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1
ROYAL AIR
FORCE
HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
JOURNAL
41
2
The opinions expressed
in this publication are those of the
contributors concerned and are not
necessarily those held by the Royal
Air Force Historical Society.
First
published in the UK in 2008 by the Royal Air Force Historical
Society
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical
including photocopying, recording or by
any information storage and
retrieval system, without permission
from the Publisher in writing.
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3
ROYAL AIR FORCE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
President Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Michael
Beetham GCB CBE DFC
AFC
Vice-President Air Marshal Sir Frederick Sowrey KCB
CBE AFC
Committee
ChairmanAir Vice-Marshal N B Baldwin
CB CBE
FRAeS
Vice-ChairmanGroup Captain J D Heron OBE
SecretaryGroup Captain K J Dearman FRAeS
Membership SecretaryDr Jack Dunham PhD CPsychol AMRAeS
TreasurerJ Boyes TD CA
MembersAir
Commodore H A Probert MBE MA
*J S Cox Esq BA MA
*Dr M A Fopp MA FMA
FIMgt
*Group Captain N
Parton BSc (Hons) MA
MDA MPhil CEng FRAeS
RAF
*Wing Commander A J C Walters
BSc
MA FRAeS RAF
Wing Commander C
Cummings
Editor & PublicationsWing Commander C G Jefford MBE BA
Manager
*Ex Officio
4
CONTENTS
EDITOR’s NOTE6
ERRATA6
20 October 1986. THE
INTELLIGENCE WAR AND THE7
ROYAL AIR FORCE by Professor R V Jones
CB CBE FRS.
16 March 1987. WORLD WAR II – THE BALANCE26
SHEET by John Terraine.
14 March 1988. THE IMPACT OF THE SANDYS44
DEFENCE
POLICY ON THE ROYAL AIR FORCE by
T C G James CMG MA.
29 June 1988. THE
POLICY, COMMAND AND66
DIRECTION OF THE LUFTWAFFE IN WORLD WAR
II by
Dr Horst Boog.
31 October 1988. Seminar – THE ROYAL AIR
FORCE AND86
CLANDESTINE OPERATIONS IN NORTH-WEST
EUROPE.
BOOK REVIEWS112
5
SELECTED ABBREVIATIONS
ABMAnti-Ballistic
Missile
ACAS(Int)Assistant Chief of the Air Staff (Intelligence)
ADI(K),Assistant
Directorate of Intelligence (K)
AIAir
Intelligence
ASWAnti-Submarine
Warfare
CASChief
of the Air Staff
CDSChief
of the Defence Staff
CIGSChief
of the Imperial General Staff
DDDeputy
Director(ate)
DFDirection
Finding
DCASDeputy
Chief of the Air Staff
DZDrop/Dropping
Zone
FEAFFar
East Air Force
FINRAEFerranti
Inertial Rapid Alignment Equipment
HUDHead
Up Display
IFFIdentification
Friend or Foe
MAMilitary
Intelligence
QRAQuick
Reaction Alert
SACEURSupreme
Allied Commander Europe
SACLANTSupreme
Allied Commander Atlantic
SAMSurface-to-Air
Missile
SISSecret
Intelligence Service
SOESpecial
Operations Executive
VCASVice Chief of the Air Staff
6
EDITOR’S NOTE
The established cycle that determines the content of our
Journals means that the edition
which appears in or about
January of each year reflects the proceedings
of the event held in
the previous spring which it does by
publishing the papers read on
that occasion.
In 2007, however,
we interrupted the usual sequence
by
sponsoring,
instead of the usual seminar,
a visit to the recently
opened National Cold War Exhibition at the RAF Museum’s
Cosford site. While those who attended
were treated to some
presentations, they were to do with the
design and operation of the
splendid new building
and the preparation of the displays. In
other words, while interesting in their own
right, they were not to
do with RAF history per se. That created something of a problem
as we would either have to skip an edition or
find something else
to print. Your Committee decided
that we could usefully fill the
gap by reprinting some of the more significant papers that were
read to the Society in its early days and which appeared
in
publications that are no longer readily
available.
ERRATA
Anthony
Furse has pointed
out an error on page 11 of Journal 40
where it says that Newall was CAS in
December 1940. Newall had, of
course, been succeeded by Portal in
October.
Tim Wingham has noted an error in the
caption to the photograph of
HSL 2550 on page 57 of Journal 40. He
points out that those are not
‘twin
Lewis guns on pillar mountings’ as stated; they are Vickers
0.303 inch Gas Operated Mk 1, No 1s aka
Vickers Class Ks, or VGOs
for short. As Tim says, when ‘presented
with a picture of a drum-fed
machine-gun in an RAF setting, the
immediate assumption is – Lewis
gun.’
I plead guilty as charged.
That was my caption, so mea culpa.
Ed.
7
RAF HISTORICAL SOCIETY INAUGURAL LECTURE
20 OCTOBER 1986
The Society’s inaugural lecture was
given by Professor R V Jones,
CB, CBE, FRS, author of Most Secret War, the
account of British
Scientific Intelligence during the 1939-1945 war, published in 1978,
serialised in the Sunday
Telegraph and used as the basis for the
television series The Secret War. Introducing Professor Jones, Air
Commodore Probert said:
‘In introducing this evening’s lecturer
I’d like to take your minds
back to the middle 1930s, the time when – according to some – the
RAF was doing so little to prepare
to meet the German threat.
The
facts
are rather different
for, as John Terraine has recently reminded
us in The Right of the Line, those years witnessed a silent, almost
unseen, transformation.
It was Professor
Blackett, in his 1960 Tizard Memorial Lecture,
who pointed out so clearly that one
aspect of this transformation was
the growing intimacy between senior
officers of the armed forces and
the scientists in the government research establishments. It stemmed
primarily, of course, from the formation
in 1935 of the Committee for
the Scientific Survey of Air Defence, and R V Jones was one of the
young
scientists who came to work for the Air
Ministry at that time.
Incredible as it now seems, by 1940 his field of research led to his
being summoned to attend a meeting of
the Cabinet on the subject of
the German beams – at the tender age of
twenty-eight!
Throughout the rest of the war he was closely involved
in almost
every aspect of intelligence, including
Ultra, and nobody is now better
placed to talk to us from personal
experience about the RAF and the
intelligence war. Moreover, ‘RV’ addresses
us this evening, not as a
guest, but as a fully
paid-up founder member of our Society!’
8
THE INTELLIGENCE WAR ANDTHE ROYAL AIR FORCE
by Professor R V Jones CB
CBE FRS
In the frantic decade of the thirties,
when some of us were doing all
we could to tackle the problems of air
defence, Professor Lindemann
once told me that he had written
to the Air Ministry accusing
it of
taking
so much time to do anything that it must be attempting to
emulate the Deity to whom we sang ‘A
thousand ages in thy sight are
as an evening
gone’. On that scale the sixty-eight years since the
creation of the Royal Air Force would
seem as a minute or less in the
long cavalcade of human history; but
they have seen more spectacular
advances in knowledge and technology
than had occurred in the entire
preceding span of historical time. Jet
engines, supersonic flight, radar,
television, computers, guided missiles,
atomic bombs, artificial
satellites and interplanetary probes
have all come into being since the
Royal
Air Force was formed; and it has had to evolve with them
through
the most intense
period of technological development the
world has yet known.
So whatever the history of the Royal Air Force may lack in
duration is much more than compensated
by the range and scale of its
activities, both technological and operational, and by its vital part in
the momentous battles
of the Second World War. It is, therefore,
entirely opportune that this history is now to be recognised by the
formation of the Royal Air Force Historical Society,
and it will be
gratifying to all of us who served in
Intelligence that the Society has
chosen
for the subject of its first lecture
the relations between
the
Royal Air Force and Intelligence.
The title of the lecture incorporates
more than one ambiguity when
it refers to ‘the intelligence war’, even if we confine
the context to
World War II. Does it mean the war
between the British and German
intelligence services? Or might it refer
to the struggle that sometimes
occurred between the intelligence branches of the three Services;
for
example, in getting the highest priority
in the cryptographic effort at
Bletchley? Or to that other war that broke out from time to time
between the intelligence and operational
branches, when the operators
found
intelligence assessments of their success
too low to be
palatable?
If that were not enough, we in Intelligence occasionally found
9
ourselves in dispute with some of the leading
experts in the country
regarding the interpretation of evidence concerning new German
weapons; for example, in the weight of
the V2, of which an American
witness, Professor W W Rostow,
wrote ‘Although I was at that time
relatively young (27), I had acquired
some experience with both
academic and governmental bureaucratic
structures and their capacity
for bloodless tribal warfare. But I had
never been present at, let alone
presided over, a meeting
charged with more emotional tension
than
that centred on the weight of the V2
warhead’.
A further interpretation of our title might point to the part played
by the Royal Air Force, not in using intelligence, but in gathering
information which was to be collated
with that obtained
from other
sources
to build up the intelligence assessments of our opponents’
intentions.
What I shall have to say will probably draw on experiences in all
these
aspects, not primarily
in reminiscence but in the belief, with
Dionysius of Halicarnassus, that ‘history is philosophy teaching
through
examples’. At the same time, some degree of reminiscence
will be inevitable, if only to express an appreciation of some of the
personalities involved.
My own contact
with Air Intelligence started in 1938, and I
became regularly involved from September 1939 onwards.
The main
objects of pre-war intelligence were the
size and technical capabilities
of the various branches of the Luftwaffe,
and of its bomber component
in particular. On estimates of size from
1935 onwards the Air Ministry
found itself in conflict with other
bodies, including Winston Churchill,
who contended that its estimates were
too low. This was, in fact, true
up to September 1939, when Air
Intelligence began to over-estimate;
for example by one-third in the numbers
of the German long-range
bomber
force. Some of us can remember the fantastic official
predictions for the numbers of
casualties to be expected in London in
the first week of the war. Frank Inglis,
who as DDI3 was head of the
German branch of Air Intelligence early
in the war, told me how the
prediction had originated. He had been
asked, at very short notice, for
an estimate of how great the casualties might be and so he assumed
that every
available German bomber might be employed on a round-
the-clock programme, allowing only enough time between sorties
to
be re-armed and
re-fuelled. He realised that this would result in a wild
10
over-estimate of what would probably happen and had not expected
any rational being to take it seriously; he had merely supplied an
answer which matched an irresponsibly
posed question.
It was interesting to watch the change
of positions in the first two
years of the war. Churchill, who before
the war had challenged the Air
Intelligence figures as being too low, now began, prompted by
Lindemann, to challenge them as being
too high; one of the key points
being the fighting strength of a Staffel,
which Air Intelligence held to
be twelve, whereas Lindemann was for
nine with three in reserve. The
controversy resulted in a judge, Mr
Justice Singleton, being appointed
in December 1940 to settle it. I was summoned
to his Inquiry, the
erroneous impression having gone around
that I was an expert on the
size of the Luftwaffe. I managed
to avoid embarrassment by telling the
judge that I was no such expert, but
might be able to help him in one
way, which was to give an opinion
of the reliability of the various
sources
of evidence that would be laid before him, based on the
experiences that I had had with Knickebein
and the other beams. Quite
the most reliable
source for numbers,
I told him, had been the Y
Service
(now Sigint) records
of the W/T call-signs of individual
aircraft. An enormous amount of painstaking observation and
recording must have been undertaken by
the call-sign section of what
was then called DDSigsY, under Gp Capt L F Blandy. Time after
time, when I asked Flt Lt Maggs, the
head of the section, whether he
had any trace of a particular call-sign,
he was able to tell me when the
aircraft had been heard and the airfield with which it had been in
contact. The Singleton Report noted that the Y Service coverage
of
call-signs of the long-range bomber force was as high as eighty to
ninety
per cent. Lindemann, too, gave the Y Service
evidence great
weight; and the final assessment
justified his original challenge which
reduced the estimate of German
front-line strength by a quarter.
While
such estimates involved
the collation of evidence from
different types of source, which was the
prime function of many of the
branches in the Air Intelligence Directorates, the call-sign evidence
also illustrated another area of Air
Intelligence; this was to collect raw
information for itself. Apart from what it might receive from secret
agents via MI6 it could, of course, draw
on reports from Air Attachés
and on whatever
might be available
in the press. But, particularly in
war, other channels
of information could be opened up; photographic
11
reconnaissance, electronic reconnaissance, prisoner
interrogation and
captured equipment could all provide valuable
evidence and would
require specialist staffs with air force
and kindred personnel to operate
and exploit them. And in the case of World War II, the Royal Air
Force
had another direct part to play in the hazardous
ferrying of
agents into and out of German-occupied territory. Let us look briefly
at these activities in turn.
As regards pre-war secret agents, they produced very little for
scientific and technical intelligence
before 1940. One telling failure in
this respect was the absence
of any report of the erection of two
massive
and remarkable radio structures, one at Schleswig-Holstein
and the other near Cleves,
only a few miles from the Dutch border,
which
were the Knickebein beam antennae, a hundred feet high and
mounted
on turntables three hundred feet across. As the war
progressed, of course, there were new opportunities for MI6 in
encouraging and working with the resistance organisations which
developed in the occupied territories.
In Most Secret War I gave a few
examples of the bravery of the men and
women of the Resistance; and
as a result of the book being published I have learnt of further
examples, and of the identities of
individuals whose stories I told but
whose names I did not know; the Belgian agent, for example,
whose
reconnaissance report of German radar stations
ended with an
emphasis of their importance which he
illustrated by the vigilance of
the sentries who had shot at him, ‘fortunately’, he said, ‘with more
zeal than accuracy’. He went on, ‘As far
as our work is concerned, it
would
be helpful if we knew to what extent you and the British
Services are interested. We have been
working so long in the dark that
any reaction from London about our work
would be welcome to such
obscure workers as ourselves. We hope
this will not be resented since,
whatever may happen, we assure you of
our utmost devotion and the
sacrifice of our lives.’ One of the
Belgian resistance organisations has
since
identified the writer as a thirty-year old doctor, André Mathy,
who was later captured by the Germans
and executed on 21 June 1944
at Halle after more than a year as a
prisoner; he had kept his word to
the last.
Another
gallant episode which only came to light after my book
was published involved a Frenchman, Pierre Julitte.
A member of de
Gaulle’s staff, he
had joined the Resistance, and was captured by
the
12
Gestapo in March, 1943. He
then spent the next twenty-five months in
prisons and concentration camps,
including Buchenwald and Dore. At
Buchenwald he and his comrades realised that what they were being
made to work on were the V-weapons, and they managed
to get a
message out recommending that the
factory, in which they themselves
might
well be working, should be attacked. On 24 August 1944, he
said,
it was indeed bombed. At first I wondered whether
his story
could be true, for there was no trace of
such an attack either in Basil
Collier’s The Defence of The United Kingdom or General
Dornberger’s V-2 nor in The Rocket Team by Ordway and Sharp.
Fortunately, I asked Air Cdre Probert
at AHB whether there was
anything in the records that might
confirm the story because, although
in his book Pierre Julitte had changed
the names of all the characters
involved (he afterwards told me that he
wanted to tell a truthful story
but did
not want to identify individuals who had behaved
badly), his
account
rang true. And indeed this turned out to be the case, for the
Air Staff Operational Summary for 25 August recorded
that, on the
previous day, 128 Flying Fortresses had attacked ‘an armaments
factory’ at Buchenwald with ‘excellent results’
which were later
detailed as ‘severe damage to nearly
every major building’, including
some of the barracks in the concentration camp. Julitte and his
immediate colleagues survived, but they
could well have been among
the many who did not.
Such sacrifices are rarely recorded
in official histories, partly
through
the difficulty of historians getting
near enough to the
evidence, particularly when, as in this
instance, there is no clue to the
underlying truth in the bald statements
of operational summaries. I am
reminded of Lord Slim’s book, Unofficial History, where he begins
each chapter with a statement
from the official
History of Military
Operations in World War I and then spends the whole chapter
describing what actually happened from
his own direct involvement in
the episode concerned. And I know how he felt because
of my own
experience in the Baedeker raids of 1942, where the Official History
merely
records that, after 4 May, ‘almost
everything went wrong for
the attackers’. The main thing that went wrong was that their
percentage of bombs on target fell from
about 50% to 13%, thanks to
our introduction of supersonic jamming
of the X-beams. How we
knew that supersonic
jamming would be needed, how we prepared for
13
it but failed to use it for the first fatal fortnight, was a story that
merited a chapter in itself.
Actually, official historians are not to be blamed if the relevant
information is not available
to them or when time does not permit
them to ferret it out. I am reminded of this point in connection with
reports from the Resistance that
sometimes failed to get through to us
in London. Thanks again to the publicity
arising from Most
Secret
War, one or two of these have now come to me, in particular from
General
Pomes Barrere of the Deuxième Bureau, who had sent in
reports on the V-weapons in 1943 and
1944 which would undoubtedly
have been helpful
had they reached
us at the time. There were
probably many such instances, some of which were due to some
intermediate official not realising
the importance of sending the
reports on, incomprehensible to him
though they might have seemed.
No such problem affected photographic
reconnaissance, which was
the unique contribution of the Royal Air
Force to the intelligence war.
It owed much to the enterprise and technical skill of Sidney Cotton
whom his successor, Geoffrey Tuttle,
described to me as the greatest
leader
he had known. Since I have described
my own relations with
photo-reconnaissance in some detail in Most
Secret War, I will say
little
more here beyond repeating my admiration for the outstanding
work that was done at all levels,
both by the pilots and by the
interpreters and also by the army of men and women who processed
the photographs – those whose work, in Lord Slim’s words, usually
only comes to notice when something for
which they are responsible
has gone wrong.
This was equally
true of another service for which the Royal Air
Force
was directly responsible, that of the radio intercept
operators
who listened to German radio signals and had to spend long hours
taking
down streams of Morse characters whose significance was to
them quite unintelligible and yet whose accurate recording
was
essential if the cryptographers were to
have any success in deciphering
them.
It was rather better for those operators
who had to record the
radio-telephone messages between, for example, German night
fighters and their ground control stations,
because once we had
worked
out the significance of various
calls such as ‘Emil Emil’ or
‘Rolf
Lise’ it was possible to listen to the activities of the German
night defences
against our bombers
almost as though we were in a
14
ringside seat. But it was a strain, all
the same.
Cryptography, of course, deserves far
more than a lecture to itself,
even at the tactical level where codes were relatively easy to break.
Curiously, not so much has been told of
the work at this level, beyond
Aileen
Clayton’s excellent book The Enemy is Listening. As regards
cryptography at the then highest level,
Gordon Welchman has given a
detailed account in The Hut 6 Story
which has been supplemented by a
posthumous paper earlier this year (ie 1986 Ed) in Intelligence and
National Security. In this latter he
pays a more adequate tribute to the
work of the Poles who, in 1939, were substantially ahead of us in
breaking Enigma and who handed over their work, including
reconstructions of actual Enigma
machines.
Let me say rather more about the Poles,
for not only did they lead
the way, but they succeeded
in covering their tracks on leaving
Warsaw when it was being overrun by the
Germans. They escaped via
Rumania to France and by the end of
October 1939 they had started to
work again on German cyphers in Paris.
On the collapse of Northern
France,
they moved to a site in Vichy France, but finally that too
became
untenable when the Germans took over. Once again, in
January
1943, they tried to escape,
this time over the Pyrenees
into
Spain. But their commanding officer,
Colonal Lange, and three others
were betrayed en route and were sent to concentration camps where
two of them died. And yet the Germans
never extracted from them any
inkling
that Enigma was vulnerable; to me, their devotion is as
impressive as their intellectual feat in breaking
Enigma. And in
passing we may note that 139 Polish
pilots actually escaped to fight in
the Battle of Britain and that they were Polish Army units which in
1944 took Monte Cassino after it had successfully withstood
all our
own gallant efforts to take it.
A few Poles, too, came into Air Intelligence; one, a flight
lieutenant, was in the Central Interpretation Unit at Medmenham,
where
he worked as a photographic interpreter. His commanding
officer, Gp Capt Peter Stewart, told me that on one occasion he was
taking
the late Duke of Kent on a tour of inspection and the Duke
asked
the Pole what he was doing. Standing
to attention, he very
correctly replied, ‘Please, Sir, you
must ask my commanding officer.’
After
the Duke had left, the group captain
took the Pole aside and,
while praising
him for his sense of security, told him that when a
15
senior officer was escorted around the
unit in the company of the CO
the Pole could, if asked, say exactly
what he was doing. A few weeks
later, the CAS himself visited Medmenham
and in due course he came
into the Pole’s section and asked him what he was doing. Coming
stiffly
to attention, but with a twinkle in his eye, he replied,
‘Please,
Sir, I am making the secret waste!’
Such experiences as all of these
made me realise
the poignant force of that part of Poland’s National
Anthem which runs ‘Poland is not yet
lost’.
Another
important channel by which a Royal Air Force
organisation gained information was that for interrogating prisoners:
this task was undertaken by a branch that ultimately became an
Assistant Directorate, ADI(K), and was
headed throughout the war by
Denys
Felkin. He and his other interrogators secured
much
information by their gentle questioning,
including the earliest mention
of the X-Gerät, in March 1940, which occasioned my first meeting
with him. From that fortunate
start we worked together in complete
confidence and with very fruitful
results for the entire war.
Equipment and documents, besides
prisoners, also fell into our
hands,
the principal items being, of course, crashed
aircraft. In
general, the documents went to Felkin,
who would send them on to
whomever he knew would be most interested. The examination and
recovery of crashed aircraft
was undertaken by the technical
intelligence branch originally designated as AI1(g) and which
ultimately became an Assistant
Directorate. Its officers
did excellent
work in the field, which was
followed up by detailed examination at
Farnborough. One example of Farnborough’s
careful analysis was its
noting
in 1940 that the Lorenz Blind Landing
Receiver installed in
German bombers was much more sensitive
than would be needed for
its ostensible purpose: this clinched
our theory that it was to be used
for beam bombing.
As the war progressed, radar equipment, too, became targets
for
Intelligence, the first and most spectacular example being the
Wurzburg
that we deliberately set out to capture at Bruneval, and
which formed the objective for the
classic raid in which the Parachute
Regiment won its first battle honour.
