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Wargaming in the Atlantic War

Louis

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In early 1942, Royal Navy Capt Gilbert Roberts (1900/1986) formed a new operational analysis team, to be called the Western Approaches Tactical Unit (W.A.T.U.) to explore and evaluate new tactics and then to pass them on to escort captains in a dedicated Anti Submarine Warfare course in Derby House, the headquarters of the Commander-in-Chief Western Approaches, in Liverpool.

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Cpt Roberts

It was led by Capt. Roberts and was principally staffed by officers and ratings from the Women’s Royal Naval Service (Wrens). Their primary tool for studying U-boat attacks and developing countermeasures was wargames set in a tactical floor divided into squares, basic ship models and a lecture theatre to both train 5,000 officers in the art of anti-submarine warfare and even develop new tactics vital to winning the Battle of the Atlantic.

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After the U-boat threat to merchant shipping was defeated, WATU continued to develop anti-submarine tactics for later stages of the war, including Operation Overlord and the Pacific War. WATU trained naval officers in its tactics by hosting week-long training courses in which the students played wargames.

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WATU formally ceased operations at the end of July 1945, at the end of war.​
 
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