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Reinhard Scheer
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===Command of the High Seas fleet=== Vice Admiral Scheer became Commander in chief of the High Seas Fleet on 18 January 1916 when Pohl became too ill to continue in that post.<ref>Sweetman, p. 394</ref> Upon promotion to the position, Scheer wrote ''Guiding Principles for Sea Warfare in the North Sea'', which outlined his strategic plans. His central idea was that the [[Grand Fleet]] should be pressured by higher U-boat activity and zeppelin raids as well as increased fleet sorties. The Grand Fleet would be forced to abandon the distant blockade and would have to attack the German fleet; the Kaiser approved the memorandum on 23 February 1916. Now that he had approval from the Kaiser, Scheer could use the fleet more aggressively.<ref>Tarrant, p. 50</ref> Following the Kaiser's order forbidding unrestricted submarine warfare on 24 April 1916, Scheer ordered all of the [[U-boat]]s in the Atlantic to return to Germany and abandon commerce raiding.<ref>Karau, p. 65</ref> Scheer intended to use the submarines to support the fleet by stationing the U-boats off major British naval bases. The U-boats would intercept British forces leaving the ports when provoked by a bombardment by the [[I Scouting Group]] battlecruisers under the command of Vice Admiral [[Franz von Hipper]].<ref>Tarrant, p. 55</ref> Scheer planned the operation for 17 May, but damage to the battlecruiser {{SMS|Seydlitz}} from the previous month, coupled with condenser trouble on several of the battleships of [[III Battle Squadron]] caused the plan to be delayed, ultimately to 31 May.<ref>Tarrant, pp. 55β56</ref> ====Battle of Jutland==== {{main|Battle of Jutland}} Admiral Scheer's fleet, composed of 16 dreadnoughts, six pre-dreadnoughts, six light cruisers, and 31 torpedo boats departed the Jade early on the morning of 31 May. The fleet sailed in concert with Hipper's five battlecruisers and supporting cruisers and torpedo boats.<ref>Tarrant, p. 62</ref> The British navy's [[Room 40]] had intercepted and decrypted German radio traffic containing plans of the operation, and so sortied the Grand Fleet, totaling some 28 dreadnoughts and 9 battlecruisers, the night before in order to cut off and destroy the High Seas Fleet.<ref>Tarrant, pp. 63β64</ref> At 16:00 UTC, the two battlecruiser forces encountered each other and began a running gun fight south, back towards Scheer's battle fleet.<ref>Campbell, p. 34</ref> Upon reaching the High Seas Fleet, Vice Admiral [[David Beatty, 1st Earl Beatty|David Beatty's]] battlecruisers turned back to the north to lure the Germans towards the rapidly approaching Grand Fleet, under the command of Admiral [[John Jellicoe, 1st Earl Jellicoe|John Jellicoe]].<ref>Bennet, p. 73</ref> During the run to the north, Scheer's leading ships engaged the {{Sclass|Queen Elizabeth|battleship|2}}s of the [[5th Battle Squadron (United Kingdom)|5th Battle Squadron]].<ref>Tarrant, p. 116</ref> By 18:30, the Grand Fleet had arrived on the scene, and was deployed into a position that would [[Crossing the T|cross Scheer's "T"]] from the northeast. To extricate his fleet from this precarious position, Scheer ordered a [[points of the compass|16-point]] turn to the south-west.<ref>Tarrant, p. 153</ref> At 18:55, Scheer decided to conduct another 16-point turn to launch an attack on the British fleet;<ref name=T165>Tarrant, p. 165</ref> he later explained his reasoning: <blockquote> It was as yet too early to assume 'night cruising order.' The enemy could have compelled us to fight before dark, he could have prevented our exercising our initiative, and finally he could have cut off our return to the German Bight. There was only one way of avoiding this: to inflict a second blow on the enemy with another advance carried through regardless of cost...It also offered the possibility of a last attempt being made to bring help to the hard-pressed {{SMS|Wiesbaden||2}}, or at least of rescuing her ship's company.<ref name=T165/> </blockquote> This maneuver again put Scheer in a dangerous position; Jellicoe had turned his fleet south and again crossed Scheer's "T."<ref>Bennett, p. 106</ref> A third 16-point turn followed, which was covered by a charge by Hipper's mauled battlecruisers.<ref>Tarrant, pp. 177β181</ref> Scheer then ordered the fleet to adopt the night cruising formation, which was completed by 23:40.<ref>Campbell, p. 275</ref> A series of ferocious engagements between Scheer's battleships and Jellicoe's destroyer screen ensued, though the Germans managed to punch their way through the destroyers and make for [[Horns Reef]].<ref>Campbell, p. 274</ref> The High Seas Fleet reached the Jade between 13:00 and 14:45 on 1 June; Scheer ordered the undamaged battleships of the I Battle Squadron to take up defensive positions in the Jade [[roadstead]] while the ''Kaiser''-class battleships were to maintain a state of readiness just outside Wilhelmshaven.<ref>Tarrant, p. 263</ref> ====Post-Jutland==== [[File:Scheer.JPG|thumb|upright|Scheer, from the frontispiece of his memoirs]] After the battle was finished, Scheer wrote an assessment of the engagement for the Kaiser; in it, he strongly urged for the resumption of the [[unrestricted submarine warfare]] campaign in the Atlantic. He argued that it was the only option to defeat Great Britain. Scheer spent the majority of the remainder of the year debating the issue with the naval command.<ref>Scheer, p. 246</ref> Ultimately, Scheer and his allies prevailed and the unrestricted submarine campaign was resumed in February 1917.<ref>Scheer, p. 248</ref> Despite his conviction that only the U-boats could defeat Britain, Scheer continued to utilize the surface fleet. On 18β19 August 1916, the High Seas Fleet again sortied in an attempt to draw out and defeat Admiral Beatty's battlecruiser squadron. The Royal Navy again intercepted German communications and sent the Grand Fleet out. In this case, however, Scheer's reconnaissance worked as intended, and warned him of the Grand Fleet's approach in time to retreat back to Germany.<ref>Massie, pp. 682β683</ref> In later 1917, Scheer began to use light elements of the fleet to raid British convoys to Norway in the North Sea. This forced the British to deploy battleships to escort the convoys, which presented Scheer with the opportunity to attempt to isolate and destroy several battleships of the Grand Fleet.<ref>Massie, p. 747</ref> On 23 April 1918, Scheer sent the entire High Seas Fleet to intercept one of the convoys. However, Hipper's battlecruisers crossed the convoy's path several times without sighting any ships; it was later discovered that German intelligence had miscalculated the date the convoy would depart Britain. The German fleet turned south and reached their North Sea bases by 19:00.<ref>Massie, p. 748</ref>
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