Most of our information about radar had,
however, to be gained by
other
means, of which the easiest
appeared to be the direct
interception of
German radar transmissions. Since such transmissions,
16
and also those associated with radio-navigation such as the beams,
took place in the same medium, classically called the aether,
as that
used for Morse and telephonic communications, there was a case for
these new tasks of interception to be
undertaken by the Y (or
Sigint)
Service. But the two problems, though technically similar,
were
philosophically different; in signalling, the aether was being used to
transmit information from one human
brain in which it had originated
to another human brain, by means of frequency or amplitude
modulation of the radio waves leaving
the transmitter; in radar and
radio-navigation the waves were being used, not to transmit
intelligible information, but to establish from their times and
directions of travel, geometrical
relationships between points in space.
While the Y Service was excellent in the
former task, it was not at first
attuned to the second; and it was only
after one of my own officers in
desperation took a receiver to the south
coast in February 1941 that we
detected the transmissions from the
German Freyas that the Y Service
had missed from July 1940 onwards.
In parenthesis
here, the differences in the two ways in which one
and the same medium, the aether, can be
exploited may be illustrated
by the analogy
of our ability to use the single medium of paper and
pencil
both to produce written messages
and to make sketches; two
different forms of expression that lead
on to literature in the one case,
and pictorial art in the other. Electronic intelligence can, therefore,
require
specialists as different
in their skills and backgrounds as are
pictorial artists from writers.
This difference was not appreciated by
the classic Y Service, nor for that
matter by their post-war successors
at GCHQ.
We in scientific intelligence had a mixed relationship with the Y
Service as a result. Some degree of
difficulty was inevitable, for if the
Y Service was responsible for signals intelligence and we for
scientific intelligence, whose was the primary
responsibility for
investigating any German development that involved a new
application of science to signalling? At one of the more difficult
periods
in our relationship I happened
to read in The Times of the
engagement of the second-in-command of
DDI4 – the Air Intelligence
Branch
responsible for the Y Service;
he was Wg Cdr Claude
Daubeny, and so I telephoned him
anonymously and rendered what I
could of the Mendelssohn Wedding
March on a mouth-organ. Being
17
in signals intelligence he succeeded in
tracing the call and, as he later
told me, decided that I could not be so
unco-operative as some of his
colleagues claimed me to be. So, on being appointed a few months
later to take over as head of RAF ‘Y’,
he telephoned asking if he could
come to see me. On arrival he said, ‘I
am now DDI4. I have served as
deputy
to two previous DDI4s and I saw them do everything they
could to get you out of your job; they
did not succeed; I want you to
know that I am not as clever as they
are, and so I am not going to try!’
This was the start of the warmest of
friendships; Daubeny had been
at Cranwell with Douglas Bader and was well into a career as a
General Duties officer when he was
posted to the Y Service. Here he
did so well that the Navy and Army agreed that he should head the
organisation that was set up for post-war ‘Y’. He
told me that in the
final
interview that led to his appointment he was asked whether he
had any special requirements. ‘I told
them’, he said to me, ‘that I must
have plenty of time to attend meetings,
and they agreed. Of course, I
didn’t tell them that I meant race
meetings!’
In the immediate post-war period he had
found that he could make
money through betting. His theory, which
ultimately ruined him, was
that although the odds were stacked in
favour of the bookmakers, what
an intelligent punter was doing was to bet, not against the
bookmakers, but against the public
through the bookmakers. There is
one lasting memorial
to his interest in horseracing; it is the siting of
GCHQ,
for when a new establishment had to be built for
cryptographers when Bletchley was
evacuated, he picked Cheltenham
because he could then look forward to
combining visits to GCHQ with
attendance at the Cheltenham meetings.
He would have been amused
to see an incident on television two or
three years ago, when GCHQ
was invaded by racegoers who thought that they were entering the
gates of the racecourse.
Mention
of Bletchley recalls
the fact that several of our
organisations were accommodated in former country
houses:
photographic interpretation at Medmenham; prisoner interrogation at
Latimer; technical intelligence near Harrow; besides
signals
intelligence at Bletchley; radio countermeasures at Radlett; MI5 at
Blenheim; Political Warfare at Woburn,
and so on. This fact at times
encouraged the development of a ‘country
house’ complex, where the
inmates genuinely
believed that theirs was the most important, and
18
sometimes the only significant,
contribution to the intelligence war. It
is easy to see how this could happen;
each in relative isolation would
see relatively little of what the others
were doing; and then, in a visit
of encouragement, some senior officer would
attempt to pep them up
by telling them how valuable their work
was, sometimes slipping into
such hyperbole as to say that theirs was the only contribution that
mattered. I myself never did this; even
though I visited them as often
as I could, I tried to show each the
whole intelligence picture as I saw
it, and where their particular
contribution fitted in.
It is a point that is worth watching for any future intelligence
organisation, for the ‘country
house’ complex can be a source of
weakness of which I saw two other examples.
Fortunately, the first
was in Germany
where military research
after World War I was
restarted in clandestine establishments
which could only come out into
the open after 1933. The Germans then
found that they had a relatively
large
number of small establishments, individually too small to be
ideally
effective, but also strong enough to resist absorption into
bigger
establishments. As a result, the Germans were unable to co-
ordinate their efforts as effectively as
we had been able to do, and only
late in
the war did they attempt the task. My second example was in
the French Resistance organisations
where, for security, if for no other
purpose, small networks had to operate
in isolation, and many
naturally came to believe that their
contributions were unique. Friction
could
start when two networks overlapped, especially when some
networks had different political
complexions from others;
and there
tended to be rivalry for credit and
status at the end of the war when the
networks could come out into the open.
Another
kind of intelligence source, too, tended to be found in
country
houses; these were our British
experts in the field of
weaponry. Radar, for example,
had been housed at Bawdsey
Manor,
and later at Worth Matravers before
settling into Malvern College; and
even in large establishments such as Farnborough and Porton
something of the same complex could be
found. In fact we sometimes
had an
intelligence war between ourselves
and the experts whom we
came to regard as our spies on the laws of nature in the field
concerned, while they regarded
themselves, and not us, as the ultimate
authority in what the Germans were doing
in that field. I have already
mentioned the battle
over the V2 warhead; and I would tend to blame
19
what was probably our greatest failure
over a new German weapon –
the failure to discover
the nerve gases – on the fact that in chemical
warfare the authority for assessing what
the Germans were doing did
not rest with the regular
intelligence organisation but with the
chemical warfare experts at Porton.
The main Air Commands, too, resided in country houses.
Fighter
Command
at Bentley Priory,
Bomber Command at High Wycombe
(Not actually in a country house. Ed), Coastal at
Northwood and 2nd
TAF at Bracknell. In a sense, too, the Commands were sources of
intelligence, for they fed us the combat reports
of their aircrews.
At
times these tended to confuse us, for
example in the overclaims in the
Battle
of Britain, or the bomber myth that IFF paralysed
the radar
control
of German searchlights. But the crews’ experiences did
intensify our own efforts to discover the nature of that
control and it
did prove to have a radar component.
Although overclaiming had led
us to regard fighter reports with
reserve, they proved to be remarkably
good as regards the damage inflicted on
German radar before D-Day.
One important episode in which the
bomber crews thought that we
were doubting their claims concerned
the proportion of our bombers
in 1941 that were succeeding in hitting their targets. Senior officers,
and even Henry Tizard, believed that we
were doing well, using astro
navigation and dead reckoning; but some
of these had doubts which in
my case were reinforced by an indignant
report from a secret agent in
Czechoslovakia that on a night when we
claimed to have bombed the
Skoda works at Pilsen there were no
bombs within many miles of the
town. I told Lindemann, who succeeded in
pressing a most unpopular
investigation of our bombing
accuracy, the acid test of which would
be flashlight photographs taken by each bomber. There was
resentment from the crews, who
thought that the investigation called
into question their courage in pressing home attacks on defended
targets. But they co-operated well, and the evidence proved damning
to all illusions
of accuracy, for on the average, only one-fifth of our
bombs had fallen within five miles of
their targets.
This was one of the occasions when Intelligence had to utter
unwelcome truths. I myself had to do this several times, notably
regarding our jamming of the X-beams in
1940, and in the use of IFF
by Bomber Command over Germany in 1943
and 1944. I could hardly
blame the CinC for
resenting my critical reports, one of which resulted
20
in him being carpeted by the Secretary
of State, Sir Archibald Sinclair.
CAS’s
secretary told me that from time to time when one of my
reports
showed that things were going wrong, CAS would telephone
the CinC and ask him whether he had seen
the report and what he was
going to do about it. At last, in autumn
1944, I was able to report that
with IFF switched
off and more discrete use of H2S, and all our
counter-measures, things were now going
well for the Command. This
time the CinC phoned the CAS first, saying, ‘Have you seen Jones’
latest report?’ It obviously meant all
the more because of our previous
refusal to flinch from saying when we
thought things had gone wrong.
Indeed,
a trust had gradually developed
which can be simplest
illustrated by the difference in attitudes between
1941 and 1944. In
1941 I had wanted to try to deceive
German bombers by sending them
counterfeit messages, which we could
easily have done, but DCAS –
who happened to be Bert Harris – refused
permission on the grounds
that we might well give away more than
we would gain. But in 1944
not only did we have permission to give spoof instructions to the
German
night-fighters, but Bomber Command would te1ephone me
every afternoon before operations with
exact details of targets, timings
and routes, so that I could try to guess which beacons
the German
night fighters would be sent to orbit as
our raids developed, so that our
own night fighters could be sent to
attack them at the beacons.
As illustrated in our relations with
Bomber Command, the need for
Intelligence to have both integrity and
a voice that is independent from
the operational staff must be paramount in a healthy
military
organisation. If anyone doubts this, let
him read the second chapter of
Freeman
Dyson’s book Disturbing the Universe, describing his
experiences in the Operational Research
Section at Bomber Command
– or Winston
Churchill’s verdict on the Battle of the Somme: ‘Sir
Douglas Haig was not at this
time well served by his advisers in the
Intelligence Department of General
Headquarters. The temptation to
tell a
chief in a great position the things he most likes to hear is the
commonest explanation of mistaken
policy. Thus the outlook of the
leader
on whose decisions
fateful events depend is usually
more
sanguine than the brutal facts admit.’
Thus one of the features of working with
Churchill was his interest
in getting the facts from Intelligence,
even to the extent of sometimes
wishing to see the
raw reports for himself. He only had the time to do
21
this occasionally; but as in all his other activities he wanted to
maintain contact with the front line
with as few intermediate links as
possible, and so at times he would summon individuals such as
myself.
And even though he might have flashes
of anger when you
had to tell him some particularly
unwelcome news, he knew from his
earlier
experiences that this was the only way to correct
‘mistaken
policy’. Incidentally, among his earlier experiences were some 140
flights to acquaint himself with the
handling of aircraft – before June
1914!
Besides
Churchill himself I was privileged to come into working
contact with many of the senior Air
figures in the war, and an entire
talk could be devoted to reminiscent appreciations of their
achievements and characters. Charles
Portal as CAS for example, took
a great
interest in our work and invited me to contact
him direct if I
had a problem that the normal
organisational arrangements would not
clear.
This was never necessary when Charles Medhurst
was
ACAS(Int) because he gave us splendid
support. Sholto Douglas, too,
as CinC of Fighter Command,
was determined to use all the
information we could provide, both in
the Battle of the Beams and in
exploiting the decrypted German radar
plots of our fighter sweeps. If I
had to single out the senior Air Officer
who has had least recognition
from posterity for the magnitude
of his contribution it would be
Wilfrid
Freeman, who as the pre-war
Air Member for Research and
Development had warmly and powerfully
supported the development
of radar by Watson-Watt and of the jet engine by Whittle,
the
Mosquito by de Havilland and several of the ideas of Barnes
Wallis.
In 1940 he might well have become Chief
of Air Staff, but unselfishly
agreed to be Portal’s Vice-Chief, even
though his seniority was such
that he had been on the Directing
Staff at Staff College when Portal
was taking the course. And again, in 1941, when things were going
wrong
in the Mediterranean, and Churchill
had such doubts about
Tedder’s leadership that Freeman
was sent out to investigate, Portal
signalled him with the suggestion that he should stay and take over
from Tedder. On receiving the
suggestion, Freeman signalled back; ‘It
is obvious that evidence of friend sent
out to investigate is being used
to incriminate. You and S of S will understand that role of Judas is
one I cannot fill.’ And so he gave up the chance of going on to be
Deputy Supreme
Commander in Normandy.
I still have an entirely
22
unsolicited and handwritten note from him as VCAS congratulating
me on my report on the X-Gerät of January 1941 which, because
it
incidentally showed that our
countermeasures organisation against the
X-beams had so far been almost entirely
ineffective, aroused so much
hostility from the staff concerned that they succeeded
temporarily in
enforcing its withdrawal. But Freeman went well out of his way to
encourage me, describing the report as ‘admirable’ despite
the
controversy it had raised among the
staff. That was the kind of man he
was – and no-one deserves a biographer
more. (Again, this was said in
1986;
the gap has since been filled by Wilfrid Freeman by Anthony
Furse; Spellmount, Staplehurst, 1999. Ed)
If I may mention one other officer who
has received little mention
in the records
but whom I came to admire, this would be Air Cdre
Frank
Woolley, the Chief Intelligence Officer
of the Mediterranean
Air Forces in 1944, which reminds me that yet another kind of
Intelligence War that we had sometimes
had to fight was with our
American counterparts when it came to deciding the destination of
captured German equipment. Naturally, they wanted it to be sent
direct to America, and we to Britain.
At one stage there was a crazy
ruling that anything small enough to go
into an aircraft should come to
us, and anything
bigger should go by ship to America.
One friendly
American colonel said to me that this
was resulting in my chaps going
around with hacksaws and his with
welding torches. At times, though,
things
could be unpleasant, and one of my civilian
officers got so
worked
up that he threw an inkstand through
the window of an
American colonel (not the one of the previous
sentence) from inside
the colonel’s room. I thought it tactful
to recall him, and in due course
I sent out a replacement, having taken
the greatest care to pick one on
whose
equable temperament I could depend.
I was grateful to Frank
Woolley for even accepting a replacement
after all the trouble he had
had in smoothing out the previous
fracas.
I was, therefore, horrified when before long there was an even
more serious fracas when my new representative asked to go to
Rumania to examine captured radar there.
The Americans insisted on
sending
one of their civilians to accompany him, even though their
man was not nearly so well qualified and
was, in fact, junior in rank;
and they insisted
that their man should be in charge.
In Bucharest
there was a flare-up
which went so far as the American
striking our
23
man – but because the American had the signals
link, he radioed
a
formal
complaint alleging that he had been struck by our man, and
asking
for the latter’s withdrawal. ‘This makes stirring
reading,’
minuted ‘Tubby’ Grant, the Director of
Intelligence in London, when
the papers were laid on his desk. It became quite an inter-allied
incident and I would have entirely
understood if Frank Woolley,
having had the previous trouble over one
of my staff, had insisted on
the second man being recalled, and been
only too glad to be relieved
of us turbulent
scientists. Instead he signalled that he was taking no
action
until he had heard my officer’s
account of the incident and in
the meantime he weighed into the Americans
stressing the vital
importance of our work to the Americans
and the Russians as well as
ourselves. It fortunately turned out
that the behaviour of our man had
been exemplary in the face of provocation,
and Woolley’s faith in us
had been justified; but I learnt much
from his restraint in not passing
judgement until he had heard both sides,
despite any predisposition to
believe the worst.
At that point he and I had never even met; and our meeting
was
delayed because of serious injuries he
sustained at Cassino. He may be
remembered by some from pre-war air force
days, for he carried
out
the acceptance
trials for the Anson, which developed
into one of the
great workhorses as a result of his suggestions.
Fortunately, Woolley was one of those
Royal Air Force officers of
whom it has been my privilege to know
many, who are patient enough
to endure the peccadilloes of civilian scientists. In retrospect I
gratefully recall how patient most
senior air officers were with us. The
tradition evidently goes back to RFC days, for the late Sir William
Farren wrote of his experiences in 1916
in learning to fly along with F
A Lindemann (later Lord Cherwell) when
they were civilian scientists
at Farnborough. ‘I doubt’, wrote Farren,
‘whether anything about him
impressed me quite as much as his complete
indifference to the
difficulties of arriving at an RFC
station in a bowler hat and carrying
an umbrella. Lindemann was unperturbed
and, to my surprise, so was
the RFC. Their instructions were to teach us to fly, and presumably
did not extend to what particular kind
of clothes we wore.’
I found almost the inverse
situation one day in 1943 when I was
visiting the Central Interpretation Unit at Medmenham
and I was
asked over a pre-lunch drink what kind of man
Professor J D Bernal
24
was. I cautiously replied that he was a
very good physicist, and asked
the cause of the enquiry.
I was then told that he had visited
Medmenham in the previous
week because he was concerned
with
bomb damage assessment, as they also
were. They had been set back
by his untidy appearance and they commented, ‘After all, we are a
regular
RAF Station, and he might have put on a decent suit to visit
us. But he seemed quite a pleasant
chap, and at the end of the
afternoon he invited us to go over to see his own work at Princes
Risborough. We went yesterday, and as soon as we saw him in his
own place we realised we had done him an
injustice — he had put on
his best suit when he came to visit us!’
There
are many other points that I should like to have made, but
they would stretch far beyond the
compass of a single lecture. I have
said nothing, for example, about the many gallant actions
by RAF
personnel in the pursuit
of the intelligence we required,
such as the
contributions of Sqn Ldr Tony Hill and FSgt Charles Cox to the
success of the Bruneval raid, and Plt
Off Harold Jordan and the entire
crew of the reconnaissance Wellington who, although wounded,
survived eleven attacks by a German
night fighter while listening to its
Lichtenstein
radar, and brought their riddled aircraft,
and their vital
information, back to England. Also, I
have not discussed the problems
of deciding priorities between short-term and long-term intelligence,
for example in competing for the cryptographic effort at Bletchley.
Nor have I mentioned the complementary
task of Intelligence in trying
to mislead the intelligence organisation of an opponent,
such as the
part played by Flt Lt Cholmondeley in The Man Who Never Was, or
the hazardous operations of dropping and picking up Resistance
agents.
These and many other topics could be among those that the
Society may care to consider in its
future deliberations.
Looking
back on those aspects with which I myself was
particularly concerned, our successes,
such as those against the beams,
radar
and the V-weapons, were obvious
enough, but we sometimes
had failures even in the midst of success, and something might be
learned from studying them. The nerve gases, for example,
were not
recognised; this was due at least
in part to the fact that, although we
heard of nerve gas in 1940, the
correlation of intelligence in chemical
warfare
was not done in the intelligence organisation proper, but at
Porton where the interpretation of reports may have been biased too
25
much by a knowledge of what Porton
itself had succeeded or failed in
developing. We may have been slow to
detect upward firing guns on
German
night fighters, and it seemed that we did not emphasise
sufficiently, although we had reported
it, the awkward height at which
the V1s flew – too high for light, and
too low for heavy, AA guns. We
also failed to recognise the aerodynamics research
institute at
Volkenrohde. In nearly every case part of the explanation lay in
inadequate liaison between different
sections of intelligence or
between
the intelligence organisation and the operational commands
or our own research establishments.
Where
we succeeded, I felt, this was due to strengths
of
understanding that came from contacts that were all the closer and
warmer
under the stimulus
of a perceived danger. And here, in
conclusion, I would echo Tizard’s
verdict on the success of his famous
Committee on the Scientific Survey of
Air Defence:
‘The first time, I believe,
that scientists were ever called in to
study the needs of the Services as
distinct from their wants, was
in 1935, and then only as a last resort.
The Air Staff were
convinced of the inadequacy of existing
methods and equipment
to defeat air attack on Great Britain,
and a Committee was
established for the scientific survey of air defence. I want to
emphasise that this committee, although it consisted
on paper
only of scientists, was in fact from the first a committee of
scientists and serving officers, working
together.
When I went to Washington in 1940, I
found that radar had
been invented in America about the same time as it had been
invented in England. We were, however, a
very long way ahead
in its practical applications to war.
The reason for this was that
scientists and serving officers
had combined before the war to
study its tactical uses. This is the
great lesson of the last war.’
And that lesson applies with as much force to intelligence as it
does to science.
26
MEETING ON 16 MARCH 1987
Introduction by Air Marshal Sir Frederick
Sowrey
Introducing John Terraine, the Chairman said that he was ‘... an
historian who is perhaps best known for
his work on World War I and
he needs little introduction to us. His
volumes on that war stand four-
square
on their style and accuracy,
and also on their judgement. His
linking
through to the last war, which I think appears
between the
lines of The Right of the Line,
gives him a perspective on the use of air
power which is invaluable to us.
John Terraine could also perhaps be credited as the fertile
soil on
which this Society grew, because it was after his lecture at the RUSI
that a straw poll was held to see
whether there was likely to be support
for a Society
such as ours, when we knew that there was incipient
response but nothing had been put
practically to the test. He speaks to
us tonight, not only as an historian,
but as a patron and a member.’
WORLD WAR II – THE BALANCE
SHEET
by John Terraine
I must say first of all that I am very
sensible of the honour that the
Society has done me by inviting me to
address you tonight at what is
only the second meeting. I am also sensible, in a wryer sense, for
myself,
of my difficulty in following
a speaker like Professor Jones
who got our inaugural meeting off to
such a magnificent start.
I think I should first of all make it
clear what this ‘balance sheet’ is
that I shall be speaking about tonight.
As you may guess, it is strictly a
World War II RAF balance sheet. I do not
venture beyond 1945; I do
not put myself forward as a crystal-ball-gazer of any kind; and the
‘balance’ in question is a balance
between intention and performance,
which I do not propose to measure by
ledger accountancy, but simply
to describe and leave the accountancy to
you.
In any
such computation it must, of course,
be a heavy weighting
factor that we – the British Empire and
the Royal Air Force – emerged
from World War II on the winning,
and not the losing, side. It is a
significant consideration. Also, I think I should add one qualifying
rider to what I have just said, which may best be expressed
by an
27
illustration. A few weeks ago I opened a
seminar at the Royal United
Services Institute with an historical
résumé on the subject of Land/Air
warfare. Each speaker was to talk for 35
minutes, and I was somewhat
disturbed to find that rather more than 20 minutes’
worth of my talk
was taken up with World War I.
