired and ready. Meanwhile, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} operation had demonstrated the risks of operating in the Atlantic without air cover. In addition, Hitler saw the Norwegian theater as the "zone of destiny", so he ordered the three ships' return to Germany in early 1942 so they could be deployed there.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The intention was to use the ships to interdict Allied convoys to the Soviet Union, as well as to strengthen the defenses of Norway.Template:Sfn Hitler insisted they would make the voyage via the English Channel, despite Raeder's protests that it was too risky.Template:Sfn Vice Admiral Otto Ciliax was given command of the operation. In early February, minesweepers swept a route through the Channel, though the British failed to detect the activity.Template:Sfn

At 23:00 on 11 February, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} left Brest. They entered the Channel an hour later; the three ships sped at Template:Convert, hugging the French coast along the voyage. By 06:30, they had passed Cherbourg, at which point they were joined by a flotilla of torpedo boats.Template:Sfn The torpedo boats were led by {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Erich Bey, aboard the destroyer Template:Ship. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (General of Fighter Force) Adolf Galland directed Luftwaffe fighter and bomber forces (Operation Donnerkeil) during Cerberus.Template:Sfn The fighters flew at masthead-height to avoid detection by the British radar network. Liaison officers were present on all three ships.Template:Sfn By 13:00, the ships had cleared the Strait of Dover but, half an hour later, a flight of six Fairey Swordfish torpedo bombers, with Spitfire escort, attacked the Germans. The British failed to penetrate the Luftwaffe fighter shield, and all six Swordfish were destroyed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

File:Cruisers Admiral Scheer and Prinz Eugen at Lofjord 1942.jpg
lang}} is also moored behind anti-torpedo nets

Off Dover, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} came under fire from British coastal artillery batteries, though they scored no hits. Several Motor Torpedo Boats then attacked the ship, but {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s destroyer escorts drove the vessels off before they could launch their torpedoes. At 16:43, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} encountered five British destroyers: Template:HMS, Template:HMS, Template:HMS, Template:HMS, and Template:HMS. She fired her main battery at them and scored several hits on Worcester, but she was forced to maneuver erratically to avoid their torpedoes.Template:Sfn Nevertheless, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} arrived in Brunsbüttel on the morning of 13 February, completely undamaged,Template:Sfn but suffering the only casualty in all three big ships, killed by aircraft gunfire.Template:Sfn

On 21 February 1942, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, the heavy cruiser Template:Ship, and the destroyers Template:Ship, Template:Ship, Template:Ship, Template:Ship, and Template:Ship steamed to Norway.Template:Sfn After stopping briefly in Grimstadfjord, the ships proceeded on to Trondheim. Two days later, while patrolling off the Trondheimsfjord, the British submarine Template:HMS torpedoed {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Sfn The torpedo struck the ship in the stern, killing fifty men, causing serious damage, and rendering the ship unmaneuverable. However, on her own power she managed to reach Trondheim and from there was towed to Template:Ill, where, over the next few months, emergency repairs were effected. Her entire stern was cut away and plated over and two jury-rigged rudders, operated manually by capstans, were installed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

On 16 May, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} made the return voyage to Germany under her own power. While en route to Kiel, the ship was attacked by a British force of 19 Bristol Blenheim bombers and 27 Bristol Beaufort torpedo bombers commanded by Wing Commander Mervyn Williams, though the aircraft failed to hit the ship.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was out of service for repairs until October; she conducted sea trials beginning on 27 October.Template:Sfn Hans-Erich Voss, who later became Hitler's Naval Liaison Officer, was given command of the ship when she returned to service.Template:Sfn In reference to her originally planned name, the ship's bell from the Austrian battleship Template:SMS was presented on 22 November by the Italian {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Rear Admiral) de Angeles.Template:Sfn Over the course of November and December, the ship was occupied with lengthy trials in the Baltic. In early January 1943, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ordered the ship to return to Norway to reinforce the warships stationed there. Twice in January {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} attempted to steam to Norway with {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, but both attempts were broken off after British surveillance aircraft spotted the two ships. After it became apparent that it would be impossible to move the ship to Norway, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was assigned to the Fleet Training Squadron. For nine months, she cruised the Baltic training cadets.Template:Sfn

