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Indian Ocean in World War II : ウィキペディア英語版 | Indian Ocean in World War II
The Indian Ocean had long been an important maritime trade route between European nations and their colonial territories in East Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, British India, Indochina, the East Indies (Indonesia), and Australia. Naval presence was dominated by the Royal Navy Eastern Fleet and the Royal Australian Navy as World War II began with a major portion of the Royal Netherlands Navy operating in the Dutch East Indies and the Red Sea Flotilla of the Italian ''Regia Marina'' operating from Massawa. Axis naval forces gave a high priority to disrupting Allied Indian Ocean trade. Initial anti-shipping measures of unrestricted submarine warfare and covert raiding ships expanded to include airstrikes by aircraft carriers and raids by cruisers of the Imperial Japanese Navy. A ''Kriegsmarine'' ''Monsun Gruppe'' of U-boats operated from the eastern Indian Ocean after the Persian Corridor became an important military supply route to the Soviet Union. ==Chronology==
* 15 November 1939: Australian, British and French warships began patrolling the Indian Ocean when the German pocket battleship ''Admiral Graf Spee'' sank the tanker ''Africa Shell'' south of Madagascar.〔Rohwer & Hummelchen, p.6〕
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