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First to Fight 1/72 Polish Reporting Cutter KM-12

Product Code: FTF126
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The Polish Reporting Cutter KM-12 was a small auxiliary vessel of the Polish Navy, used in the late interwar period and during the opening phase of the Second World War. Classified as a kuter meldunkowy (reporting or liaison cutter), KM-12 belonged to a group of compact motor craft designed for short-range coastal operations rather than combat.

These cutters were employed primarily for communication and liaison duties, carrying orders, reports, and personnel between naval bases, command posts, and ships operating along the Polish coast.

In an era when radio communications could be unreliable, intercepted, or restricted, such vessels played an essential role in maintaining operational coordination.

Their shallow draft and small size made them well suited to operating close inshore, in harbours, and along rivers or sheltered coastal waters.

KM-12 and similar craft were active during the September 1939 campaign, when Poland’s coastal forces faced overwhelming German naval and air superiority.

Although lightly built and unarmoured, reporting cutters continued to operate under hazardous conditions, often exposed to air attack and artillery fire.

Their contribution, while rarely highlighted in major histories, was vital to sustaining communication during the rapid collapse of Poland’s coastal defences.

Technically, the KM-12 was a simple, utilitarian vessel, prioritising reliability and manoeuvrability over armament.

Any weapons carried were minimal and intended purely for self-defence.

The cutter’s importance lay not in firepower, but in its ability to move quickly and discreetly along the coast, delivering information at a time when timely communication could influence tactical decisions.

Today, the Polish Reporting Cutter KM-12 stands as a representative example of the many small, non-combat vessels whose quiet but essential service underpinned naval operations during the early days of the Second World War.