Service in the BalticEdit

File:Prinz Eugen.jpg
lang}} underway

As the Soviet Army pushed the Wehrmacht back on the Eastern Front, it became necessary to reactivate {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} as a gunnery support vessel; on 1 October 1943, the ship was reassigned to combat duty.Template:Sfn In June 1944, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, the heavy cruiser {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and the 6th Destroyer Flotilla formed the Second Task Force, later renamed Task Force Thiele after its commander, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} August Thiele. {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was at this time under the command of KzS Hans-Jürgen Reinicke, and she served as Thiele's flagship. Throughout June she steamed in the eastern Baltic, northwest of the island of Utö as a show of force during the German withdrawal from Finland. On 19–20 August, the ship steamed into the Gulf of Riga and bombarded Tukums.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Four destroyers and two torpedo boats supported the action, along with {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s Ar 196 floatplanes; the cruiser fired a total of 265 shells from her main battery.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s bombardment was instrumental in the successful repulse of the Soviet attack.Template:Sfn

In early September, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} supported a failed attempt to seize the fortress island of Hogland. The ship then returned to Gotenhafen, before escorting a convoy of ships evacuating German soldiers from Finland.Template:Sfn The convoy, consisting of six freighters, sailed on 15 September from the Gulf of Bothnia, with the entire Second Task Force escorting it. Swedish aircraft and destroyers shadowed the convoy, but did not intervene. The following month, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} returned to gunfire support duties. On 11 and 12 October, she fired in support of German troops in Memel.Template:Sfn Over the first two days, the ship fired some 700 rounds of ammunition from her main battery. She returned on the 14th and 15th, after having restocked her main battery ammunition, to fire another 370 rounds.Template:Sfn

While on the return voyage to Gotenhafen on 15 October, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} inadvertently rammed the light cruiser Template:Ship amidships north of Hela.Template:Sfn The cause of the collision was heavy fog.Template:Sfn The light cruiser was nearly cut in half,Template:Sfn and the two ships remained wedged together for fourteen hours.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was taken to Gotenhafen, where repairs were effected within a month.Template:Sfn Sea trials commenced on 14 November.Template:Sfn On 20–21 November, the ship supported German troops on the Sworbe Peninsula by firing around 500 rounds of main battery ammunition. Four torpedo boats—T13, T16, T19, and T21—joined the operation.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} then returned to Gotenhafen to resupply and have her worn-out gun barrels re-bored.Template:Sfn

File:Cruiser Prinz Eugen underway in May 1945.jpg
lang}} under escort from Copenhagen to Wilhelmshaven after surrendering

The cruiser was ready for action by mid-January 1945, when she was sent to bombard Soviet forces in Samland.Template:Sfn The ship fired 871 rounds of ammunition at the Soviets advancing on the German bridgehead at Cranz held by the XXVIII Corps, which was protecting Königsberg. She was supported in this operation by the destroyer Z25 and torpedo boat Template:Ship.Template:Sfn At that point, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} had expended her main battery ammunition, and critical munition shortages forced the ship to remain in port until 10 March, when she bombarded Soviet forces around Gotenhafen, Danzig, and Hela. During these operations, she fired a total of 2,025 shells from her 20.3 cm guns and another 2,446 rounds from her 10.5 cm guns. The old battleship Template:SMS also provided gunfire support, as did {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} after 25 March. The ships were commanded by {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Bernhard Rogge.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The following month, on 8 April, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} steamed to Swinemünde.Template:Sfn On 13 April, 34 Lancaster bombers attacked the two ships while in port. Thick cloud cover forced the British to abort the mission and return two days later. On the second attack, they succeeded in sinking {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} with a single Tallboy bomb hit.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} then departed Swinemünde for Copenhagen,Template:Sfn arriving on 20 April. Once there, she was decommissioned on 7 May and turned over to Royal Navy control the following day.Template:Sfn For his leadership of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in the final year of the war, Reinicke was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross on 21 April 1945.Template:Sfn During her operational career with the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} lost 115 crew members; 79 men were killed in action, 33 were killed in accidents and three died of other causes. Of these 115 crew members, four were officers, seven were cadets or ensigns, two were petty officers, 22 were junior petty officers, 78 were sailors and two were civilians.Template:Sfn