Disturbed, that is to say, until I totted
up (for my own benefit
as well as that of the audience)
the list of
subjects that I had been discussing; it
was this:-
long-range
reconnaissance
short-range
reconnaissance
photographic
reconnaissance
aerial survey
artillery
co-operation
interdiction
the tactical use of
air power.
If you add to those, naval co-operation (with particular emphasis
on anti-submarine warfare),
the beginnings of air supply,
and
appreciable development of
strategic air offensives, you will see that
there is not much left; World War I
virtually ran the air power gamut.
Sadly,
however, as it turned out, the RAF never quite took the
measure of its own antecedents.
Institutionally, as we all know, the RAF
was born on 1 April 1918
but as an instrument of military
aviation I would suggest that a better
date would be 13 August 1914, when the first three squadrons of the
infant
Royal Flying Corps flew into the theatre
of war; one of
history’s significant first occasions if
ever there was one. When their
back-up
organisation, known as the Aircraft
Park, also arrived,
the
RFC was a going concern,
and since the Western Front was the
decisive location of the First World
War, it could not have been more
effectively placed.
Equipment, of course, was always the
limiting factor – there were
very strict limits to what the aircraft
of the day could do; but one role
the RFC seized upon unhesitatingly – long-range reconnaissance.
Throughout the Mons campaign in 1914 and
the retreat to the Marne,
the RFC established itself as the ‘eye
in the sky’ to such an extent that
British
GHQ, which had originally been more than somewhat
patronising, abruptly
swung over to ‘almost embarrassing deference’ –
28
a condition which, of course, carries
with it certain dangers of its own.
When the war settled down into trenches
and became (as it very
soon did) an artillery war, short-range
reconnaissance in collaboration
with the guns became the prime duty of
the airmen, and remained so
for the rest of the war. An early refinement of this function
was
photographic reconnaissance which made possible an accurate
charting of the enemy’s
lines, defences, supply dumps and
communications. A further refinement of
this, whose ‘finest hour’ for
the RFC came in 1917, was a meticulous aerial survey of the whole
British front, which the Royal Engineers
translated into the first really
reliable map. This became the basis of
the ‘artillery boards’ supplied
to all the batteries. Thanks to this, and the introduction of the
technique of calibration, the artillery was now able to open fire
without
previous registration at exact targets
(instead of what I have
called
‘blazing away at a landscape’), thus restoring surprise
and
bringing precision into battle practice. These two factors,
plus
protection supplied by smoke, unlocked the trench-bound battlefields
and restored the war of movement in
1918. That was a direct fruit of
Land/Air co-operation – in fact its most
valuable fruit – and it is one
of history’s extraordinary circumstances
that it took until 1942 for the
penny to drop in the next war.
But that was not all. There was interdiction, or rather, attempts at
interdiction. The first (by the RFC) was the attempt to do severe
damage to the railways behind the German front during the
Battle of
Loos in September 1915. With the
aircraft and bombs of the day this
could only be a pathetic failure – which
it was. A later attempt, on 8
August 1918 (the opening of the highly successful Battle of Amiens,
‘the black day of the German Army’),
was intended to destroy the
Somme bridges to prevent reinforcements
from reaching the German
front. It proved to be a ‘black day’ for
the RAF also; 45 aircraft were
shot down and 52 more were so badly damaged
that they had to be
written
off. The bridges
stood. It was, nevertheless, a day worth
mentioning in the history of air power
because on it the RAF deployed
some 800 machines,
and the French on their right over 1,100 – an
amazing
total of 1,900 aircraft bearing
the clear sign that this was
what great battles of the future were
going to be like.
I mention
air supply in my list of contributions. The scale, I need
hardly say, was
trivial by the standards of the later war, but everything
29
has to
have a beginning. For the RAF this
was on 4 July 1918 when
aircraft dropped 100,000 rounds of small arms ammunition to
Australian machine-gunners on the
battlefield of le Hamel. During the
advance
in Flanders in October, when rain turned the old Ypres
battlefields into swamps which threatened to cut off supplies to the
forward
troops, the RAF joined in a drop of 15,000 rations – a
ludicrously small amount by comparison with, say, RAF supplies to
the Fourteenth Army during the monsoon
advance in Burma in 1944,
but as I say, there has to be a
beginning.
The same was true of close tactical
support. This was always
difficult, and very dangerous, to practise against
forces well
entrenched. During the great German advance
in March 1918 the
landscape suddenly filled with troops and vehicles out in the open.
The British and French fliers needed no
urging to ‘have a go’ and they
certainly produced effects, but these
were local and, in relation to the
scale of the battle, insignificant.
However, there was a very clear hint
of what the future might hold in General Allenby’s
final advance in
Palestine in September. His small air
contingent flung itself upon the
Turks
and turned their retreat into a rout, with scenes of destruction
which seem to be previews of the Falaise
Gap in 1944. All in all, the
air performance in World
War I was impressive and one might have
supposed that it would leave imperishable memories and a clear
example
for both Army and Air Force. Alas, it did not! As Sir
Maurice Dean wrote:- ‘Between 1918 and 1939 the RAF forgot how
to support the Army.’ Since it turned out that the RAF had also
forgotten how to support the Navy it may
be said that this was a costly
lapse
of memory. It certainly prompts
the question – What did the
RAF think it was for in the 1930s? That question is, of course,
no
sooner asked than answered.
Members of this Society are unlikely to forget that the RAF, as a
separate Service, was in fact born of a
strategic air offensive, launched
by the German Air Force with Gotha and
R.VI ‘Giant’ aeroplanes in
May 1917. The attack on British cities by these aircraft was not, by
our standards, very destructive of life
or property but the effect on the
morale of people and
Government was enormous. As the Chief of the
Imperial General Staff remarked
after a Cabinet meeting following
one of the raids, ‘One would have
thought the world was coming to an
end.’ So, the Smuts
Committee was set up, and out of its findings the
30
RAF was born.
Already
the German performance was being challenged by a
British
counter-offensive and in June, 1918 the Independent Force
came into existence
under Major-General Sir Hugh Trenchard
– and
that was a date in history, too. In the time given, Trenchard’s
Independent Force actually caused even fewer casualties and less
damage than the Germans had done, but
once again the morale effect
was considerable and Trenchard himself
pronounced that:- ‘the moral
effect of bombing stands to the material
effect in a proportion of 20 to
1.’ This belief became the
foundation-stone of RAF strategic thinking
thereafter.
In the inter-war
years the pursuit
of a strategic air offensive
as a
substitute for the existing modes of
waging war, the deep faith in war
by bombing, and the equal faith that, in
Mr Baldwin’s famous phrase,
‘the bomber will always get through’, took on the attributes of
religious dogma. It may, indeed, be said that bombing was what the
RAF was all about. Some
Imperial policing had to be done, some
concession had to be made to civilian fears, some fighter squadrons
had to appear on the strength, but bombing was what the RAF
understood by real air warfare, and bombing was what it chiefly
intended to perform.
In the 1920s and ‘30s the constant
refrain of both the champions
and the enemies of air power was the
prospect of what was called ‘the
knockout blow’. It was the
hope of delivering a quick crushing blow at
the enemy’s heartland, instead of engaging
his armed forces,
that
enthused the air power prophets. This, they said, would be the new
style
of warfare, the revolutionary language of the future. As such it
was very welcome because the still fresh
memory of 1914-1918, and
particularly the costly battering-ram
procedures of the Western Front,
was viewed with intense revulsion
by many people. So, the ‘anti
World
War I’ school lined up on the side of air power, with its
promise
of a short, sharp conflict
in which, with luck, bricks and
mortar would be the chief sufferers.
Politicians echoed the national
mood as they usually do. The
Treasury, always trying to cut military
expenditure by every available
means,
approved of the air force as an economical alternative to a
conscript army and a big battle
fleet. Supporters of disarmament and
collective security
through the League of Nations were quick to seize
31
on the ‘knockout blow’ as a powerful
argument on their side. Add to
this the science-fiction output in
literature and the cinema and one can
see that a considerable degree of
hysteria attached itself to the subject,
and with it a degree of unreality. What I find hard to accept is the
virtually complete failure to take note of the actual air warfare that
was taking place at the time.
In 1932 the Japanese bombed Shanghai, and people paying their
weekly
visit to the cinema were able to see the bombs fall and the
smoke
go up, and a very shocking sight it was. Exact information
about
what was happening
was, of course, just about impossible to
come by – I mean figures showing how
many aircraft were used, how
many tons of bombs were dropped, how much damage,
how many
casualties, how many killed,
etc. Very difficult
to establish, but I
wonder how hard anyone really tried. One
fact about the Japanese war
in China does stand
out, however, and steadily made itself clearer
at
the time; that whatever might be happening
in it, what was not
happening was a ‘knockout blow’. In the ten years that
separated the
Shanghai bombing from Pearl Harbour the cities
of China experienced
a pretty fair amount of air bombardment, but China was still in the
war. It seems to have been a point worth noting but there is no
evidence that anyone did.
There
was another example
too, if anything even more striking.
The Spanish Civil War broke out in 1936
and for three years Madrid
was a beleaguered city, under some degree of air attack for most of
that time, with large international Press coverage and some very
striking newsreels to illustrate the event. Barcelona
was also heavily
attacked, the bombing there in March 1938 causing
a casualty total
about
the same as Britain’s in the whole of the First World War.
Civilian air raid deaths in the entire
Spanish war would seem to have
been about 14,000 in the Republican area
and about another 1,000 in
the Nationalist
zone. That amounts to roughly 3% of the full total of
people killed in the war. Once more, there
was no ‘knockout blow’.
What there was, however, was a very
considerable air contribution
to the land battles by each side. The Nationalists in particular
compensated for a serious
shortage of artillery
by using German
bombers, most spectacularly the Junkers
87 dive-bombers, which thus
obtained a new lease of life on the threshold of obsolescence and
would be heard of
again. It was in August 1938 that ‘command of the
32
air passed decisively to the
Nationalists’, after which the issue
of the
war was never in doubt. Yet the Chief of the Air Staff, Sir Cyril
Newall, pronounced that this aspect of
the war was a ‘gross misuse of
air force’, and there is nothing to show
that he had changed his mind
by September 1939 or even May 1940. So we see that the RAF
between
the wars was dedicated to long-range bombing
as its chief
expression of air power and it is,
therefore, the more curious, I think
you will agree, that it was not until
the spring of 1938 that it began to
make actual plans for carrying this out.
Now, when we talk of the RAF we are talking of a technical
service
which is not to be understood in any other sense; divorced
from its aircraft the RAF, unlike the Luftwaffe
of that period, ceases to
exist.
So it is important to remind ourselves
of what comprised
Bomber Command in 1938:-
17 squadrons of Fairey Battles
16 squadrons of Bristol Blenheims
5 squadrons of Handley Page Harrows
2 squadrons of Vickers Wellesleys
9 squadrons of Armstrong Whitworth
Whitleys.
The Battles, Harrows and Wellesleys were recognised as obsolete
and were on their way out; the Blenheims never pretended to be
anything but short-range aircraft
and, as I said in The Right of the
Line,
‘nine squadrons of Whitleys did not make a strategic
bombing
force’. Yet it was precisely at this
time that the Air Staff and Bomber
Command were insisting that by
concentrating on 19 power plants and
26 coking plants in the Ruhr, flying 3,000 sorties
at a cost of 176
aircraft, the RAF could bring German war-making capability to a
standstill. The bomber mandarins
seem to have existed in a ‘Never-
Never
Land’ unrelated to geographical, mechanical or numerical
reality: knocking out the German war
industry in a fortnight with 144
Whitleys takes some beating!
Fortunately a sharp wind of realism
was about to blow. Air Chf
Mshl Sir Edgar Ludlow-Hewitt became
AOCinC, Bomber Command
in September 1937. He had a penetrating mind and a sharp eye, and
was forthright in expressing his views. It was his belief that war
planning without operational efficiency
is merely hypothetical, and on
taking up his post he set about investigating every aspect of Bomber
Command’s readiness
for war. He presented two reports, which make
33
astonishing reading after all the talk of independent air power and
‘knockout blows’; they display
the RAF’s centrepiece, its favourite
child,
with merciless clarity
on the very eve of war. It amounted to
this;
in Ludlow-Hewitt’s opinion
his Command was ‘entirely
unprepared for war, unable to operate
except in fair weather, and
extremely vulnerable both in the air and on the ground.’
Well might
the official historians say, on this
authority, that ‘.... when war came in
1939,
Bomber Command was not trained
or equipped either to
penetrate into enemy territory
by day or to find its target areas, let
alone
its targets, by night ... This seems a strange result after twenty
years
of devoted work.’ It does indeed. It meant, as Webster and
Frankland say, that the RAF’s most treasured instrument was
‘incapable of carrying out the operations on which the Air Ministry
had based its strategy for the last four years.’
Indeed, with war
immediately imminent, there was a very real difficulty in finding
anything effective at all for Bomber Command to do – an
extraordinary state of affairs.
And this was not all. Fighter Command,
under Air Chf Mshl Sir
Hugh Dowding, was a thing apart, inasmuch
as it contained the two
most effective weapons in the RAF’s
armoury, the Hawker Hurricane
and the Supermarine Spitfire. Both were combat aircraft
and both
were unquestionably capable
of performing the tasks for which they
were intended, which was something
you could not say for most
others. Dowding’s problem was very simple, to get and keep enough
of them, and this brought
him up against an unpalatable truth; that
despite a practically nationwide aversion we were, once again, going
to be engaged
in a coalition war on the European
continent. Once
again there would be a BEF as in 1914,
but unlike the 1914 article this
one would require
immediate large-scale air support, and this air
support
would have to have a fighter component. Dowding had no
doubts
about what that would consist
of; the only RAF aircraft
that
could
deal with modern German fighters
(already seen in action in
Spain)
were his precious
Hurricanes and Spitfires. The Spitfires he
was determined not to let out of his
grasp, so it would be Hurricanes,
at first just four squadrons of them.
But the demand from all quarters
kept growing and Dowding grimly remarked
‘the despatch of 4 Field
Force
squadrons has opened a tap through which will run the total
Hurricane output.’
His unflagging fight was to keep a hand on that tap
34
– if it was possible.
When war came some fundamental matters were soon decided.
First,
there was the immediate abandonment of the anticipated
strategic air offensive against
Germany – a traumatic volte-face.
Coupled
with that was the discovery
that daylight operations against
the German mainland
were out of the question, and whatever was to
be done – leaflet dropping
or bombing – would have to be done at
night.
In other words, Bomber Command
would have to become a
night
force, which was something for which it had never been
intended, equipped or trained.
This was traumatic, too. Also, it was
realised with much dismay that, even in
attacking the more accessible
targets
just across the North Sea, bombers were not able
to defend
themselves against modern fighters, even in tight formation. Another
trauma.
And when the real fighting
in the West began the lessons
flowed
in thick and fast, with the Battle of France in May and June,
1940 supplying the real tutorial.
It is difficult, in my opinion,
to exaggerate the historical
importance of the Battle of France. It
was what Ronald Lewin would
call the ‘pay-off’, of a whole complex
of errors – political, ideological,
technological and strategic – which possessed
the Western world
between
the wars. The German triumph
in France in 1940 has been
attributed to various factors with more
or less truth. For myself, I have
no hesitation in saying that the
decisive element was what I call ‘the
saturation of a battle area by air power’ – and at the root of that
achievement was the fighter.
In France in 1940 the fighter was the
sanction of all that occurred or did not occur. The Allies discovered
that their weapons and their system of
war were irrelevant to the 1,200
Messerschmitt 109s and 110s which
saturated the battle area and made
possible the operations of about 1,700 assorted bombers
and ten
Panzer divisions. The only weapon on the Allied side that proved to
be able steadily to cope with the
stresses of the battle was the RAF’s
Hurricane. The Hurricane pilots never had the sense of being
outclassed – but they were only too well
aware of being outnumbered.
The grim outcome
was, as I said in my book, that the RAF now
found
itself in the position of ‘looking over both shoulders
at once,
which is an awkward posture for a man
and tends to blur his vision’.
The Air Staff and
Bomber Command were still
looking at Germany;
Dowding was looking
at Britain, which it was his duty to defend. But
35
the decisive battle was happening in
France and the hard truth is that
the RAF was virtually
irrelevant to it. If we are looking for a lesson it
.
is clear enough, don’t
be irrelevant. The humiliating disaster of the |
Battle of France is one of history’s
great punctuation marks. It totally
altered the terms of reference of the
Second World War. It marked the
end of an epoch – of dreams, unreality,
theories and follies. It could all
too easily have marked the end of
Britain and the British Empire: but
after June, 1940 the realities came
thundering in.
After
France, Britain: that was the obvious logic – but history is
rarely so simple. The question in July,
1940 was whether the Luftwaffe
could
now take command
of the sky over the narrow waters of the
Channel as it had done in France, thus
neutralising British sea power
and making invasion
possible. Its commander, Hermann Goering,
thought
it could, and Hitler allowed
himself to be persuaded. What
followed was the Battle of Britain,
the first decisive
air battle in
history – decisive in all senses of the
word. It was also one of history’s
ironies. The battle was fought and won
by Fighter Command, yet the
separate RAF really existed
for the opposite purpose – offensive
bombing. The RAF was not really about
fighters at all.
In the Battle of Britain, as usual in
air matters, we see technology
again
at the centre of the event. There were, first, the two admirable
fighters, the Spitfire and the Hurricane, and there was the system of
using
them – a system itself based on the new technology of radar
which had provided the guideline for
Fighter Command since its very
beginning. The Dowding battle system was one of tight control
and
deployment founded on the intelligence coming from the radar chain
and other sources, received in Fighter
Command’s famous Operations
Room at Stanmore,
filtered and transmitted outwards to the
Operations Rooms of the Groups and
Sectors, and finally passed to the
squadrons in the form of precise
instructions about location
and
altitude and what to expect, through
one of the most comprehensive
communications networks so far seen.
Control was definitely tight, all
the way down. I said in The Right of
the Line, there was no place in it
for ‘free-range’ activity
or mavericks’. I was referring, of course, to
AVM Sir Trafford
Leigh-Mallory, AOC 12 Group, and that
distinguished flyer Sqn Ldr Douglas
Bader, and the ‘big wing’ dispute
which
blemishes the ultimate
achievement. It is my view that there
was never very much
reality in the ‘big wing’ theory. The whole thing
36
was really a matter of personality – the ambitious
personality of
Leigh-Mallory and the eager, combative personality of Douglas
Bader.
The blemish lies in the apparent inability
of RAF command
procedure to deal with a situation
which ought never to have
developed at all.
The RAF’s achievement in the battle (and we should remember
that both Bomber Command and Coastal Command
did also play a
part in it) was victory, clear and
unmistakable: the clear defeat of the
Luftwaffe, Germany’s first
defeat in the war. And from that victory Air
Chf Mshl Sir Hugh Dowding emerges as the
only air commander with
an unquestionable ‘battle honour’ of his
own.
So, the invasion
of Britain was ruled out, but by any rational
military judgement Britain’s overall
position was hopeless.
Fortunately, rational military judgement
did not decide the issue,
Hitler took the astonishing, and really
lunatic, course of attacking the
Soviet
Union with an undefeated enemy at his back. So Britain was
saved after all, but her survival was
nevertheless precarious. For those
at the centre of affairs another threat
visibly developed in 1940 which
somewhat dulled the lustre of the
victory in the skies.
I am, of course, referring to the U-boat
campaign against Britain’s
whole
supply system, which took on a new dimension when the
Germans
occupied the European
littoral from the North Cape to the
Spanish
frontier. We had faced a U-boat peril before, above all the
‘unrestricted U-boat warfare’ which
began officially in February, 1917
and remained a serious threat until the
second quarter of 1918. It was
in 1917 that the Secretary
of State for War told the Commander-in-
Chief of the British Expeditionary
Force, ‘... we have lost command of
the sea.’ His words would be ominously
echoed in 1942. In the event,
solutions were found in 1917-1918. The U-boats were defeated but
they had provided
the most serious
naval threat since the Spanish
Armada,
and probably the worst scare that the Admiralty had ever
had. Amazingly, in 1937 we nevertheless find the Naval Staff
asserting that ‘the submarine should
never again be able to present us
with the problem we were faced with in 1917’.
‘Never again’ – fatal
words; call-sign of too many disastrous
notions between the wars!
The new battle against the U-boats
effectively began in the summer
of 1940 and for the next three years, as Churchill says, that ‘one
anxiety reigned
supreme’. From the western point of view the
Battle
37
of the Atlantic, fought from 1940-1943,
was the decisive battle of the
war – in two ways. It was, first of all, a decisive
defensive battle on
which Britain’s survival depended as
surely as it did on defeating the
Luftwaffe
in the sky in 1940. This defensive phase lasted from mid-
1940 until the first days of 1942. The battle ceased to be defensive
when the decisions
taken at the Arcadia (Anglo-American)
Conference in Washington in December 1941 and January
1942
became
official Allied policy.
The most important
of them was the
American decision to take on ‘Germany
first’; it was fundamental, and
shaped
the rest of the war. The natural
corollary of ‘Germany
first’
was an Allied landing in north-west Europe,
which meant a massive
build-up of American land and air forces
in Britain (BOLERO) for an
assault
in 1943 (ROUNDUP). From the moment of that decision
the
Battle
of the Atlantic became also the lynch-pin
of Allied offensive
strategy.
