Erich Raeder
Erich Raeder (24 April 1876 - 6 November 1960) was the German supreme naval commander from 1928 to 1943, including much of World War II. The first Grand Admiral since Alfred von Tirpitz, he was also the last.
Raeder was born in a middle class family in Wandsbek, near Hamburg, Germany, he joined the German Imperial Navy in 1894, rapidly rising in rank to Chief of Staff for Franz von Hipper in 1912. He served in this position during World War I as well as in combat posts, taking part in the Battle of Dogger Bank in 1915 and the Battle of Jutland in 1916. After the war Raeder continued to rise steadily in the navy hierarchy, becoming a Konteradmiral in 1922 and a Vizeadmiral in 1925. In October 1928 Raeder was promoted to Admiral and made Commander in Chief of the German Navy (Oberbefehlshaber der Kriegsmarine).
Although he generally disliked the Nazi party, he strongly supported Adolf Hitler's attempt to rebuild the German Navy, while apparently disagreeing equally strongly on most other matters. Due to his efforts to rebuild the German Navy, on 20 April 1936, just a few days before Raeder’s forty-seventh birthday, Hitler presented him with a rank of General Admiral (Generaladmiral). In his quest to rebuild the German Navy, Raeder faced constant challenges from Hermann Göring's ongoing quest to build the Luftwaffe.
Nevertheless he was promoted to Grand Admiral (Großadmiral) in 1939, and later that year suggested the invasions of Denmark and Norway in order to secure sheltered docks out of reach of the Royal Air Force, as well as provide direct exits into the North Sea. These operations were eventually successfully carried out, although with relatively heavy losses.
Raeder was not a strong supporter of the Operation Sealion, the planned German invasion of the British Isles for he felt the war at sea could be conducted far more successfully via an indirect strategic approach by increasing the numbers of u-boote, and small surface vessels in service in addition to a strategic focus on the Mediterranean theater including a strong German presence in North Africa plus an invasion of Malta and the Middle East.
He argued strongly against Sealion unless decisive air superioty was taken over the English Channel. Since such circumstances were never gained the invasion was thus postponed indefinitely due to the Luftwaffe's failiure to obtain the invasion prerequisite of air superiority during the Battle of Britain, and instead the focus of the German war machine was diverted to Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of Soviet Union, which Raeder opposed strongly.
A series of failed operations after that point, combined with the outstanding success of the U-boat fleets under the command of Karl Dönitz led to his eventual demotion to the rank of Admiral Inspector of the German Navy in January of 1943, and eventually to resignation and retirement. Karl Dönitz succeeded him in the post of the Commander in Chief of the German Navy on 30 January 1943.
After the war he was sentenced to life imprisonment at the Nuremberg Trials, for waging a "war of aggression". This somewhat dubious sentence was later reduced, and due to ill health he was released on 26 September 1955, later writing an autobiography, Mein Leben in 1957. Erich Raeder died in Kiel, on 6 November 1960.