Service with the United States NavyEdit

On 27 May 1945, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and the light cruiser Template:Ship—the only major German naval vessels to survive the war in serviceable condition—were escorted by the British cruisers Template:HMS and Template:HMS to Wilhelmshaven. On 13 December, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was awarded as a war prize to the United States, which sent the ship to Wesermünde.Template:Sfn The United States did not particularly want the cruiser, but it did want to prevent the Soviet Union from acquiring it.Template:Sfn Her US commander, Captain Arthur H. Graubart, recounted later how the British, Soviet and US representatives in the Control Commission all claimed the ship and how in the end the various large prizes were divided in three lots, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} being one of them. The three lots were then drawn lottery style from his hat with the British and Soviet representatives drawing the lots for other ships and Graubart being left with the lot for {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Sfn The cruiser was commissioned into the US Navy as the unclassified miscellaneous vessel USS {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} with the hull number IX-300. A composite American-German crew consisting of 574 German officers and sailors, supervised by eight American officers and eighty-five enlisted men under the command of Graubart,Template:Sfn<ref name="DANFS">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> then took the ship to Boston, departing on 13 January 1946 and arriving on 22 January.Template:Sfn

After arriving in Boston, the ship was extensively examined by the US Navy.Template:Sfn Her very large GHG passive sonar array was removed and installed on the submarine Template:USS for testing.Template:Sfn American interest in magnetic amplifier technology increased again after findings in investigations of the fire control system of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The guns from turret Anton were removed while in Philadelphia in February.Template:Sfn On 1 May the German crewmen left the ship and returned to Germany. Thereafter, the American crew had significant difficulties in keeping the ship's propulsion system operational—eleven of her twelve boilers failed after the Germans departed. The ship was then allocated to the fleet of target ships for Operation Crossroads in Bikini Atoll. Operation Crossroads was a major test of the effects of nuclear weapons on warships of various types. The trouble with {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}Template:'s propulsion system may have influenced the decision to dispose of her in the nuclear tests.<ref name="DANFS" />Template:Sfn

She was towed to the Pacific via Philadelphia and the Panama Canal,<ref name="DANFS" /> departing on 3 March.Template:Sfn The ship survived two atomic bomb blasts: Test Able, an air burst on 1 July 1946 and Test Baker, a submerged detonation on 25 July.Template:Sfn {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} was moored about Template:Convert from the epicenter of both blasts and was only lightly damaged by them;Template:Sfn the Able blast only bent her foremast and broke the top of her main mast.Template:Sfn She suffered no significant structural damage from the explosions but was thoroughly contaminated with radioactive fallout.Template:Sfn The ship was towed to the Kwajalein Atoll in the central Pacific, where a small leak went unrepaired due to the radiation danger.Template:Sfn On 29 August 1946, the US Navy decommissioned {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Sfn

By late December 1946, the ship was in very bad condition; on 21 December, she began to list severely.<ref name="DANFS" /> A salvage team could not be brought to Kwajalein in time,Template:Sfn so the US Navy attempted to beach the ship to prevent her from sinking, but on 22 December, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} capsized and sank.<ref name="DANFS" /> Her main battery gun turrets fell out of their barbettes when the ship rolled over. The ship's stern, including her propeller assemblies, remains visible above the surface of the water.Template:Sfn The US government denied salvage rights on the grounds that it did not want the contaminated steel entering the market.Template:Sfn In August 1979, one of the ship's screw propellers was retrieved and placed in the Laboe Naval Memorial in Germany.Template:Sfn The ship's bell is currently held at the National Museum of the United States Navy, while the bell from {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} is held in Graz, Austria.Template:Sfn

Beginning in 1974, the US government began to warn about the danger of an oil leak from the ship's full fuel tanks. The government was concerned about the risk of a severe typhoon damaging the wreck and causing a leak. Starting in February 2018, the US Navy, including the Navy's Mobile Diving and Salvage Unit One, US Army, and the Marshall Islands conducted a joint oil removal effort with the salvage ship Template:USNS, which had cut holes into the ship's fuel tanks to pump the oil from the wreck directly into the oil tanker Humber.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The US Navy announced that the work had been completed by 15 October 2018; the project had extracted approximately Template:Convert of fuel oil, which amounted to 97 percent of the fuel remaining aboard the wreck. Lieutenant Commander Tim Emge, the officer responsible for the salvage operation, stated that "There are no longer active leaks... the remaining oil is enclosed in a few internal tanks without leakage and encased by layered protection."Template:Sfn

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