Now, where does the RAF come in? It comes, of course,
in the
form of Coastal
Command under a succession of able AOCinCs:
Sir
Frederick Bowhill, Sir Philip Joubert and Sir John Slessor. Coastal
was the Cinderella of the Commands in
1939, the most obvious victim
of the ‘locust
years’ of pre-war
neglect. Nothing illustrates its
‘Cinderella quality’ better than its
armament: the core of its strength in
1939 was ten squadrons of Avro Ansons,
scarcely military aircraft at
all, lacking speed, lacking range and virtually
unarmed. The
Command as a whole had practically no combat capacity
and in fact
reconnaissance was just about all it was
expected to do. It took a long
time – until 1942 in fact – to change
this deplorable state of affairs and
get back to the highly effective methods
of co-operation between
naval
and air anti-submarine forces which had become regular,
standard drills in 1918. The Navy had forgotten
the hard-bought
lesson that what it liked to call ‘offensive
tactics’ (large-scale U-boat
hunts) were a sheer waste of time. The
one sure place to find U-boats
was near convoys
and in World War II, convoy escort,
derided as
‘defensive action’, was in fact the
opposite. Convoy escort was where
you made your kills. And for convoy
escort, 1918 also taught that the
right kind of aircraft was essential.
‘The right kind’: Well into 1943, Coastal
Command’s great
struggle was for the necessary equipment
of all kinds: for more and
better aircraft,
especially VLR (in particular the Very Long Range
38
B-24 Liberators); for weapons – illuminants and depth charges
with
the right fuses and fillings;
for ASV (air-to-surface-vessel) radar, in
fierce competition with Bomber Command.
And all the time there was
intense tactical study, the ceaseless
perfection of techniques; methods
of attack, speeds, heights and angles of
approach, fuse settings, depth-
charge
spacings, communications with naval vessels
and ships in
convoys, etc.
At last the day came (in July 1942) when air action, which in
the
first
half of the year accounted
for just over 30% of a very small
number
of U-boat kills, in the second half accounted for 53% of a
substantial number. That was the turning
point. The moment of
decision was May 1943, during which no
fewer than 41 U-boats were
sunk.
Aircraft claimed 56% of these kills, and of the aircraft total
Coastal Command claimed 69.5%. Among the
various forces engaged,
it had become a major U-boat killer. And it remained an
outstanding
scourge of the U-boats for the rest of
the war. D-Day in 1944 put the
crown on Coastal Command’s efforts, as it did on the Atlantic
battle
as a whole: 30 Coastal
Command squadrons covered
the south-
western
approaches to the D-Day convoy routes, quartering every
square mile of sea every 30 minutes by
day and night, with the result
that the U-boats proved totally
ineffective against the great combined
operation.
The D-Day landings and the Battle of
Normandy were the supreme
offensive action of the Western Allies in the war, contributing
incalculably to the defeat of Germany.
The victory in the West could
not have taken place without
the victory in the Atlantic,
which thus
rates as an offensive victory of
maximum importance. It is fair to say
that Coastal Command had restored the
lost art of naval co-operation
with a vengeance!
So Britain, at the end of 1940, had won
one fight for survival and
was firmly locked in another.
But what was she doing – what could
she do at that stage – about actually
defeating Germany? It is clear that
the Royal Navy with all its merits cannot be the direct element in
winning victory over a major land power
based in central Europe. The
Army, after Dunkirk, took a long time to
rebuild its strength, and from
June 1940 until the end of 1942 (with the exception of the brief,
disastrous campaign in Greece)
it saw little of its main enemy. Its
chief opponent,
the Afrika Korps, never numbered more than four
39
weak divisions out of a German battle order of 471 divisions
in the
spring
of 1942. That left the RAF. Bomber Command could at least
have a go at what it was always intended
for: the attack on
communications, military installations and war industry
in the
enemy’s homeland, and at the same time a blow at
the morale of his
population. And so, with a force which, until 1943, was almost
entirely composed of Wellingtons, Hampdens and the ancient
Whitleys (and which very rarely in 1941 numbered
more than 200
operational aircraft) Bomber Command set
out to do just that, because
there
was absolutely nothing
else that Britain
could do to damage
Germany. Bomber Command thus shared the hard experience of the
BEF in 1915 and 1916, lacking weapons,
lacking necessary equipment
of all kinds, lacking experience and
training for the new style of war,
but forced by inexorable circumstance to engage a powerful and
determined enemy.
We should always remember that the strategic
air offensive, as it
developed between 1940-1945, was born of defeat. Without utter
defeat in France, if the front in the West had continued to exist, I do
not see how there could have been a strategic air offensive; the RAF
would
have been far too busy supporting armies which would have
had their work cut out to survive.
However, there was such an
offensive, and a vast enterprise it ultimately became.
I must freely
admit
that my admiration for the aircrews of Bomber Command,
British, Dominion and Allied,
is so deep as to be virtually
inexpressible: theirs was ‘the right of the line’ indeed and a damned
uncomfortable place it can be, as they found out. The strategic
offensive is always associated – understandably – with Bomber
Command’s most famous AOCinC,
Sir Arthur Harris.
It was not his
brain-child, nor was it ever his sole
responsibility; it was not even the
sole responsibility of the Air Staff. It was the responsibility of the
Chiefs
of Staff (and later the Combined Chiefs of Staff) and of the
British
and American Governments with, let it be said, the warm
approval of the overwhelming majority of their peoples. The form of
it, which aroused considerable dismay
later, was above all dictated by
the distressing discovery
in 1941 that the only target that Bomber
Command could be trusted to hit by night
was a large German town.
At that stage of technology, in other
words, its only reliable technique
was area bombing, a
name that would gather evil associations.
40
Area bombing had the attraction that it offered
a fair chance of
hitting some sort of military or
industrial target, and at the same time
of striking at that German morale which
Bomber Command, inspired
by Lord Trenchard, believed to be the weak spot in Germany’s
armour. There is no point in being
mealy-mouthed about the attack on
morale;
in my book I said this:- “Morale’
is a cosmetic word.
Attacking morale, whatever phrases
it may be dressed up in, really
means only one thing: putting the fear
of death into individuals. On a
collective scale it means threatening a massacre.’ The scale of the
proposed massacre is somewhat
breathtaking. In November, 1942 the
Chief
of the Air Staff, Air Chf Mshl Sir Charles
Portal, stated that,
given enough aircraft, it would be
possible in 1943 and 1944 to drop
one and a quarter million tons of bombs
on Germany. He outlined the
material damage that could be expected
from this and added:-
‘Twenty-five million Germans would be
rendered homeless, 900,000
would
be killed, and one million
seriously injured.’ ‘One thing’, I
said,
‘emerges with absolute
clarity: this was a prescription for
massacre, nothing more or less.’
Hindsight, of course, can be a trap; we
have to remember that this
was November 1942, near the close of a very bad year littered with
disasters; none of the hopeful things that came in 1943 had yet
appeared. The war was still dominated by
German strength, and as Dr
Noble Frankland insisted, ‘The great
immorality open to us ... was to
lose the war against Hitler’s
Germany. To have abandoned the only
means of direct attack which we had at
our disposal would have been
a long step in that direction.’ One thing, I believe, is as certain
as
anything in human history
can be: that some form
of bombing
offensive by the RAF was inevitable
between 1940 and 1944 and was
also essential if Britain’s continued
participation in the war was to
have credibility in the eyes of the British people,
in the eyes of the
Germans
and in the eyes of Britain’s allies.
It is also my belief,
however, that morale, so far from being Germany’s
weak spot, was
just about the worst target to attack explicitly.
Once more, a bad misreading of World War
I was having a serious
delayed effect. The British
at all levels, in their horrified
recoil from
the heavy losses between 1914 and 1918, had come to believe
that
these
were due mainly to the idiocy of their generals.
They were
nothing of the kind; our losses were caused by the German army,
41
whose main body the BEF had engaged for
three hard years. It was an
army which, for most of that time,
displayed very high quality indeed,
and most of which maintained its morale to the end under fearful
pressures. And it was a conscript army,
which means that it reflected
the character of the people from whom it
sprang. The same was true of
its successor between 1940 and 1945; the
morale of German civilians,
like the morale of the German army, remained steadfast
to a point
beyond all expectation.
There
is, I fear, one more aspect of the bombing
offensive which
grates on me. Both the Air Staff and
successive AOCinCs of Bomber
Command
– but none more loudly than Sir Arthur Harris –
complained constantly of what they called ‘diversions’ of the
Command
to what they seem truly to have believed were fringe
activities. Harris, at the end of 1942, suggested
to Churchill in all
seriousness that all British bombers should be brought back from the
Middle East, and that every possible bomber
should be obtained from
America
(irrespective of American
needs). He even proposed that
Stalin
should be urged to send the Soviet bomber force across to
operate from Britain. And worst of all,
because it was marginally more
practicable, he demanded that all suitable
aircraft should be
transferred from Coastal Command, which
he chose to call ‘merely an
obstacle to victory’ – and this, you
will note, at precisely the moment
when Coastal Command
was at last becoming an effective U-boat
killer. I made a list of the chief ‘diversions’
that the bomber prophets
so strongly objected
to, giving reasons
for each one of them – and I
concluded that you could sum them up succinctly and accurately as
‘the war itself’.
Indeed, I felt compelled to remark, ‘... it is at times
difficult, taking into account
the ineffectiveness of Bomber
Command’s ‘proper’ activity, and its strong resistance to all
‘improper’ activity, to decide whether it is more correct to say that
Bomber Command was irrelevant to the
war, or the war was irrelevant
to Bomber Command.’
I have already drawn attention
to the
undesirability of being irrelevant.
I now come to a very different but
highly effective style of warfare
which its most distinguished
practitioner called ‘air warfare in its own
right’.
He was Sir Arthur Tedder,
who emerges to me as the
outstanding airman of the war, with the largest
view of its conduct.
This is not surprising; Tedder’s Middle East Command was quite
42
unlike
the functional metropolitan Commands – it was itself an air
force.
It contained something
of everything because
it had a use for
everything, so naturally Tedder’s
view was different
and generally
larger than that of the Home AOCinCs. He
expressed it very clearly in
a letter to Admiral Cunningham, commanding the Mediterranean
Fleet, in the course of a lively dispute
in June 1941. Tedder said:- ‘In
my opinion, sea, land and air operations in the Middle East Theatre
are now
so closely inter-related that effective
co-ordination will only
be possible if the campaign
is considered and controlled as a
combined operation in the full sense of that term.’ This was a view
from which Tedder did not depart. In
1944 he is on record as saying:-
‘I do not myself believe that any modern
war can be won either at sea
or on
the land alone or in the air alone ... war has changed to three-
dimensional, and very few people realise
that.’
This perception drew Tedder towards
another of the greatest
importance, which crystallised in the
dark days of the Middle East in
1942. I have summed it up like this:- ‘...
the war was driving home the
lesson
that when critical
land operations are in progress,
army co-
operation is not simply a specialised
activity of part of an air force. It
is the function
of the entire force with all its available strength.’
Operation OVERLORD illustrates this perfectly. I have mentioned
Coastal Command’s part in it; Bomber
Command (in conjunction with
the United States Strategic Air Force)
took on a number of vital roles,
including the isolation of the whole Normandy battle area by
interdiction; and the Tactical Air
Forces ‘saturated the battlefield with
air power’ as the Germans themselves had
done in 1940.
These
two perceptions – that the war was a combined
operation,
and that the combination might well require
the entire available
strength – seem to me to be of the highest
quality. Tedder added
another. From December 1941 onwards the war in the West was a
coalition war again, subject
to all the searching disciplines of such.
Britain in World War II, threw up
three great coalition commanders;
Lord Alexander in Italy, Lord Mountbatten in South-East Asia and
Tedder,
who became General
Eisenhower’s Deputy Supreme
Allied
Commander in 1944, having already shown himself a true coalition
leader in the Mediterranean theatre.
I have mentioned tactical air forces, a
name first heard in January,
1943. It was under Tedder and Air Mshl Sir Arthur Coningham that
43
the long-neglected art of Army
Co-operation was revived in the desert
and, with the addition of some valuable work
by Army Co-operation
Command in England, evolved into a
fairly exact science as practised
by the tactical forces.
We dwell too much, I think, on D-Day and
the Normandy beaches.
We should think more about what made D-Day possible,
and it is
difficult to call to mind anything
more important for that than the
nine-week campaign conducted by the
Allied air forces – at a cost of
12,000 casualties – before the sailors
and soldiers ever approached the
Normandy coast. Once the battle ashore
was launched there were very
few days indeed,
in a very bad summer,
when the tactical
air forces
did not fly in support of the armies.
When the Germans made their last
counter-attack – at Mortain
in August, 1944 – the tactical forces,
in
Coningham’s proud words, ‘made air
history’. The counter-attack was
smashed and it was, he said, ‘proved
that a tactical air force may be a
decisive battle winning factor.’
What the RAF achieved in Normandy was an
outstanding triumph
of air power within a combined
operation. I said in my conclusion:- ‘It
was air power that paved the way into
Europe; air power covered the
landings and made it impossible for the Germans
to concentrate
against
them; air power maintained interdiction and pressure on the
enemy
when the ‘master
plan’ failed; air power completed
the
overwhelming victory.’ So we see how, per
ardua, the RAF returned
to its original purposes; how it lent
wings to the victories of the Navy
and the Army, and in so doing, I firmly contend, placed itself at ‘the
right of the line’.
44
MEETING ON 14 MARCH 1988
Introduction by Air Chief Marshal Sir David Lee
I was Secretary to the Chiefs of Staff during part of the period
we
are considering this evening and
relations between the Chiefs of Staff
and Mr Sandys were, not to put too fine
a point on it, uneasy. He did
not like having to deal with a number of
important, powerful, military
officers. He wanted to talk to one
person and it was simply the Chief
of the Defence
Staff. The three Service Chiefs still had immense
responsibilities and he did not like having to deal with this very
powerful committee and so, during that period, there was a bit of
wishful
thinking and a whispering campaign
was going around the
corridors of power which said the time
of Sandys was running out!
Now we are very fortunate this evening
to be able to have this talk
from Mr Cecil James whom I have known personally for something
like thirty years or more. He has had a
long and distinguished career in
the Civil Service, most if not all of
which has been in connection with
the Royal Air Force, either in the old Air Ministry, the Ministry of
Defence, or in the Far East. Since
retiring, Cecil James has written a
book which is entitled Defence Policy
and the Royal Air Force 1956-
1963. Unfortunately for most of us it is a classified document
and
presumably will remain so for some time to come but I mention
it
because it does illustrate what a very
deep knowledge of this particular
period in Defence Policy he has, and I
think we can now look forward
to a most interesting and accurate account
of the very controversial
events
of those days. Without further
ado, may I introduce Mr Cecil
James.
45
THE IMPACT OF THE SANDYS DEFENCE POLICY ON
THE ROYAL AIR FORCE
by T C G James CMG MA
No Defence White Paper has been more
eagerly awaited than that
which Mr Duncan Sandys presented to
Parliament in April 1957. The
threat
from nuclear weapons,
which the White Paper described
in
apocalyptic terms yet with an insistence
that these nevertheless offered
the best
hope of avoiding global war, led to
intense public debate on
the morality as well as the merits of
what was seen as a new deterrent
policy. How far this policy was new is
one of our themes. What was
certainly new was the intention to abolish National
Service, which
meant that the manpower strength
of the Services would be virtually
halved over the next five years. This
was not all that significant for the
Royal
Navy; on the other
hand, the future role of the Navy was less
than clearly defined
in the White Paper. The army faced major
reductions in its fighting
strength and thus the difficult
task of
disbanding or amalgamating units with long and proud histories. Its
commitments in Europe and outside remained;
but it was going to
have less with which to meet them. The
Royal Air Force was the most
curiously placed. On the face of it, it
was not undervalued. The Prime
Minister, Sir Anthony Eden, who had just departed
the scene, had
appointed Sir William Dickson
the first Chairman
of the Chiefs of
Staff Committee because, he said, ‘the
RAF must play an increasingly
important part in our military scheme of things in future.’
The 1957
White
Paper confirmed the RAF as the custodian
of the key
component of the deterrent
policy. Such argument
as Ministers
allowed
themselves was about the size and equipment
of the
V-bomber force, not about the need for
it. On the other hand, the logic
of nuclear deterrence, coupled with
foreseeable developments of both
offensive and defensive missiles,
was widely construed
as the
beginning of the end of the military
aeroplane.
So the 1957 White Paper was a major
event. But the shadows had
been cast before. How far back they had
begun to loom is arguable. It
is said that a day or two after Sir
Winston Churchill returned to office
in October 1951 he was being driven
along Horseguards Avenue on a
Sunday. The massive doors at the north
end of what is now the MOD
Main Building were
shut. Sir Winston glowered at these new, and no
46
doubt expensive, structures and said to
his Private Secretary: ‘This is
what we have come into power to stop,
Socialist extravagance.’
Whatever hopes the Services
might have had that they would be
generously treated by the new government were soon disappointed.
The chill wind of economy blew from the
beginning. We certainly felt
it in
the Air Ministry where Lord de L’Isle and Dudley took over as
Secretary of State. One distinguished air marshal, very distinguished
indeed,
is said to have thumped
the table and said that he was not
going to be told how to run the Air
Force by a guardee peer, only to be
reminded by the Permanent
Under-Secretary that the guardee peer was
also a chartered
accountant. The need to achieve
a better match
between
defence expenditure and economic capabilities was
recognised in successive Defence
White Papers up to and including
that of 1956. The 1956 White Paper came
out a few months after the
appointment of a new Minister of Defence, Sir Walter Monckton,
whose
brief according to his biographer ‘was to devise a method by
which
the figure of £1,500M spent annually on defence could be
substantially reduced.’ We can regard this White Paper as the
beginning of a political process which
led directly to the 1957 White
Paper and which had important
consequences for NATO as well as for
British policy. It set out the roles of
the Services like this:-
a.They must make a contribution to the Allied deterrent
commensurate with our standing
as a World Power. This means
not only building
up and maintaining a nuclear
stockpile and the
means
of delivery, but also contributing to the maintenance of
NATO’s defensive effort by land, sea and
air.
b.They must play their part in the Cold War. By their mere
presence they can contribute to the stability
of the free world and
the security of overseas territories whose peaceful development
may be threatened by subversion whether
overtly Communist or
masquerading as nationalism.
c.They must be capable
of dealing with outbreaks of limited
war should they occur.
d.They
must also be capable of playing their part effectively in
global war should it break out. They
will have to include support to
the civil
authorities.
47
It is clear from the White Paper and
elsewhere that these roles were
to be understood as an order of priority.
It is also clear that
preparations against a global war,
including substantial investment in
civil defence, even though these were
the lowest priority were having
an important and expensive influence
on the Services’ programmes.
This is not to say that separate ranges
of equipment were regarded as
necessary for the separate
roles; some capabilities were obviously
relevant to more than one role. But it was no less obvious
to the
Ministers who mattered most – the Prime Minister,
the Chancellor
(Mr Macmillan) and the Minister of
Defence – that the budgetary and
economic implications, if the Services
continued at anything like their
present
size and shape, were unacceptable. Defence was getting
too
big a share – of money, production, scientists and engineers, and
manpower in general. A key date in this pre-Sandys period is
20 March 1956 when Macmillan and
Monckton sent a joint minute to
the Prime Minister.
They expressed their concern at expenditure on
defence measures that were ‘little more
than a facade’. They called for
‘a reappraisal at the highest
level of the whole basis on which our
defence policy should rest.’ They posed
a number of basic questions,
the thrust
of which was to minimise expenditure on fighting a major
war in favour of a policy of nuclear deterrence. As the National
Service Act would expire in 1958 there
was no time to be lost.
Ministers eventually got down to the
task in June when they were
presented with a far-reaching memorandum on ‘The Future of the
United Kingdom in World Affairs’, to
quote its title: not one, we must
note,
produced by the Chiefs of Staff even though it had been
triggered by doubts about defence policy. It
was the work of a small
group
of senior officials, commissioned by Sir Norman Brook, the
Secretary of the Cabinet. He seems not
to have told the Chiefs about
it. At any rate, Mountbatten wrote to Monckton
some time after the
group
had begun its work. He said the Chiefs had heard that ‘some
form of committee
is being set up to advise the Government on the
general policy to be followed in future
... such a wide survey of policy
must include the defence aspect and we
are gravely disturbed that our
constitutional responsibilities to
advise the Government are being by-
passed.’ Monckton gave him very little
change: Ministers alone would
consider broad aspects of policy before more detailed
areas such as
defence were addressed. Norman Brook might have given him even
48
less change. Even on the broader issues
of defence, let alone national
policy,
he was wary of leaving
the initiative to the Chiefs of Staff.
When a Future Policy Committee was set
up a year or so later, Brook
deliberately designed its framework of studies in such a way that, as
he put it, ‘the Chiefs of Staff could
not take the bone away and gnaw it
in a corner by themselves.’
Copies
of the report by Brook’s
group of officials
landed on the
desks of the Chiefs of Staff on 6 June. It was scarcely
a coincidence
that the first meeting of the Policy
Review Committee that the Prime
Minister had set up, in response to the pressure from Macmillan and
Monckton, was held that same day. The Brook group paper was the
only one considered by the committee; and the Chiefs of Staff were
not present. It all seems to have been
carefully contrived to ensure that
it would be Ministers only who had the
first gnaw at the bone.
Not that the bone was all that
appetising. The memorandum was a
notably perceptive appreciation of the
national condition. It identified
the two main factors that called for a
thoroughgoing review of policy
and identified
both the policy objectives and a programme
of studies
designed to produce answers
to questions of defence as well as the
civil sector. The two factors were put
like this:-
a.The external
situation confronting us has changed.
The
hydrogen bomb has transformed the
military situation. It has made
full-scale war with Russia or China unlikely. And conventional
forces,
though still of great importance in some situations, have
become
a relatively less important factor in world affairs. The
Russians have recognised this change, and they are
adapting their
actions
to it. While their objectives may remain unaltered
their
methods of attaining them are changing.
We must modify our own
tactics accordingly.
b.It
is clear that ever since the end of
the war we have tried to
do too much – with the result that we have only rarely been free
from the danger of
economic crisis. This provides no stable basis
for policy in any field. Unless we make substantial reductions in
the Government’s claims on the national economy
we shall
endanger our capacity to play an effective role in world affairs.
Only thus shall we be able to find the
means to place our economy
on a stable basis and
to counter the new forms of attack with which
49
we are being confronted.
Of the defence imperatives in the
memorandum, first and foremost
was the need to apply the logic of
nuclear deterrence to NATO policy,
which meant that the British
conventional forces in Europe should and
could be substantially reduced. The
overseas situation outside NATO
called
for different treatment
but there too garrison forces and
contributions to the Baghdad
Pact and SEATO could be reduced;
improved air transport was the key to
economy. Another emphasis we
should
note was on home defence;
was the United Kingdom
defensible in any real sense? At a meeting
of senior Ministers
even
before the Policy Review began Mr
Macmillan said that the sensible,
though
difficult, decision for the government was the abolition
of
Fighter
Command. This could not be done immediately but in his
view the Hunter and Javelin should be
the last aircraft for UK defence;
the case for a more advanced fighter
should rest on overseas needs and
those of the Navy.
The Prime Minister
was anxious to move quickly.
Numerous
papers
were commissioned by the Policy Review Committee, on all
aspects of defence as well as on the
economic situation, with the aim
of completing its work by the end of
July. The Committee was hard at
it in June and July; nine meetings in
some seven weeks. It was due to
hold its tenth meeting on 27 July but on the 26th Nasser announced
the nationalisation
of the Suez Canal and the meeting was cancelled.
The Policy Review Committee did not meet
again until December. So
Suez had two consequences affecting the
1956 Review. It meant that
much of the earlier impetus
was lost and that the case for radically
revising defence policy was even stronger.
But the main issues were
identified.
The first was the need to persuade NATO
Allies of the overriding
importance of nuclear deterrence, which called for a new NATO
strategic concept: ‘one’ said the Brook official group, ‘that can be
interpreted in terms of lower but
militarily definable force levels, and
a planned and coherent Allied effort ... it might perhaps be based
mainly
on the idea of a ‘plate-glass window’
or ‘trip-wire’.’ Is then
this memorandum the origin of ‘trip-wire’ both the term and the
strategy? Whether or not this is so, the fact is that a diplomatic
offensive was launched in the last few months of 1956 to persuade
50
first the United States and Canada and
then the other NATO Allies to
adopt a new strategic concept.
And it was successful, up to a
point. A new NATO directive
was
agreed at the NATO Council in December
1956, ambivalent in some
respects, not wholly accepted
in all its possible implications,
positively disliked by SACEUR and
SACLANT (‘as of now I hate the
British’, said General Gruenther
on one occasion), but nevertheless
providing British Ministers with the
rationale they needed for making
major cuts in BAOR and 2TAF. It was to
provide later a rationale for
a determined attack on Air Staff plans
for air defence of the UK. Even
the British nuclear
deterrent force was not to be sacrosanct. Sign,
visible though it was, of the government’s
convictions, it was already
in some danger.
Macmillan, as Chancellor, thought it larger than
necessary. The current plan was for a front-line of some 200
V-bombers; he thought 120, or even 100, would be enough.
And
neither
Mountbatten nor Sir Gerald Templer,
the CIGS, were at all
convinced by either the concept of the new strategy or its
consequences for conventional forces.
They thought that the
government had got the priorities the
wrong way round. The first thing
to settle was the size and shape of conventional forces for
commitments within and outside
Europe; only what might be
afforded, after that had been done,
should be allotted to nuclear forces.
Moreover, they were concerned about the
risk of conventional war in
Europe once Russia had achieved nuclear
parity with the West. CAS,
Sir Dermot Boyle, totally disagreed and
this disagreement among the
Chiefs had to be exposed to the Defence Committee during the 1956
Policy
Review. The view of
CAS prevailed, as it did when
the issue
was again put to ministers in 1957 and
1958. Unfortunately, to win is
not necessarily to be popular. Teacher’s
pet tends to get beaten up in
the playground; and I feel bound to give
you my personal impression
that the extremely rough ride the RAF
was to be given during the rest
of the fifties can be ascribed in part
to a feeling in some quarters that
the junior Service had been getting too
big a share of the cake.
The last question
before we get on to the impact of the Sandys
policy itself, is – how did the Air
Council respond to the turbulence of
the last six months of 1956? This has to
be done to reach a judgement
on how far Mr Sandys was innovator
as well as architect. The Air
Staff warmly welcomed
the memorandum of the Brook official group,
51
especially the case it made for a new strategic concept.
The Air
Council was in fact ahead of the game;
it had put in hand a study of
the future Air Force early in 1956. This was discussed by the Air
Council
in June 1956. It might well have startled the Air Force at
large. As compared with the existing
plan for a V-bomber front-line of
200, the study saw this falling to 100
as the BLUE STREAK missile
came into service
and did not rule out eventual replacement of
bombers
by ballistic missiles.
Fighter Command would come down
from currently some 500 aircraft to 200
in phase with the introduction
of SAM missiles,
and after the middle sixties
SAM would be the
predominant weapon for air defence. The
Command was perceived as
primarily a contribution to the nuclear
deterrent. But another
fighter
beyond the Lightning was envisaged, as
indeed was a successor to the
V-bombers to ensure against
slippage in the ballistic missile
programme. No role was allotted to the
air defence fighter in Europe.
Nothing emphasises more clearly the
extent to which the Air Council
was convinced that most of the eggs should go into the deterrent
basket
than what was in mind for 2TAF: a cut of two-thirds in its
existing strength of some 400 aircraft,
with the residue
entirely
devoted
to strike and reconnaissance: no fighters, no helicopters for
army support. This disbelief in
preparations for a serious conventional
phase was reflected as well in the
outline plan for Coastal Command,
which the Air Council saw coming down
from some 70 aircraft to 36
– six squadrons. Overseas, Middle East
Air Force would remain at its
present
strength but Far East Air Force would be little more than a
token
presence. Reinforcement from the UK would be part of the
answer if there was serious trouble
overseas; another part – interesting
in view of later developments – would be a mobile striking force
based
on carriers. The Secretary of State for Air, Nigel Birch, is
recorded as expressing ‘considerable
apprehensions’ at this particular
notion.
Logically, this view of policy for the Air Force overseas
demanded a bigger Transport
Command. The first orders for the
Britannia had been placed in January
1956 and a substantial force was
planned. The last point to stress, and we must remember that all
this
was before the 1956 Policy Review Committee
began its work, was
that the Air Council assumed
that National Service
would be
abolished.
In broad terms, and in many details as well, these Air Council
52
discussions in the summer of 1956 were
in harmony with what finally
emerged
at the end of the year from deliberations of the Policy
Review
Committee. Mr Antony Head (who had replaced
Sir Walter
Monckton) proposed as follows:-
Fighter Command and
2TAF to be halved.
Bomber Command
restricted to 184 V-bombers.
What was described as
a ‘small force of MR aircraft in Coastal
Command or overseas’.
A stronger Transport
Command.
Small tactical
air forces as contributions to the Baghdad
Pact
and SEATO.
A smaller fleet, with
no more than two fleet carriers and a light
carrier; the South Atlantic,
American and West Indies stations
abandoned.
A smaller army, with
BAOR coming down from over 80,000 to
55,000 and possibly less.
The manpower allocations were 90,000 to
the Navy, 200,000 to the
Army,
155,000 to the RAF: some 450,000 in all, with National
Service assumed to continue on the basis
– so Antony Head proposed
– of a ballot. All this was sufficiently accepted
for Ministers to tell
their American colleagues and SACEUR and
SACLANT of what they
had in mind. But no final commitment had
been made, certainly none
to Parliament and the general
public, before Sir Anthony Eden
resigned. Eden himself had wanted to get
rid of National Service; and
much work had been done during 1956 on the maximum strength
of
forces
that could be sustained by all-regular recruitment. About
350,000
seemed to be the best guess, compared
with the 450,000
in
Head’s final proposals.
Comprehensive national service produced
larger drafts than would
be required to meet this gap of 100,000.
So the question of a selective
draft had to be addressed. The problem
for Eden was that he saw great
political difficulty in providing
a method which the country
at large
would regard as fair. A Premium Bond
Lottery was one thing; a ballot
to decide who should or should not be called up was a different
proposition.
53
National Service was thus the first
issue that had to be settled when
Mr Macmillan became Prime Minister in
January 1957; to embark on
size and shape exercises for the front-line strengths of the Services
would
otherwise be pointless. Amongst the first actions of Mr
Macmillan, having selected Mr Sandys as his Minister
of Defence,
was to give him a directive requiring
him as his first task ‘to formulate
in the light of present strategic needs
a new defence policy which will
secure a substantial reduction in expenditure
and manpower.’
What we shall now be dealing with is, first, the National
Service
question; secondly, strategic deterrence
and the associated force plans;
air defence; Coastal
Command; and finally
the air transport force
against
the background of the government’s attitude to overseas
commitments outside the NATO area. There
will not be time to deal
with the RAF’s administrative problems,
severe though they were.
Defence
White Papers are usually published
in February; the
Sandys
White Paper came out in April. Difficulties over National
Service
explain some of the delay. Collectively the Chiefs of Staff
believed that the Services
would not be able to meet the current
commitments to NATO, or maintain adequate
garrisons, with
manpower of less than 450,000. Mr Sandys was quite unimpressed.
The Navy, under the 450,000
scheme, was claiming
a four-carrier
group
force, bigger than Mr Head had proposed.
The Army would
have to reduce BAOR by one division but
it was with at least this kind
of reduction in mind
that Ministers had painfully
negotiated the new
NATO policy directive. The Air Force
component assumed that 2TAF
would
be halved in little more than a year but the Air Council itself
envisaged further reductions later on. In any case, taking the view as
he did that it would take five years to achieve all-regular forces, Mr
Sandys
reasonably doubted whether
there would be any significant
difference between a 450,000 force
including national servicemen and
all-regular and more efficient Services
of around 370,000. So, in mid-
February he told the Chiefs of
Staff to examine the implications of
a
force of that size. This was a rebuff
for the less radical members of the
government. Lord Salisbury had submitted a paper to the Cabinet
in
January
advising that a limited National
Service intake would be
required until at least 1965. I have found no record of it ever being
discussed in Cabinet. Indeed,
the unhappily strained
relations that
developed between Mr
Sandys and the Chiefs were as much the result
54
of the way defence business
was being conducted
as of differences
over policy. At what was a crucial
meeting of the Defence Committee
on 27 February
the Chiefs of Staff’s memorandum arguing the case
for 450,000 manpower
was not presented; the Committee
at Mr
Macmillan’s direction considered only
the aim of achieving all-regular
forces by the end of 1962. After that
meeting the Defence Committee,
which usually met every two weeks, was
not to meet again until July.
There is no doubt that the Chiefs of
Staff were deeply disturbed by
what seemed to them a failure to use the normal procedures for their
relations with and access to Ministers
collectively. They continued to
maintain that 450,000 was the lowest acceptable strength
and they
formally represented that a serious constitutional issue would arise
if
the White Paper gave the impression that
the economies were justified
on military and strategic grounds and
were therefore acceptable to the
Chiefs.
Yet in the view of the Air Staff the case made for a 450,000
force
was itself flawed:
‘not a logically concerted paper which first
establishes the essential strategic
commitments and then estimates the
forces
needed to meet them.’ This reflected a concern that an
essentially deterrent policy might not
be thought through and applied
as rigorously as it should be:
misgivings that were not misplaced.
So it was against their advice that the Chiefs were required
to
structure the Services within manpower of some 380,000:
80,000 to
the Navy, 165,000 Army, 135,000
RAF. Compared with the 450,000
figure the Navy would have to reduce
from 150 to 130 fighting ships,
including three rather than four carrier
groups; the Army from 136 to
118 major units. RAF force plans showed little change.
The Air
Council felt that it had already
proposed a minimum force and that it
would
somehow have to use its reduced manpower
more efficiently.
They could be excused from thinking that the Air Force was less
vulnerable to pressure since their views on the deterrent
concept and
its implications were similar to those of Mr Sandys.
The most vivid
expression of that concept is to be
found in the 1957 White Paper: ‘the
overriding consideration in all military planning
must be to prevent
war rather than prepare for it.’ The
Chief of the Defence Staff tried to
persuade Sandys to leave it out because it was liable to be
misunderstood in NATO. Sandys left it in
precisely because it was the
crux of the case for cutting back in Europe.
His convictions about
nuclear deterrence were argued with typical obstinacy, against
55
opposition at home as well as in NATO. He would not be moved on
the concept and he must have been disappointed that he was not
wholly
successful in persuading others, particularly in NATO, to
attach
less importance to conventional defences.
This was why the
first tranche of BAOR reductions was no
more than 20,000; a second
and later reduction
brought the force down to 55,000. It has stayed
there or thereabouts although the 1957
intention was to bring it down
to 45,000, possibly
even less: 2TAF, in contrast,
was very rapidly
reduced: to just over two hundred
aircraft by March 1958. The Air
Council’s plan to come down to a smaller
strike/recce force was
scheduled for completion in 1961. That in the event a fighter
component was retained, although
the intention to remove it was
declared to NATO in 1958, is a story
that lies outside the period. None
of this was at all easy to negotiate;
German Ministers were particularly
concerned at the reductions. Sir Frank Roberts,
the Ambassador to
NATO,
put his finger on the root difficulty in his annual report for
1957: ‘NATO is mainly interested in our
presence in Europe and not
so much in our responsibilities in the
Middle East or Asia, nor even in
our possession of the major deterrent
... the United States contribution
to the deterrent is generally considered
to be enough for the Alliance
as a whole.’ Sandys was unshaken. He
delivered a stern lecture to the
NATO Council in December 1958. Britain was spending more on
defence
than any of the European
allies, partly because
of its
commitments outside Europe. These,
however, had the same purpose
as NATO itself in containing Russia. ‘It is essential’, he said, ‘to
ensure that our flank in the Middle East
and beyond is not turned.’ As
for the ultimate
sanction, this would remain valid even when Soviet
nuclear
capabilities matched those of the West. But there were two
conditions: the deterrent should be so organised that it could not be
destroyed in a first strike, and the Russians should not come to think
that the West no longer had the courage
to use it. And the British were
determined to be involved; he said that
most of the aircraft in an initial
retaliation would be British.
The V-bomber force was, it seemed, to have priority;
and it did,
despite
the protests of Mountbatten and Templer. Yet Mr Sandys
could not wholly defend the frontline of
184 aircraft which was called
for in the latest Air Council plans.
What he secured at a meeting of the
Defence Committee
in August 1957 was a frontline of 144, most of
56
which
– 102 – would be Mk 2 Vulcans and Victors. The Air Staff
were not too disappointed. The Mk 2 V-bombers were the crucial
element. With BLUE STEEL Mk 1 already
under development, to be
succeeded by the much more capable
Mk 2, a credible airborne
deterrent could be poised until well
into the 1960s. Moreover, by 1957
the advent of a missile
component in the deterrent had come much
closer. Whereas nobody expected the
British BLUE STREAK to be in
service until some time in the ‘60s, the
American Thor was just over
the horizon.
The possibility of deploying Thor in
Britain had emerged in 1956.
Ministers were in favour from the outset; the Air Staff were not so
convinced, mainly because they thought
they were being rushed into
accepting what even the Americans
regarded as an interim, first-strike
weapon
and one whose technical provenance left something to be
desired. Nevertheless, President Eisenhower and Mr Macmillan
reached
agreement in principle at the Bermuda Conference in March
1957 and from then on things moved quickly: first to an
intergovernmental agreement in February
1958 which settled
the
number of missiles to be deployed –
sixty. A training and deployment
programme was successfully completed
before the end of the decade;
an extraordinary achievement by the two
Air Forces and especially by
Bomber Command. We have to leave it
there. The opportunity to hear
much more about the history of the
nuclear deterrent will come in next
year’s
Society programme. But a final point: as Thor came closer to
deployment the possibility was discussed of substituting it for BLUE
STREAK. Give it a British warhead,
emplace it underground and the
Americans might then give up operational
control of the weapon and
we would still have an independent
deterrent and save the expense of
developing BLUE STREAK. The detail of
this episode and the history
of the demise of BLUE STREAK must be
left till another occasion.
A diversified deterrent
– manned aircraft
with air-to-surface
weapons and ballistic missiles – was in
prospect. But it was not cheap,
particularly if BLUE STREAK remained in
the programme and also if
what Sandys had told NATO was essential
for effective deterrence
was taken seriously: the operational
credibility of the deterrent force.
Sandys certainly took this seriously, as
did Bomber Command; hence
the expensive scheme for widespread dispersal airfields, overseas
as
well as at home, and the quick reaction
procedures which Bomber
57
Command
perfected and demonstrated in training and exercises.
Sandys
was determined that the deterrent
should be seen to be
effective as well as politically
independent.
But now to air defence, where his
attitude to RAF plans was very
different. Nobody, the Air Staff included,
was in any doubt that
Fighter Command’s 1956 strength was
insupportable. But even when,
as the Air Staff planned,
this was reduced
to twenty squadrons, plus
three
overseas, there was formidable opposition on both conceptual
and financial grounds.
As early as March 1957 Mr
Sandys cancelled
all work on OR329 – the all-weather interceptor to succeed
the
Lightning. Not that this meant that the
Lightning as a weapon system
was unthreatened. Orders for the Lightning
Mk 1 had now been placed
but it was the Mk 3, with first
Firestreak and then RED TOP air-to-air
missiles, that the Air Staff had in mind
for the twenty-squadron force.
Doubts
about the extent of investment in UK air defence had been
voiced, as you have heard, in 1956. What
we can regard as beginning
an exhaustive and exhausting review was a minute from Mr
Macmillan to Sandys in August 1957: What
is the threat over the next
ten years, the plans for meeting it and
the military arguments on which
they are based? – these were his
questions.
First,
the threat as the Air Staff and the Joint Intelligence
Committee assessed it: up to 1960, from nearly 300 Badger medium
bombers
backed by a large nuclear
stockpile: from 1960 a similar
weapon to BLUE STEEL Mk 1 would come
into service and so would
ballistic missiles with the range to
reach Britain but probably not with
the accuracy to eliminate missile sites.
These could well be targets still
allotted to bombers. Sometime
in the mid-1960s a new Soviet
strategic bomber could come into
service: quite an aeroplane – combat
radius with flight refuelling of 3,500
miles, cruising at 1.7 Mach, 200
mile dash capability of Mach 2 at 60,000 feet. No hard evidence,
I
suspect: a hypothetical aircraft
which I doubt has materialised even
now. But a belief in a continuing threat from the manned bomber to
the UK-based deterrent
forces was one reason for the Air Ministry’s
persistent defence of a substantial
force of air defence fighters.
Next,
the plans for meeting the threat: twenty squadrons, SAM
defences – at their peak amounting to
700 launchers, over one hundred
with nuclear warheads on a developed
Bloodhound Mk 2 – and air-to-
air weapons
which included the nuclear-tipped Genie to be obtained
58
from the Americans; and, underpinning fighters
and missiles, a
modernised control and reporting
system. A costly programme,
estimated to be more in the period from
1957 to 1962 than would be
spent
on Bomber Command.
‘It can be justified,’ said Mr George
Ward the Secretary of State for Air, ‘only
if we can show that it makes
all the difference to the success of the
deterrent.’
And the military arguments: these were
as much psychological and
political as military. There was a real
difficulty. The size of a deterrent
force could be quantified by reference
to whatever criterion of damage
to an aggressor
was selected. It was much more difficult
to
demonstrate that a particular scale of air defence was necessary to
implant doubt in an aggressor’s mind
about his ability to neutralise the
nuclear
strike forces. And that was the object:
doubt, not effective
defence against an actual attack.
It was not until 1960 that the size and
equipment of UK air defence
was determined, at any rate for the next
ten years: five squadrons only
and no SAM units. The catalyst at that
time was a report by the Joint
Planning Staff (JPS): Sir Fred Rosier,
who is here this evening,
was
the JPS Chairman. The views of the JPS were much the same as
Mr
Sandys
had argued in 1957, with support from other Ministers. Mr
Watkinson, Mr Sandys’ successor, was at least as determined to
economise in air defence.
From the beginning
of this lengthy debate
Mr Sandys doubted
whether fighters were needed to protect the
V-bomber airfields. He argued that the
Soviet Union would not mount
an attack against
this country until it could simultaneously destroy
nuclear bases in the United States. If
ever that was possible, it would
certainly not be until well into the
sixties, and the weapons would be
ICBMs
to which fighters
were irrelevant. As for SAM defences,
ministerial opinions oscillated in the late fifties. Sandys himself
doubted their value, as he did, and
others beside, the practicability of
effective ABM defences. Just before one of the numerous Defence
Committee meetings at which air defence
was on the agenda the Daily
Express printed an article by
Chapman Pincher which questioned the
value of SAM. It was noted in the Air Ministry
that he and Mr Sandys
had lunched together the previous day.
What mattered most to Sandys
was V-bomber dispersal
and QRA; and BLUE STREAK emplaced
underground as well. He continued to
argue for BLUE STREAK even
after the Air Staff had accepted
defeat, and the Chiefs of Staff had
59
unanimously and categorically disowned
it as being only a first-strike
weapon. This view is arguable but not
perhaps tonight.
The Air Ministry fought a good fight for
a bigger fighter force than
the government was prepared to concede.
Closely argued papers were
produced on both sides of the debate;
rightly so, but what was hard to
bear was the absence of what Sir Dermot Boyle called ‘the same
thoroughness, the same objectivity’ in
analysing the programmes and
policies of the other Services. Which leads us to look next at the
maritime scene and Coastal Command.
To begin with, Mr Sandys accepted his
predecessor’s proposals for
a smaller Navy: three carriers only and manpower
limited to 80,000.
The 1957 White Paper showed uncertainty about the Navy’s NATO
role,
though it stressed
its value for limited war outside the NATO
area and in peacetime emergencies. For the Air Ministry, Coastal
Command came last in its priorities and
it planned to reduce it to six
squadrons. The battle then commenced;
and after intense lobbying the
issues
were presented to the Defence
Committee in November 1957.
An Admiralty paper scarcely troubled
to conceal its distaste for a
nuclear deterrent policy and argued for
a four-carrier group fleet. Yet
in drawing attention
to losses at sea during 1943, inflicted
by a
German submarine fleet substantially
smaller than the Russians could
deploy, it might well in objective terms
have destroyed the naval case
for a bigger North Atlantic presence. It
seemed nonsensical to the Air
Ministry to get excited about the need
to protect convoys; if this was
to be taken seriously it postulated a
conventional campaign, in which
case strong air defences would be needed to protect
the ports and
anchorages for the convoys. And strong
air defences were unlikely to
be conceded. Nevertheless, Mr Sandys
shifted his position towards the
Navy. He agreed to a fourth carrier
group, with an emphasis on ASW
capability in the Atlantic,
and allowed the Navy extra manpower
above the original White Paper
allocation – 88,000 instead of 80,000.
And even before the meeting of the
Defence Committee was held he
had arbitrarily instructed the Air
Ministry to plan on the basis of eight
and not six Coastal Command squadrons.
The Air Ministry protested:
‘such
an increase would be inconsistent with approved strategic
priorities, and it would not be militarily significant, bearing in mind
the size of the long-range maritime forces which it was necessary
during the war to deploy against
a submarine threat nowhere
60
approaching in numbers or in quality
the threat which confronts us
today.’ It did no good; the instruction
to plan for eight squadrons was
soon turned into an order actually to
maintain that number.
This was only the first phase of the battle.
The second was even
more worrying for the Air Ministry. In the first half of 1958
speculation began about the transfer of Coastal Command
to the
Admiralty: speculation in the Press, questions
in Parliament. When
this had last been discussed – in 1954,
when the decision was to leave
well alone – Mr Sandys had been in
favour of transfer; and he put a re-
examination in hand in November 1958. This second-phase battle
lasted until the following July. It
should never have been started; with
all the turbulence in the Services, there could not have been a worse
time for an inter-Service row. However, Mr Sandys made a mistake
which was to prove crucial; he seems to
have omitted to tell the Prime
Minister. For some weeks he appeared
to be getting his way. The
Chiefs of Staff were evenly split; CDS
and CAS were against change;
Mountbatten was naturally in favour;
CIGS – Field Marshal Festing –
reluctantly supported Mountbatten, with some reservations. One
reason for the CDS appointment was to
have an adjudicator when the
Service
Chiefs could not agree; and having set out the reasons for
making no drastic changes Sir William
Dickson offered Sandys a way
out. This was to revise the existing
arrangements for control
of
maritime aircraft, placing CinC Coastal Command
and his group
commanders under the operational command of their Naval
counterparts as deputies and not
co-equals. But Sandys would not
be
put off. A report concluding that a case
on merits had been made for
transfer was considered by the Defence
Board. From the minutes of
the meeting one would think that the Air Force was on the point of
losing. Mr Sandys could have claimed the
support of the majority but
his own summary
at the end of the meeting was that while the case
had been made he had been impressed
by the effect of a transfer on
the morale of the Royal Air Force. He had previously seemed
impervious to precisely this consideration. Why did he change his
mind?
Sir Richard Powell,
his Permanent Secretary, may have
influenced him. What is certain
is that the Prime Minister some time
before had sent Mr Sandys a private
minute to the effect – according
to one account
that this was not an appropriate time to change the
status of Coastal
Command, or more precisely – according to another
61
– that he did not wish the issue to be dealt with before a General
Election (which took place in October
1959). It is no less certain that
before
the Defence Board meeting the Cabinet Secretary
was being
advised that the case for transfer ‘had
considerable failings and a fairly
destructive argument against it can be
produced by the Air Ministry.’
Soon after that meeting Mr Sandys issued a directive
which began
with the statement
that Coastal Command
would continue as a
separate Command. It had been, said the Cabinet
Office, ‘an
unnecessary and deplorable exercise.’ The outcome was not wholly
satisfactory. The issue of principle was
still open; more resources than
the Air Ministry
considered appropriate were allotted to the North
Atlantic; and some basic questions of maritime policy were swept
under the carpet, at least for the time
being. But a decision had been
reached. The Air Ministry
put in hand a programme
of Shackleton
modernisation for a bigger Coastal
Command and also a specification
for a
Shackleton replacement which led to the Nimrod. And changes
in the command
relationships which Sir William Dickson
had
suggested at the beginning of the
controversy were introduced.
And so, finally, to air transport where
policy was not bedevilled by
such fundamental doubts as marked nuclear deterrence, air defence
and the maritime
scene. Improvements in air transport
capability
stemmed
inevitably from a policy of reducing in Europe but, despite
the cut back in Service manpower,
maintaining an effective influence
in the Middle East and Far East. The difficulties were recognised,
whether
contingencies arising overseas
were limited wars in either
theatre
or the kind of emergency
that was to occur over Kuwait. Mr
Macmillan thought that ‘with skill and ingenuity’ British
positions
could be maintained. One of the keys to
success was obviously more
long-range capability and secure
reinforcement routes. As things stood
in 1957 neither
was satisfactory. Mr Macmillan was very scathing
about the inadequacies of the
Hastings/Beverley force; and what was
the determinant of the size of force required – the movement
of a
brigade
from Britain to Singapore in seven days – could only be
secure
if Indian Ocean staging posts under firm British control
were
available. India and Ceylon were likely to refuse facilities if the
emergency did not meet with their political approval. Gan was being
prepared in 1957 to meet this need; the Air Staff would have liked
another Indian Ocean
staging post – in the Seychelles. Improvements
62
to Masirah in South Arabia also had
route security in mind as well as
V-bomber dispersal. Interestingly, HQ FEAF preferred
Diego Garcia
to Gan.
One of Mr Sandys’ early decisions was to relax somewhat the
requirement for Far East reinforcement. As then stated,
this could be
met by a force of twenty Britannias, plus a few Comet 2s. This was
the first objective
for an enlarged Transport Command.
It was not
achieved until the end of 1960, happily in time to make all the
difference to the Kuwait Emergency in 1961. Amongst
a number of
industrial and technical difficulties, which resulted in only one RAF
Britannia coming off the line each month, the crucial factor was the
failure to secure big enough orders for
the civil Britannia to justify a
higher production rate. But the
Britannia fleet was not the biggest
of
the problems. These derived more from what the Army began to
demand,
under three heads: a long-range strategic freighter, tactical
transports and short-range transports, including helicopters. The War
Office presented Mr Sandys in August
1957 with a demand for a long-
range freighter capable of carrying up
to 13 tons over a range of 3,000
miles. This was a much bigger requirement than anything previously
stated.
It coincided with the completion of studies of a Beverley
replacement which pointed to an
aeroplane of similar performance to
the C-130 which had recently gone into
service with the USAF. But at
first this was considered too small for
the strategic role and too big for
the tactical. Moreover, the Army wanted
the aircraft quickly: by 1963,
by which time their manpower strength would have been reduced by
National Service. So if it were to be British, aircraft
developed for
other purposes would have to be adapted;
otherwise, it would have to
be a foreign
aircraft, which meant an American
buy. The Air Staff
came to favour a compromise: the C-130
after all, with the larger and
more expensive C-133 another
possibility.
The trouble was that the Army had moved
the goal posts. A Chiefs
of Staff sub-committee had earlier stressed
the importance of
stockpiling heavy equipment at the main overseas bases as a much
cheaper
alternative to carrying
them about the world in large
aeroplanes: heavy equipment such as armoured
cars and the
Thunderbird SAM, and also the BLUE WATER surface-to-surface
missile (which was later cancelled).
Since it was not agreed policy that
tactical nuclear
weapons such as BLUE WATER should be deployed
63
outside Europe, the case for a
high-quality strategic freighter was not
all that strong. With hindsight, the Air
Ministry might have argued the
case more than it did, especially as its
budget made no allowance for a
new strategic transport in the Army’s
time-scale. One could wish that
Mr Sandys had thrown his weight about,
as he did on other issues. As
it was, he agreed that a new aeroplane
was needed, and that neither the
C-130
nor C-133 would be considered. But what British
aeroplane?
The various possibilities were examined
throughout 1958: beef up the
Beverley; a freighter version of the
VC10; re-design the Britannia and
give it rear-loading doors; a Handley
Page freighter based on the
Victor
wing and tail. Then there was this turboprop aircraft,
the
Britannic, that was being developed in
Belfast: good range, very good
load,
but a turboprop and slower than some of the other candidates.
The Air Staff strongly favoured
a turbojet and eventually persuaded
the Air Council
and Mr Sandys and the War Office to back the
Handley Page aeroplane, the HP111.
The Cabinet, no less, decided the issue
early in 1959. There can be
no doubt that politico/industrial arguments
were decisive. Shorts in
Belfast
was government-owned; the end of Britannia production was
in sight; without a major order most of
the labour force would have to
be laid off. To select the HP111 would prolong
the life of the
company
and hamper the policy of progressively rationalising the
aircraft industry. A late entrant into the race, the rear-loading
Britannia, was favoured by the Ministry
of Supply as a useful and
relatively inexpensive interim solution.
Both Mr George Ward and Mr
Sandys were advised to speak against it (the HP proposal Ed). So it
was that the Belfast was ordered: at best, the Air Council’s
second
choice;
for which there was no allowance in forward costings;
an
untypical aircraft and highly unlikely
to have a civil market; and with
an engine (the Tyne) not in service
elsewhere in the RAF. It made
little
sense in logistic
and engineering terms. The VCAS of the day
said, ‘they will be obsolete when we get
them.’
The background of policy to this
unfortunate decision was the need
to move reinforcements of equipment as well as men to deal with
limited
wars outside the NATO area. The War Office was also
demanding more air transport
within theatres. So in addition
to
unplanned expenditure on a long-range freighter, the Air Council
found itself presented with a much bigger bill for tactical
and close-
64
support transport aircraft than it had
allowed for in its 1957 plans.
The scenario is important. War Office air transport requirements
were for:
a brigade group
parachute drop;
the move of two
brigade groups in an overseas theatre within a
fortnight;
air supply of up to
six brigade groups during the first month of a
limited war.
The bill: an additional 75 medium-range
aircraft (Argosies; and we
haven’t the time to examine why this
aeroplane was chosen); at least
another
200 short-range transports and helicopters, including
80 – a
totally new requirement – for the Army
in Europe. This bill was never
met. It was excessive even if the scenario had remained unchanged;
and it included
expensive items such as the Rotodyne and Chinook-
type helicopters. But the Air Council had to go some way towards
meeting
it. Some fifty Argosies were ordered and delivered and the
Whirlwind force was usefully increased.
What eventually reduced the
War Office bill – and to mention
this takes us outside Mr Sandys’
time as Minister
of Defence – was a revision of overseas policy by
which
the Army’s commitments in the contingency of limited war
were very substantially cut back. And behind that revision were
growing
financial difficulties and also doubts about the security of
British bases overseas. Even so, the
post White Paper insistence of the
Army on maximising air supply to
maintain itself in the field was one
more factor affecting Air Ministry plans
for the size and shape of the
Air Force. Transport aircraft of all
types in service in the early sixties
were nearly twice as many as the Air Council had proposed in 1958.
The number of helicopters trebled. With
these changes came a change
in the geographical deployment of the Air Force: fewer squadrons in
Europe than had been planned and more
overseas.
A very brief summary: looking
on the one hand at the Air Force
which
the Air Council considered appropriate to a deterrent
strategy
and on the other, to that which was emerging
when – nearly three
years
later – Mr Sandys ceased
to be Minister of Defence,
there had
been several developments. A smaller,
but still powerful, V-Force but
with increasing doubts about BLUE
STREAK, which the Air Ministry
knew about and to
some extent shared, and also about BLUE STEEL
65
Mk 2, which they may not have known. Polaris was beginning to be
discussed though there was not yet what
an Air Ministry official was
to describe as a ‘Gadarene
rush throughout Whitehall’. A much
smaller fighter force: final decisions
as to exact size not yet taken but
the writing was clearly on the wall; indeed, the Air Staff itself had
reduced its claim for a fighter force of
twenty squadrons to twelve and
also the size of the SAM force for UK Air
Defence. Coastal Command
was somewhat larger:
not a wholly unpalatable consequence but the
controversy about control of the Command
had needlessly involved
much time
and effort. Developments in the air transport
force I have
just described. This increase was arguably greater
than was strictly
necessary; it was certainly
financially embarrassing. It had been a
difficult time for the Royal Air Force.
The sad fact is that even more
difficult times were
not far away.
66
MEETING ON 20 JUNE 1988
Introduction by Air
Commodore H A Probert
This evening we are returning to the air
war in World War II, and
this time we are going to
look at it from the German side. Dr Boog,
our speaker, is one of the leading air
historians in West Germany. He
came originally from what is today East Germany, from Leuna-
Merseburg, where he obtained
first-hand experience of Allied
bombing. In 1944, at the age of 16, he
underwent training as a glider
pilot
but then, instead
of going on to the Heinkel 162 as had been
intended, he found himself in the Volksturm,
an experience which he
fortunately survived. After the war he came to the West. He spent a
short time as a translator and
interpreter at Nuremberg and then went
as an exchange student to the United
States; one of the first exchange
students to go from Germany to the USA
in the late 1940s. Returning
to Germany in 1950, he worked for the United States Air Force in
Germany
on intelligence duties until 1964 and
also studied part-time
at the University of Heidelberg where he obtained
his PhD in 1965.
Since then he has worked in
the Military History Research
Office in
Freiburg, where the main research in West Germany
into wartime
history
and the history of the post-war Bundeswehr takes place. His
work has concentrated upon the air aspects of World War II and as
Senior
Air Historian he has contributed to the main writers’
programme and also lectured
extensively in and outside Germany.
A
major work which he has written is German
Air Force Leadership and
Command, 1935-45. He has also written
on The Strategic Air War and
German
Home Air Defence, American, British
and Soviet Foreign
Policy
and Strategy, 1939-1943
and is co-author of a volume,
The
Attack
on the Soviet Union: many more items have flowed from his
pen. I personally, in my time as Head of
AHB, have met him a number
of times and it gives me great personal
pleasure that he has agreed to
come over and address our Society on the air war from the German
standpoint.
67
THE POLICY, COMMAND AND
DIRECTION OF
THE LUFTWAFFE IN WORLD WAR
II
by Dr Horst Boog
Chief Air Historian, West
German Military
History Record Office,
Freiburg
Mr Chairman, thank you very much for your kind introductory
words.
I consider it a great pleasure and an honour to be here,
especially in view of such distinguished
predecessors as Professor R V
Jones and Mr John Terraine.
It is, I believe, not unusual that those
who have lost a war are more
critical of themselves than those who
came out of it as victors. I shall,
therefore, not concentrate on the strong
points of the Luftwaffe, that is
on its able application of technical principles such as the use of
interior lines, mobility, concentration of forces at decisive points,
surprise and successful co-operation with ground forces.
I shall
consider instead some special
traits of the Luftwaffe’s command
and
leadership which constituted the basis, as well as the limits,
of the
performance of the German Air Force and turned out to be decisive
and constituent causes of its defeat. Now this does not mean that
without these particular characteristics
the Luftwaffe would have won
the war: it would have been out-produced anyway, but to crush it
would have been harder, and maybe resistance to the war in the year
1939 would have been greater.
Of these characteristic traits, which
were most clearly reflected in the
training of the general staff officers,
I think five are important:
First,
there was a gradual reduction
of Luftwaffe leadership and
command
thinking to purely military aspects,
in which the General
Staff Officers certainly became
specialists with great abilities although
the principle of general assignability
continued to be cherished by the
General
Staff theoretically. We shall see later that this reduction
of
scope did not solely follow from the
fact that Hitler pressed for rapid
expansion of the armed forces to make
them ready for his war at the
cost of shortening the training of the officers.
During the war there
was a further
reduction of General
Staff training to the needs of the
routine work of troop staffs. The
original objective of this training, the
education of future Chiefs of Staff, was
renounced as being no longer
possible. Understanding the world outside
Germany became
68
increasingly difficult for these
officers, for other reasons too, such
as
punishment for listening to foreign broadcasts, and unclear
conceptions about the outside
world were the result. For instance,
when Pearl Harbour happened nobody in
the armed forces operations
staff
knew where it was located;
I heard this from the Chief of the
Luftwaffe
Section. War conditions further
led to a limitation of the
experience of staff officers,
because there was no time for
familiarising them with other Service Branches or careers or theatres
of war or even with the life of the troops at the front. Specialisation
was the natural
consequence and certainly
the fastest way of getting
results from these officers, though in
limited fields.
This basis was too narrow to produce
officers accustomed to think
in terms of all the Services. As the last energies were mobilised
towards the end of the war (it was
already early in 1943) a further shift
of values took place, from knowledge and
ability to courage, bravery,
resolution, youthfulness, belief in Hitler, and strong nerves as
requirements for General Staff Officers.
Irrational values were now to
replace the rational approach to things which ought to have been the
business of the General Staff and higher
officers.
A second trait, of fundamental
importance, was the over-emphasis
on tactics and operations at the expense
of the other spheres of
command
like logistics, intelligence, technology and signal
communications, training and air transport. This attitude was called
S3/A3
thinking. To become an operations officer, and eventually a
chief
of troop staff, was the goal of most General
Staff Officers and
for various reasons the Luftwaffe
had relatively more S3/A3 positions
than the other services.
Thirdly there was in practice, not in
theory, underestimation of the
importance of technology in relation to tactics and operations. While
the first Chief of the Luftwaffe General
Staff, General Wever,
repeatedly stressed that tactics
and technology were of equal
importance, his third successor, Jeschonnek, in 1939 rejected the
opinion of his engineers that technology
was the basis of the Luftwaffe
and that the technical superiority of the air force would therefore be
decisive. Since all industrialised nations had reached
about the same
technological level, he argued, it was
hardly possible to gain technical
superiority for any significant period of time. It would be better to
stress the development of air tactics,
which were still largely
69
undeveloped. This would secure the Luftwaffe
its superiority over the
enemy
in case of war. Later in the war it was exactly
the temporary
slight technical advantages that were decisive
for the outcome of the
air war. Suffice it here to add that
technology was not in high favour
among most officers and that engineers were
often regarded by them
with disdain, the whole situation
being symbolised at the top by
Goering who bragged about his technical
ignorance.
The fourth trait was the doctrine of the
offensive, which was valid
until almost the end of the war. The
first Chief of the Luftwaffe Staff
regarded the bomber as the decisive
weapon in the air, a conviction
that entered into the basic Luftwaffe
manual on the conduct of air war.
He at first meant the heavy bomber,
because he was influenced by
Douhet.
Later, in a realistic appreciation of Germany’s situation, he
favoured fast medium bombers,
the operational radius of which was
large
enough to cover the necessary distances to the potential enemy
capitals. Offensive thinking was conditioned by Germany’s
unfavourable geo-strategic situation in the middle of the Continent
which required that the war be carried
into enemy territory right from
the beginning, to conquer, together
with the army, a glacis deep
enough
to offer some protection against
enemy air raids. That Hitler
and Goering later developed ideas of the global use of very large
bombers
must be mentioned here although
this plan was never
earnestly pursued and never materialised. The idea that the country
could
also be defended by a strong fighter
force was foreign
to the
German Air Staff because in Germany as
elsewhere there was a strong
conviction that an effective
air defence against
bomber raids was
impossible.
Finally, and as already
implied by the concentration of air
armament on the medium bomber, it was
the co-operative type of air
war that prevailed, although the idea of the necessity of strategic
bombing
under certain conditions always existed latently
in German
air doctrine and came to the fore when the situation was considered
favourable for it, as in the summers of
1940, 1941 and 1942. Indeed it
had already appeared
in late 1938 when Hitler ordered the
quintuplication of the Luftwaffe,
an expansion which was thwarted by
the outbreak of war.
Offensive thought in the German Air
Force did not follow the lines
of Douhet but was
generally orientated towards co-operation with the
70
ground
forces and, theoretically at least, with the navy. Since
experience in close air support was only gained during the Spanish
Civil
War, the Luftwaffe planners at first considered this type of air
battle
to be most difficult and therefore believed
that the normal co-
operative air war would comprise
indirect missions in support
of the
ground
forces against the rear areas of enemy forces, but within the
zone of operation
of army groups (Operationsgebiet). So they called
this type of ‘normal’ air war ‘operativer
Luftkrieg’ (operative air war).
The limits of Operationsgebiet
were, of course, flexible so both terms
were also applied
to missions and flying forces providing either
technical support on the battlefield or independent strategic
bombing
operations.
The concept of operativer Luftkrieg was
thus unclear. The Bomber
Chief
of the Operations Department of the Luftwaffe General Staff,
Major
(later General) Deichmann, told me that when, in 1936, he
called together all General Staff
Officers and made them write down
their definition of the concept of operativer
Luftkrieg, he got as many
definitions and interpretations as there
were officers present.
Unclear thinking led to the attempt to
conduct a strategic air war by
tactical means as, for instance, in the Battle of Britain.
The term
‘strategic air war’ did not exist in official
Luftwaffe terminology. It
was developed only late in the war after
the Allied strategic bombing
offensive had demonstrated the nature
and effects of strategic air war
and when it had become clear to the
German Air Staff that it was more
economical to destroy enemy tanks and weapons where they were
produced than on the battlefields.
The factors contributing to the development of an essentially co-
operative air doctrine were the
following:-
The experience of WW I, when support
on the battlefield
(starting in 1917) brought favourable
results more quickly than
the Zeppelin and giant bomber (Gotha)
raids on Britain.
The fact that the Luftwaffe
by itself could not occupy the glacis,
or forefield, thought necessary for
Germany’s protection in case
of war, but had to do it together with
the army. Only the army
could occupy territory.
The fact that
most of the higher air force officers were former
army officers.
71
Shortage of the raw materials necessary
to conduct a time-
consuming strategic air offensive.
The intention not to
destroy the industries in the countries to be
occupied on the Continent, but rather to
use them for one’s own
purposes later on.
The fact that the principles of independent strategic
bombing
were not yet solidly confirmed, the Spanish experience rather
having proved the effectiveness of
direct and indirect support of
the ground forces.
Although the main incentive
for Hitler and Goering to create the
Luftwaffe
as a third service
was the idea of an independent strategic
bomber force (as an attribute of a big
power and as the raison d’être
of an air force independent of, and
equal with, the other Services and
as a means to avoid the repetition of the bloody trench warfare
of
WW I), independent strategic bombing was
to be only the last of the
Luftwaffe’s three main tasks.
The primary and continuous mission was
the destruction (or at least paralysis) of the enemy air force through
attacks on its ground organisation and
production workshops. Later in
the war it was learned that this had
also to be done by continuous air
battles. The second task was support
of the operations of the ground
forces,
support of the navy enjoying
equal rank in theory, but
becoming the stepchild in practice because
of lack of aircraft. The
bombing
of the centres of enemy war potential
(strategic bombing)
came last and was to be resorted to only
when there was a standstill in
land warfare and when a decision of the war could not be brought
about
otherwise, because this kind of air war consumed, so it was
believed, too much material and time
before its effects (if there were
any at all) made themselves felt at the
land front. The land front was
considered to be Germany’s main ‘theatre
of war’. Frederick the Great
was aware that he could not sustain a
long war and so were Germany’s
military leaders in subsequent centuries. After all, another means of
overcoming positional warfare had been developed, the strategic use
of tanks supported by the air force, a
method that really functioned for
the first time in the western campaign.
The necessity to economise led to the early development of
navigational and bombing aids (Knickebein, X- and Y-Geräte), the
adoption of the dive-bomber and the extension
of the dive-bombing
72
requirement, even to the He 177 heavy
bomber. You will all know its
story and that, in order to reduce air
resistance during the dive, two of
its four engines
worked on one crankshaft. This caused so many
technical difficulties that the bomber
never became operational. It was
finally
built with four separate engines
and designed for horizontal
bombing, but though about 1,200 He 177s
were produced they could
not be flown for lack of fuel. The
dive-bombing requirement reduced
the range of the bombers because of the
extras needed and thus forced
the designers towards the short- and
medium-range tactical bombers.
Lack of raw materials was one reason why the air staff in 1939
refused to develop area-covering
munitions, and it was only in 1942,
after
the incendiary attacks
on Lübeck and Rostock that their
development was ordered. The necessity to economise, and the
recognition of the international laws governing the air war (which
were like Swiss cheese and very inconclusive at that time) were,
together with the classical
continental European distinction between
combatants and non-combatants, the main reasons why the Luftwaffe
doctrine expressly forbade indiscriminate bombing to be part of the
strategic air war concept,
except as a reprisal measure.
I must say,
however, that the instrument of reprisal
was resorted to so often that it
soon lost its meaning: the more so since
it was British policy to carry
through strategic air attacks not as
reprisals but as a method of warfare
and for a long time the only way they
could reach into Germany.
It was accepted that no bomber force in
the world was able to drop
its bombs exactly on target, either at
the beginning of the war or later,
and that collateral damage was thus
unavoidable. I can say, however,
that it was the Luftwaffe’s
intention to adhere to the principle that
its
foremost objective was the enemy armed
forces and targets of military
relevance, until the spring of 1942. Admittedly (as in other bomber
forces)
the necessities of war usually
prevailed over non-intentional
collateral damage; civilian casualties
were accepted if they could not
be avoided in the execution of
operations. But even Hitler, who must
be blamed for many inhumane
actions, warned his Chief of the Air
Staff not to wage an indiscriminate
bombing war, only ten days after
his public announcement of 4 September
1940 that he would ‘erase’
British cities, and he repeated this
order in his directive of 6 February
1941.
Indiscriminate bombing would lead to nothing, he said. Of
course, Hitler did not warn for humanitarian reasons.
It was the
73
economic point of view he considered, and his fear of British
retaliation.
When the Luftwaffe started to engage in some intentionally
indiscriminate bombing attacks on
British country towns in 1942, the
so-called ‘Baedeker raids’, it did so without sufficient bombers
because
these were tied down in Russia and the Mediterranean. The
V1 flying bomb, the development of which was accelerated in 1942,
was designed as an area-covering terror
weapon and the V1 offensive
was designed to be an indiscriminate air
war.
Let me repeat, after all this evidence,
that the Luftwaffe was mainly
designed to be a co-operative air force in the widest sense, not a
strategic instrument or a terror instrument. Although this latter
function was propounded by the Germans
themselves before the war,
to threaten potential enemy nations into
submission, and deliberations
about the possible use of the Luftwaffe
as an instrument of terror were
not abhorrent to the Luftwaffe’s leaders, either before or during the
war – such ideas were pondered over by
most aviation writers and air
strategists at one time or another, all
over the world.
I shall now try to demonstrate some of
the consequences of the five
basic features of the Luftwaffe,
insofar as I have not yet done so. The
most striking example
of the narrowing of Luftwaffe staff and
command thinking to military matters
and, within this limitation, the
dominance of operational matters
over the support
and infrastructure
sectors, was the organisation of the German Air Force High
Command. The Luftwaffe was a new
service without much command
experience and it therefore changed its
top echelon organisation more
often
than any of the other Services. There was the difficulty of
combining the tactical with the
technological side; there were personal
feuds
between the top officers which were fostered
by Goering’s
policy of ‘divide et impera’ and
by favouritism.
Governing this top organisation until 1939 was the desire to
streamline it in accordance with the immediate
requirements of the
expected short war, at the beginning of
which all forces, including the
reserves, had to be used for the decisive
blow. Chief of Staff
Jeschonnek reduced the General
Staff to something
like Goering’s
personal operational staff, confining
it voluntarily to operational and
tactical matters and excluding, as an unnecessary burden, everything
not needed for the
immediate purposes of operations, such as training,
74
technology and the inspectorates. The
Chief of the General Staff also
assumed
the position and duties of the Chief of the Luftwaffe
Operations Staff in order to shorten
the chain of command and thus
make it more effective. The Quartermaster services
had been
downgraded organisationally.
This was certainly
an effective organisation for a short campaign
but turned out to be insufficient for a long war of attrition. The
reorganisation that took account
of this came too late, in 1944 and
1945.
The Luftwaffe General
Staff had become an operations staff –
just for the execution of orders. Nowhere
was there a permanent
planning staff, neither in the
organisation of the Ministry, nor with the
air fleets. Nowhere
was there a permanent advisory
or co-ordinating
counsel
or agency, for long-range planning,
and (although the
necessity of conducting the air war
economically was always stressed)
nowhere
was there anything
like an Operations Research Section.
Planning was only one of the many tasks
of the operations officers on
the higher staffs.
They did it besides their daily routine
and
operational work and at the most for just a battle or for a short
campaign. There was no overall plan for the war in Germany, there
were no technical
planning and advisory
committees for the conduct
of the strategic
air war against Britain; this was considered to be a
military domain. It was not until 1943 that the Chief of the General
Staff grew aware of the fact that this
type of air war also required the
knowledge and advice of the civilian
technical and economics experts
of the Armaments Ministry.
The predominance of the military
aspects, and of operational
matters, was further reflected
by the low esteem enjoyed
by the
Quartermaster Service, employment in which could prejudice an
officer’s career. When the Operations
Officer of Air Fleet 4 was given
the function of Quartermaster of his air fleet by the Commander-in-
Chief, Field Marshal von Richtofen (who also
told him that this was
only an intermediate step to becoming
the air fleet’s Chief of Staff),
the officer protested, even though a
Quartermaster was higher in rank
than an Operations Officer in the Operations Section.
Not the best
officers were assigned Quartermaster
duties. There is ample proof that
many operations, indeed the entire war, was fought on the basis of
operational and political objectives and not on the basis of logistics.
The chief of the economy and armament department of the Supreme
75
Command
of the Armed Forces admitted
this in January 1942 in a
speech before his assembled armament
inspectors. This is not to say,
that under certain
circumstances, the quick and bold utilisation of a
favourable opportunity does not also lead to success, but this applies
more to the tactical and operational
spheres. To base one’s strategy on
sudden opportunities does not seem to be
a successful method.
Air transport as a means of supply was
theoretically neglected until
1940, although the Luftwaffe
carried out substantial air lift operations
between Morocco and Spain in 1936 at
the beginning of the Spanish
Civil
War. The Chiefs of blind flying training
schools and of air
transport operations were one and the
same person in the first years of
the war, since the same type of aircraft
(the Ju 52) was used for both
purposes. Once aircraft support
operations became necessary
the
Ju 52s,
with their instructor crews, were gathered
together from the
training schools and assembled into ad
hoc transport units. Had there
been an Air Transport Command
early enough the problems of air
supply for Cholm, Demjansk and
Stalingrad in Russia, and for Tunis,
would
not have been given to Hitler so readily by Goering and the
Luftwaffe
General Staff. This command
was, however, only
established late in 1943 after the great losses in the air supply
operations of the winter 1942/43, losses that could never be
replaced
and which substantially impeded the
training of bomber crews.
This brings us to training, which, as
Field Marshal Kesselring and
the Quartermaster General
of the Luftwaffe confirmed after the war,
was the stepchild of the Luftwaffe.
If cuts had to be made in the supply
of gasoline or of new combat planes, the
training sector had to suffer
first. At the end of the war, a German
fighter pilot received only one-
third
of the flight training time of an American pilot and more than
50% of the flying accidents
were due to inadequate training.
The
number
of aircraft lost without enemy action was generally higher
than that caused by enemy action and
ranged around 1,800 aircraft per
month
in early 1944 as against
about 1,500 per month caused by
enemy
action. The comparatively low esteem of the military
for
technology resulted in important
technical positions being filled by
incompetent people, the best-known case
being that of Udet, who was
not the manager
needed to direct air armament
and the German
aviation industry. Goering appointed him
because he knew that Hitler
regarded him as the
most able and popular flyer in Germany.
76
In the Luftwaffe General Staff there was no civilian engineer
or
scientifically trained officer in a position
of responsibility and, as
mentioned above, there was organisationally a gap in the Luftwaffe
High Command between
operations and technology. Goering
preferred highly decorated combat officers in positions of technical
responsibility; their combat experience counted more than the expert
opinions of engineers. Successful young engineers were, therefore,
allowed to demand alterations to aircraft already in series production
which resulted in delays in mass
production. Jeschonnek, the Chief of
the General Staff of the Luftwaffe
said in March 1942 that the front-
line officer should not have to accept everything that the aircraft
industry wanted to get rid of.
The Corps of Engineers of the Luftwaffe
was created in 1935 to set
the active officers free for their operational
tasks, with the result that
these
officers, who were always the superiors of the engineers, were
not forced to familiarise themselves
with technology, which for many
of them meant dirty fingers.
In fact, when this uniformed
civilian
Corps of Engineers was replaced by an
Engineer Officer Corps in the
later
years of the war,
the Luftwaffe High Command could not make
up its mind as to whether or not those
engineer officers were to bear
visible
insignia marking them as engineer
officers, because it was
feared
that an officer recognisable as an engineer
officer would not
enjoy
the authority and reputation of an ordinary
line officer. The
question was never solved during the
war.
The prevalence of the operational point of view led responsible
officers to underestimate the importance of completing each
individual stage of aircraft development
and to squeeze them together
in time so that series production began before testing
had finished.
This happened elsewhere too, in times of
need, but in the Luftwaffe it
was the rule and resulted
in the jamming and delay of series
production. The best examples
are the multipurpose Me 210 and
He 177.
Goering, especially, had no idea of the duration of the
different development phases of aircraft. He was always astonished
and furious when he was confronted with
the fact that this policy did
not lead to results as fast as he had
thought. Lack of understanding of
the laws governing
technical development and production, coupled
with the prevailing military principle
of order and obedience, resulted
in the belief that the aircraft
industry could be commanded like an
77
infantry company. Moreover, the technical uncertainty of the
responsible officers as to the type of aircraft
suited best for each
purpose
brought about too many experiments in aircraft designs.
In
1943,
Germany produced more than 50 types, with about 250
variations and modifications, against
only 18 standard models of the
Americans. There were, in addition, more than 130 experimental
types.
The preoccupation of the General
Staff with operational matters
further
stifled the issue of tactical and technical requirements for the
direction of the aircraft
industry and allowed
this lavish
experimentation, when mass-production of the most important types
should have been the order of the day.
On the other hand, Goering and
Field Marshal Milch, as well as Udet,
seemed not to have sufficiently
understood the importance of continuity
of research and development.
Goering
and Milch especially, were more interested in production.
Before the war, the research funds
decreased continually in relation to
the production funds and the aviation research
department was
steadily downgraded organisationally until its chief resigned early in
1942.
In early 1940, all research
and development projects
were
ordered to be stopped unless they
yielded results within one year, after
which,
it was thought, the war would
be over. This, and not Hitler’s
later meddling with aircraft production,
was the main reason why the
first jet fighter, the Me 262, was not
mass produced earlier. There was
also Milch’s reluctance to risk putting
a revolutionary new aircraft,
with all its teething problems, into
production.
Obviously, the leader of the Luftwaffe
assumed that the conduct of
an air war required a good tactical
general staff officer
in the first
place, and could eventually do without
technical general staff officers.
So, under the pressure of Hitler’s war policy, the Technical General
Staff
College was disbanded
two years after its establishment, and
technical courses at the College were
completely dropped in late 1938,
to be resumed
only late in the war without success.
There was also
much reluctance among general staff officer candidates to become
technical general staff officers
because of the latter’s low reputation.
In this they shared the fate of the engineers
in the Luftwaffe. The
disdain
with which the latter were regarded by many officers
was
enhanced by the fact that officers
usually had a broader education,
better manners,
were able to lead men and had an esprit
de corps.
78
Above all, they had the authority of
command which the engineers did
not have.
Many a young engineer left the Engineer
Corps to become
an active officer at a lower rank, but
with a chance of a better career.
The relatively low esteem enjoyed
by technologists and scientists is
best demonstrated by the fact that such people, if they had not had
previous military training, were drafted as ordinary soldiers
and put
into the trenches
with a rifle, instead of being kept in their civilian
capacities and put into laboratories.
This attitude changed only later in
the war, when it was too late.
Intelligence was another field which did not enjoy a reputation
comparable to that of operations. The best staff officers were not
assigned to such duties and, after the
first setbacks, Goering and Hitler
no longer wanted to believe in
intelligence. The Luftwaffe intelligence
service
was disorganised as much as the entire German intelligence
community, the co-ordination of the different
Services being
attempted only in 1944. German air intelligence substantially
underestimated the three main opponents, England,
the Soviet Union
and the United States, in the decisive
pre- and early war years,
especially since ideological bias and euphoria
arising from initial
successes impeded its work. Whether Hitler,
had he received correct
data on
the enemy, would have thought
twice about going to war is,
however, questionable. The results
of intelligence work were usually
realistic in relation to the enemy deployment, front-line strength,
training, organisation and equipment, ie as regards
tactics and
operations. The signals intelligence
service produced particularly good
results. The cypher service,
however, seems to have produced
very
little, and only information of a
tactical kind.
Where
intelligence failed was in its strategic perceptions
concerning the enemy’s economy,
production capacity, morale and so
on. To explain
this failure one must remember
that the Luftwaffe
general staff officers who were in
charge of the major positions within
air intelligence, were trained more in the military field and not so
much in areas important in grand
strategy, such as economics, politics,
science
and technology. The belief in a short war, which had to be
decided right at the start, by the use
of all available forces led to the
assumption that the potential
that might be developed by the enemy
later on in the war could be neglected.
It was rather short sighted, but
that’s how it was. It
is no wonder that, in a society that valued fighting
79
and leadership qualities in the field
more than good performance in the
supporting sectors and at the desk of the intelligence officer
in the
rear, there was a traditional disdain for intelligence work, which was
considered to be close to spying. It
should also be kept in mind that a
military organisation that cherished
the principle of the offensive
is
naturally more inclined to impress its will on the enemy by force,
rather than attempt to understand him.
In fact, only after Germany had
been thrown onto the defensive
did the Luftwaffe reorganise and
intensify its intelligence activities, because now it needed to know
more about the intentions of the enemy, in order to take appropriate
measures for defence. Organisationally the intelligence officer
on a
staff was always subordinate to the
operations officer.
As regards the principle of the offensive, let me just say that it
prevented the timely preparation of a
strong German air defence. You
all know
the words ‘fortress without a roof’. As to the consequences
of the overemphasis on co-operative air
war, it suffices to say that the
German bomber force had its greatest
losses in this type of warfare –
co-operative close escort – especially
in Russia – something that was
considered to be the most difficult kind
of air war before the Spanish
Civil War. Low-level attacks by medium bombers were frequent and
costly and in 1943 the German bomber
force had to be renewed twice,
ie the losses were three times its
initial strength at the beginning of the
year.
Many of the fatal consequences of the
main ideas around which the
Luftwaffe
was built up can be explained
by the pressures of the
situation: ie by the pressure exercised
by Hitler to expand the armed
forces
(especially the Luftwaffe, which had to be established
practically from scratch) and by the resulting armament
in breadth
rather than in depth, which cared for
front-line strength more than for
spare parts and reserves, and was to
make the armed forces ready for
the assumed short war as soon as possible. This explains the
Luftwaffe’s attitude towards
technological research, training, strategic
intelligence and reserves. Indeed,
Field Marshal Milch told the
Director-General for Air Armament, Udet, before the war that Hitler
would
conduct only short wars, so that all aircraft repairs
could be
done during the breaks between the
campaigns. The fiasco came when
the war turned into a European, and
later into a World, War of attrition
which Hitler had hoped to avoid by settling
affairs in Europe before
80
the big powers of East and West became too strong. Such an
explanation, however, can only partially be accepted and would
otherwise be rather superficial, because it neglects
the fact that the
traditional German militarist’s
thinking led to quite a few of Hitler’s
demands. This does not mean that all the military leaders
also
accepted Hitler’s political and
ideological goals, but the limitation of
higher
military leadership thinking
to military matters,
which was to
Hitler’s liking, had started
already under the elder Moltke and had
been intensified by Count Schlieffen, until General Ludendorff
developed the idea of total war, in which politics was the servant
of
war. So attempts to widen the horizon of
general staff officers, failed
both in the 1860s and in the 1920s and
early 1930s. Logistics, another
of the non-operational fields, had been
the weak point of the so-called
Schlieffen Plan before WW I. Rommel was
another good example of a
tactician for whom logistics
became important only when it did not
function. The priority of the offensive
was always a fundamental
element
in German military
thought, mainly for the geo-strategic
reason already mentioned.
The treatment of technology and technicians in the Luftwaffe also
had deeper causes,
originating from the social and political situation
since the beginning of the
industrialisation process, which started half
a century later in Germany
than in England. Most of the Luftwaffe
leaders were born in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries, well before
the First World War. At this time the army would have preferred
officer candidates from high schools
which stressed the sciences and
modern languages, the so-called Realgymnasien.
For political reasons,
however, it looked for candidates from
the Humanistische Gymnasien,
high schools that stressed the
humanities, because they were the sons
of families of the higher classes, of the bourgeoisie and aristocracy,
which stood for throne and altar against
the egalitarian and democratic
ideas
of the lower, more technical-minded classes of workers
and
craftsmen, who were even suspected of intending to overthrow the
monarchy. The Humanistische Gymnasien
produced graduates with a
classical and all-round education, humanists who did not like the
specialisation that went with
technology. This does not mean that they
did not like science. On the contrary,
many of them became famous
scientists. But scientific achievement to them was something that
depended on the
capabilities, on the genius, of the educated individual.
81
In short, graduates
from the Humanistische Gymnasien were not
particularly prepared for the technical
professions. More than 75% of
the later Luftwaffe generals came from upper middle class officer
families or belonged to the nobility.
Only 17% of the generals’ fathers
had technical professions. Two-thirds of
the generals grew up in rural
environments. Only 5% of the Luftwaffe generals and general
staff
officers obtained technical degrees.
During the time of the Weimar
Republic these officers could not familiarise themselves with higher
technology because Germany was not allowed
to have aircraft and
heavy weapons. The belief was kept alive
that the officer with a higher
education was superior to the engineering specialist and could carry
out the majority
of duties. So, when the Technical General
Staff
College
was closed, it was obviously
believed that the ‘tactical’
general
staff officer could handle operations as well as technology,
whereas
it had never been assumed
that the technical
general staff
officer would be able to do both. To
demonstrate the prevailing belief
that the broadly-educated officer was competent
in the technological
sector
and at the same time to elucidate
the misconception of
technology which existed, I should like to quote a sentence
from an
official report on Luftwaffe performance during the Wehrmacht
manoeuvres in 1937: ‘Officers’, it said,
‘who received commissions as
commanders of airfield service
companies for the duration of the
manoeuvre were not able to fulfil their
difficult task, even if they were
public prosecutors.’ This implied that a
public prosecutor (ie a person
who had studied
law at a university and was considered to be an
educated man) was expected to be able to
run a highly technical outfit
without any preparation.
National Socialist ideology thought of
the rational approach to life
in an industrialised society as ‘Americanism’, against which it
glorified pre-industrial and irrational
values like faithfulness, bravery
and so on; without these, of course,
no society and no armed force
could
exist, but they needed to be supplemented by rational values.
The ideology thereby
created an atmosphere which did not exactly
favour a rational approach to life and
to technology. There were many
good technologists and scientists in
Germany and Hitler used them for
his purposes, but he, and National
Socialism, did not want to submit to
the laws and regularities inherent
in technology. Technology was
considered to be an
art, the product of the creative individual genius;
82
that a lot of team work by ordinary men was necessary
to achieve
results
here was simply not understood. So, when the Germans
realised that they were far behind the Western
Allies in radar
technology, Goering staged an inventors’ contest
in the belief that a
spark
in the brain of a genius could bridge the gap. The suitably
qualified scientists – who first had to be released from the armed
forces – could, however, not solve the
problem at short notice, as may
be understood.
Let me now mention the so-called Auftragstaktik (mission
type
order) as a further cause of inadequate
technical understanding among
many air force officers. The army, where most of them had come
from,
had developed this principle in the previous
century. It
permitted a commander to execute an order in accordance with the
actual situation and did not lay down how
he had to execute it. In land
operations, for which this principle was developed, it allowed quick
changes in response to new situations.
In air operations, however, the
principle did not work so smoothly,
because they were largely
conditioned by predetermined technological factors, which could not
be changed so readily and required much more planning
and
adherence to advance programming.
Once an air operation had started, there
was little scope for further
orders
and many an older Luftwaffe officer, having been educated at
the Humanistische Gymnasien, and
originally trained in the army, was
driven
to despair. One of them wrote after the war that, whereas
general
staff work used to be an art, in the Luftwaffe it was a
mechanical business with a slide-rule, which required ‘just common
sense’, organisational abilities and
some technical skill. Such duties he
obviously considered to be beneath the
general staff officer. Younger
officers certainly thought otherwise,
but they had no say.
The neo-humanistic belief in the
well-educated individual who was
able to understand and fulfil a
multitude of tasks had produced in the
early 19th century the principle that
officers could be assigned to any
kind of role. In a perverted form this
ideal seems to have amalgamated
with the otherwise social-Darwinistic
leader-principle of the National
Socialists. Goering, in particular, favoured it in the Luftwaffe. While
the other service
headquarters were called High Command
of the
Army or Navy he had his Air Ministry and
Air Force High Command
designated as ‘The Reich Minister of Aviation and Commander-in-
83
Chief
of the Luftwaffe’ until shortly
before the end of the war. The
belief
in the capabilities of the individual leader went so far that,
whenever a problem had to be solved quickly,
Goering appointed a
dictator (eg when electronic valves
became rare, a tube-dictator) or a
plenipotentiary for the specific
task and gave him almost unlimited
authority to deal with it. At the end of
the war there existed many of
these plenipotentiaries, each
encroaching on each other’s business and
creating turmoil. Together with the traditional military principle of
obedience, which had been instilled into
the generals while they were
still schoolboys in a Gymnasien
before WW I, and with the prevailing
Nazi-authoritarianism, it was this individual approach
to leadership
that tied the Luftwaffe to the traditional authoritarian style of
command requiring almost omniscient leaders at the top. In addition,
the traditionally high reputation of the military, and of the officer, in
militarised German society created
a gap between civilians and the
military and induced the latter to look
at war as the exclusive business
of the soldier.
Since there was not much horizontal exchange
of
information and since the staff
organisation stressed the vertical lines
of authority ending in the respective commander
or leader – for
instance, the only connection between
the various intelligence services
was in Hitler’s
head – the leader was supposed to be able to decide
virtually everything on his own with
little advice from experts and was
certainly overburdened. Another example
of the belief in the all-round
capabilities of the individual staff officer was the early attempt to
educate
general staff officers
to be good operations officers
at the
same time as good engineers, an attempt
which failed.
For all of these reasons,
the Luftwaffe did not develop
a co-
operative style of command and
leadership, as I have indicated already
when mentioning the absence of mixed
military and civilian advisory
and controlling bodies.
It did not try to compensate for the natural
limitations of the knowledge and
abilities of any one individual leader
by establishing boards and committees.
One would have expected that
in an air force, a highly technical
instrument capable of interfering
with enemy economies
and consuming the highest share of the
nation’s armament expenditure, a co-operative style of command
would have been the first thing to
develop, because there, more than in
the army, many technical and economic
factors had to be considered.
No single person could master all of these issues without
the
84
permanent advice of experts
and committees, firmly established
throughout the whole organisation. For the conduct
of a strategic
bombing campaign it was, for instance, necessary
to have the advice
of civilian experts
on questions of the economy,
the industrial grid
system, science and so on – just as
Bomber Command and the British
Air Staff were assisted by various
civilian ministries and agencies.
Officers by themselves cannot know
everything necessary for such
a war. If Goering and Hitler chose to ask outside individuals for
advice, they did so only on an ad hoc
basis. Advisory and controlling
boards ought also to have been set up in the fields of operations and
technical administration of the Luftwaffe. But since the officers had
the say here, and there was a gap between
the civilian and military
side in German society, the climate for such an organisation did not
exist. Moreover, Hitler’s basic order No
1, of 11 January 1940, for the
safeguarding of military secrecy,
prevented the steady flow of
technical, political, scientific,
military and economic information that
had to form the basis for higher decision-making in a modern war,
because
nobody was to know more than was necessary for his
immediate task. Hitler – and similarly
Goering and many little
Führers in this
social-Darwinistic system of command – relied on his
own genius and refused to submit to a rigid routine of regular
attendance at conferences of permanent
boards. When the Wehrmacht-
Akademie, in 1938, drew up a manual for the conduct
of war at the
highest
level (Kriegführung) providing
for such a top organisation,
Hitler
prevented this manual from becoming
effective. He did not
want to have anybody telling him whom he
would have to consult and
when. The overall conduct of the war he
made his own domain. This
was also one of the reasons why the general
staff training of the
Luftwaffe
did not include courses
in grand strategy
and why the
Wehrmacht-Akademie, which tried to train higher officers in this,
ceased to exist in 1938. The Supreme
Command of the Armed Forces,
and especially the Armed Forces
Operations Staff, was kept small and
could thus not undertake the effective
direction of the war as a whole
and the operations of all the Services.
Under all these circumstances it
is no wonder that nothing
like the British
and Allied committee
system
ever developed. Hitler’s
conferences were usually
monologues; Field Marshal Milch’s
air armament conferences were
parliamentary debates
with very few definite or recognisable
85
conclusions and hardly any decisions to be carried
out. Too many
people participated.
In conclusion I should like to point out
that many of the problems
of the Luftwaffe were also encountered
by other air forces, and indeed
still occur in new disguises. The Luftwaffe
was too young – just 4 to 6
years of age, when the war started – to
have enabled its leaders to gain
sufficient experience in the handling of such a highly technical
service, and during the war it had no
time to cope with the multitude
of problems which were mainly caused by Hitler’s irresponsible
policy and strategy, on which the Luftwaffe
had next to no influence.
Goering’s political influence on Hitler had been on the decline since
1938. The Luftwaffe had no time
to get away from the old army style
of command and its leaders were still too much involved in thoughts
and attitudes
that corresponded more to those of a pre-industrial and
authoritarian society and had not yet
developed to match the degree of
industrialisation which Germany had now reached
and which had
enabled her to build a strong air force.
The mental approach to the air
war was inadequate. While the outward
appearance and form of
contemporary RAF and British staff
documents already demonstrated
a great amount of rationality,
comparable German documents did not.
This indicates an irrational, or romantic, approach
to the overall
direction of the war on the German side (though not to tactics
and
operations) in contrast to the systematic grand strategy employed
on
the British and Allied side. On the
strategic and grand strategic level,
Luftwaffe leadership was poor.
But within its own limitations and the
ones imposed on it from the outside –
here I mean Hitler, the National
Socialist regime, the war itself, and
allied superiority in men, material
and advanced thinking – the Luftwaffe,
I believe, performed very well.
That it lasted so well through this long
war was mainly due to its good
tactical and operational leadership, its
initial technical superiority and
the fighting virtues
of its soldiers. The fact must, however,
be faced
that it was the fate of the Luftwaffe
to have to serve Hitler’s political,
and inhumane ideological aims in the most terrible
war ever
experienced.
What I wish to make clear above all is that if the air war, as
Richard
Overy says, was a test of the modernity of industrialised
nations, then its
outcome was the proof of that modernity.
86
SEMINAR ON 31 OCTOBER 1988
THE ROYAL AIR FORCE AND CLANDESTINE
OPERATIONS IN NORTH-WEST
EUROPE
Introduction by Air Marshal Sir Frederick
Sowrey
This evening we have amongst
our guests those who have
participated in special operations in north-west Europe.
It would be
invidious of me to pull out the names of
those great protagonists and
gallant operators who took part, but
perhaps I could just mention those
who are not members of the
Society, in no particular order except the
way they are sitting in the front row – Brigadier Michael
Calvert,
starter of the SAS, great leader, SOE
operator in north-west Germany;
Robin
Hooper, again involved,
himself, to a very great degree; Sir
Douglas Dodds-Parker, delighted to see
him with us this evening, and
Sir Brooks Richards
who is also President of the Special
Services
Club.
A very warm welcome to you, gentlemen, from the Royal Air
Force Historical Society.
But to the team which we have on the platform, in the order in
which
they are going to speak – Professor
Michael Foot, Group
Captain
R Hockey, Air Chief Marshal
Sir Lewis Hodges,
Group
Captain Hugh Verity and Mr Tony Brooks,
who was our man on the
ground, despite in fact being put in
from the air.
Professor Michael Foot will take the
chair and there will be a short
break
before the discussion period, during which the panel will take
questions, discussion and contributions, which we hope this
magnificent audience will make towards an august and historic
evening. It’s all yours, Sir.
Professor Michael Foot
In Air Chief Marshal Sir Christopher Foxley-Norris’s Royal Air
Force
at War, which the Benevolent Fund published in 1983, two
chapters dealt with tonight’s
subject, and the author of each is here.
One of them, Bob Hodges,
will talk about the business
of parachute
dropping in which he engaged and the other, Hugh Verity,
will say
something about what it was like
manoeuvring a light aircraft; he went
twenty-nine times to France in
1943, landed, and came back. Before
either of them speak, Ron Hockey will explain how the thing started
87
up from scratch, and at the end, Tony
Brooks, who was really at the
sharp end, spending two years in France
pretending to be French, will
explain what that was like.
This was an odd corner of the war; among the oddest.
It was not
the first field into which somebody would put himself
who was
anxious
for personal publicity
or personal renown.
It had to be kept
well out of the public eye, though oddly enough the main airfield at
Tempsford from which the special duties squadrons operated
was
alongside the main line from
Kings Cross to Edinburgh, and abutted
on the Great North Road, so it was not
all that private. Every wartime
operation had to be secret until it took place (that was taken for
granted) but the special
duties squadrons did not enjoy the publicity
that so often attached successively to fighter
and to bomber squadrons
because what they were doing had to
remain secret as they were doing
it for the Secret Services. In the
earliest days it didn’t seem that any of
their
work would ever be admitted
and some of it may remain
inadmissible even at the present day. It was an extra lonely kind of
flying
because outside one’s own flight hardly a soul in the country
was aware of what one was doing. It also called for dedicated
airmanship and, even for the Royal Air Force, an unusual
degree of
readiness to press on. For a few dizzy weeks in the summer of 1940
the Chiefs of Staff, believing they had
no other offensive resources at
all, looked to sabotage and subversion
from inside the Nazi new order
as their only available weapon.
By the time the Special
Operations
Executive (SOE), the dirty tricks
department, had been set up, hardly
before
time, in mid-July
1940, the Chiefs of Staff were already
beginning to look for salvation
elsewhere. SOE could, it turned out, do
two main kinds of thing. It could
organise sabotage, or it could help to
organise secret armies. Each task
required stores and agents to explain
how to use them, who had to be put in, because
there was no other
way of getting them in that was
practical in any quantity, by air.
It would be going too far to say that
without the RAF’s support the
resistance movements of north-west
Europe could have done nothing,
but they would certainly, without that
support, have done a great deal
less than they did. The first British
clandestine air operation
in this
war, of which I have heard, is supposed to have involved
the
parachuting of a single man, near Paris, as early as 20th June 1940,
two days before the
French signed the Armistice, too secret to go into
88
anybody’s operational record book, but
years later the man, who had
become
vain, talked. Phillip
Schneidau, recruited into the Secret
Services by J C Masterman on the international hockey field,
parachuted into France in September
1940 and was brought out next
month by Lysander. Both these operations
were for SIS and they will
remain unacknowledged. The first attempt for SOE was made on the
night of the Luftwaffe’s big raid
on Coventry, 14/15 November 1940.
A Whitley got to the neighbourhood of
Morlaix in north Brittany, the
solitary agent took a long look through the hole in the floor and
decided
he wasn’t going to jump. Before much more could happen,
there was a stiff hedge to cross –
Portal’s opposition.
Gladwyn
Jebb, now Lord Gladwyn, then SOE’s Chief Executive
Officer, sounded Portal out early in 1941 about an Air Ministry
proposal to drop some Frenchmen into south Brittany
to disrupt the
Luftwaffe’s Pathfinder Force
by ambushing a busload of pilots. Portal
replied
on the same day, ‘I think the dropping of men dressed
in
civilian clothes for the purpose of attempting to kill members
of the
opposing forces is not an operation
with which the Royal Air Force
should
be associated. I think you will agree that there is a vast
difference in ethics between the
time-honoured operation of dropping
a spy from the air and this entirely new
scheme for dropping what one
can only call assassins.’ Jebb managed to talk Portal round. The
RAF’s
first successful operation
for SOE, a flight of more than a
dozen
hours in an unheated Whitley
to Poland and back, dropping
three
men at the limit of’ the aircraft’s range, took place on 15/16
February 1941. That French party dropped
into Brittany after all in
March, only to find their target already
dispersed. The first party from
the rival independent – that is,
non-Gaullist – French section dropped
into the centre of France in May.
Thereafter, gradually, these flights,
though always exciting for the agents taking part,
became for the air
crews something of a routine.
Though Portal had been talked round,
Harris, then his deputy, soon
thereafter Commander-in-Chief of Bomber Command, remained
hostile
to SOE throughout the war. He had a sound, professional
reason
for this. Aircraft
allotted solely to secret work were, from
Bomber
Command’s point of view, part-wasted assets because they
could only work for 10 or 12 days out of
every 28. They had to have
moonlight to see where they were going, just as the agents and
89
reception committees to whom they worked
had to have moonlight to
see what they were doing. As Sir Robin
Brook put it in retrospect, in
SOE, ‘for at least two years the moon
was as much of a goddess as she
ever was in a near-eastern religion.’ This apparently lunatic line
concealed some hardbitten airmanship. At
a time when many aircraft
in Bomber Command did well to know what country,
let alone what
county,
they were flying over, aircraft
on special duties had already
begun, not only to find particular
counties, but to find particular fields
in them. This they could only do by meticulous map-reading both
before and during the flight; much
easier of course for the navigator of
a multi-engined aircraft
than for a Lysander pilot who had to do
everything himself. Once SOE settled
down to its sums, the requests it
made for aircraft
became, from Bomber Command’s point of view,
alarmingly large.
I might instance
the ‘Carte’ organisation with which the SOE
sections working into France were toying in the spring of 1942; that
was going to require nearly 4,000 tons of stores to get armed. As it
turned out, ‘Carte’ was purely notional;
it was a complete illusion; it
had no real existence at all, apart from
one man with one bright idea,
but the idea that it might be necessary
to shift this quantity of stores,
was one that SOE staff thus learnt to handle comparatively early.
Portal remained sceptical. He used to
describe Bomber Command as a
gilt-edged investment certain to bring in a return,
a steady return,
while
SOE was a gamble which might bring in a fortune or might
bring in nothing at all. There were
never anything like enough aircraft
from SOE’s point of view. Care was taken
to slot their allocation and
their
use as carefully as possible
into the general
course of allied
strategy and by the spring of 1944,
though not till the spring of 1944,
the United States Army Air Force had begun to lend its powerful
support.
To satisfy the RAF’s sense of the proprieties, SOE never actually
gave orders to operational units. A new sub-branch of the Air
Intelligence Directorate, called AI2c, was set up to deal with SOE’s
operations staff. This staff requested AI2c to mount operations
arranging them, if need be, in an order
of priority; AI2c then directed
Tempsford to carry them out. Harris is
said, perhaps unfairly, to have
picked on Tempsford for the special duty squadrons’ base because it
was the foggiest airfield
in his command. Almost all the work that
90
Tempsford did, about nine-tenths of it,
was for SOE rather than for the
intelligence, or the escape, services.
But there is one escape operation
that does command
mention. A girl called Trix Terwindt, a former
KLM air
hostess, was dropped
very late on 13 February
1943, to an
SOE reception in Holland and was handcuffed at the side of her
dropping zone, for SOE’s work in Holland
at the time was entirely in
the hands of the Gestapo. Her training as an air hostess stood her in
excellent stead: she was trained to be used to sudden shocks.
She, at
least, of those fifty-odd unfortunate
prisoners said nothing she should
not have said, kept her head, kept quiet and survived. In the
Netherlands, only, the loss rate on
special duty operations went up to
18%, one aircraft
in every six dispatched, so in June 1943 the Air
Ministry imposed a temporary ban on
special duty flights there.
At the same time in France, the Germans were often aware of
Lysander and Hudson flights through the
notorious Dericourt who was
working for as many sides as would pay
him. The Germans in France
took care never to interfere, not wishing to kill the goose that laid a
number
of golden eggs
for them. When, in November
1943,
operational responsibility for special
duties flights into north-west
Europe
was transferred from AI2c to Bomber Command,
Harris
moved at once. He did his best, in
conjunction with several of SOE’s
many enemies in Whitehall, to get SOE
wound up altogether and not
until
January 1944 when Lord Selbourne, the Minister in charge of
SOE, managed to play the ace of trumps in the shape of Churchill’s
personal support, were both SOE and Special Duties Operations put
firmly
back on to the road. They are only just coming forward
into
respectable public gaze. Historians of international relations
and
historians of war usually omit what
Andrew and Dilks have called ‘the
missing
dimension’, the problems
of intelligence, security
and
subversion that can dominate
so much of government policy.
Inevitably the question comes up – did
these operations do any good?
Or were they, as Harris always maintained, scandalous diversions
from the proper task of the main force?
Some of SOE’s main triumphs,
and they did exist, were not in
north-west Europe. That extraordinary series, for example
of
smuggling and black market deals in Chiang Kai Shek’s China that
netted
£77M, about £950M at today’s
prices, and enabled
SOE to
wind up with its accounts in the black. But some were, Eisenhower
91
reckoned, for instance, that resistance had been worth up to half a
dozen
divisions to him in the course of Operation OVERLORD,
for
which
SOE had caused the RAF to deliver
arms for about half a
million
men into France.
As I have said elsewhere, arms were as
indispensable to a successful resistance movement as rain is to a
farmer; no arms – no armed struggle.
Before
Eisenhower’s armies landed in France,
one of SOE’s best
agents
there, Harry Ree, had invented
a technique of blackmail-
sabotage. The agent calls on a factory manager,
carefully chosen of
course, and explains that if the manager
does not allow a little discreet
sabotage, the whole plant may be laid flat by an air raid – a
tremendous saver of casualties had it
only been worked out sooner and
much more widely applied. Of actual
sabotage there was a good deal,
especially in France and Denmark. I was
able in my book on SOE in
France
to include a list, originally worked out by Tony Brooks,
of
ninety-three enterprises put out of’ action for various lengths of time
with a total weight of plastic
considerably smaller than the bomb load
of a single Mosquito. On the secret army front also, quite a lot got
done. How much might be summarised in a
table, not yet published on
this side of the Channel, of the
quantities of warlike stores parachuted
on SOE’s indent into various parts of
Europe:
Yugoslavia16,469 tons
France11,333 tons
Italy5,907 tons
Greece4,205 tons
Albania1,205 tons
Denmark700 tons
Poland600 tons
Rest of Europe2,327 tons
Yugoslavia, you see, got much the most, the odd 469 tons were
probably food, but all the rest were arms or explosives. France got
11,000 tons, Italy nearly 6,000, Greece
4,000, Albania just over 1,000;
Denmark, which came rather late to the business
of resistance, 700
tons;
Poland only 600 tons, because
it was so far away and aircraft
going
there were not allowed to land in Russia – they had to come
back.
The rest of Europe, Holland,
Belgium, Norway and a few
oddments such as
Czechoslovakia thrown in.
92
In these operations the RAF forged a strong,
though usually
unnoticed, link between this country and
the particular districts where
they reached their climax of a parachute
drop or a clandestine landing.
That,
during a world war, a local stretch
of meadow or moorland
could
be picked out for individual attention sometimes seemed not
much less
than a miracle to members of reception committees. It did
not suit the diplomats, either side of
the Channel or the North Sea, to
remember this later – it was too far outside the normal run of
diplomacy. There are still many witnesses alive to
testify to this fact
and the well of affection
for England arising
from it has not quite
dried
up. It was also of supreme importance to all the occupied
countries that their citizens should regain, if they could, the sense of
national self-respect that they had lost at the time of occupation and
defeat which through resistance, as it
was armed and fostered by SOE,
they could. And much can be forgiven
the organisation that stymied
Hitler’s attempts to build an atomic
bomb.
I am now going to hand you over to the
man who dropped, himself,
the two men trained by SOE who helped to get rid of hydrogen
–
Group Captain Hockey.
Group Captain Ron Hockey
I have been asked to talk about the early days of the build-up
of
this unit and the days when we were
trying to sort out what we had to
do – tactics, procedures and all that
sort of thing. The initial RAF unit
which was known as 419 Flight, was
formed at North Weald, north of
London,
on 20 August 1940. Its original purpose
was the aerial
transport of SIS personnel
and one of its early operations, of which
you have heard, was the deposit and collection of the late Phillip
Schneidau from France in 1940. Phillip’s
story of the eventual landing
near Oban and the difficulty of
identifying himself and the pilot of the
Lysander, Wally Farley, to the local Home Guard and police was a
classic
yarn and always of interest
to his restricted circle, invariably
told with his usual humorous anecdotes.
Phillip was a great chap and
we miss him very much.
I eventually joined 419 Flight from my
previous unit at Stradishall
in November 1940. The original
aircraft establishment was two
Whitley
Vs and one Lysander. We had five pilots and all captains
were very experienced for that era. Most had done much flying pre-
93
war: 1,500 hours was laid down as the
minimum requirement. At that
time we carried
co-pilots for navigation and map-reading purposes
except in the Lysander. In those days,
there was no separate navigator
trade in the RAF and all pilots were
trained in navigation up to a basic
standard. Later, air observers, so
called, were trained in navigation and
bomb-aiming and eventually these
specialities also became separated.
Co-pilots continued to be used for the very long sorties, to help with
the pedalling and also for training
purposes, of course.
My initial briefing was to carry out a
number of the longer Whitley
sorties
followed by a few shorter
Lysander operations, depending
upon operational requirements. This
original policy was overtaken by
events.
Because of the formation of SOE, its expansion and its
demand for our specialised services
through an ever-widening area of
Europe, the original policy never caught
up with events until after 161
Squadron was formed.
The original unit was later renumbered
1419 Flight because of the
advent
of Canadian units, all of whom took the 400 sequence. We
were flying from Newmarket racecourse
and were raised to Squadron
strength in late 1941. After a short
return to Stradishall it moved to its
final destination at Tempsford in March
and April 1942.
I had the job of moving the squadron
from Stradishall and I think
Professor Foot said it was picked because it was the foggiest
aerodrome in Bomber Command.
I think it was the boggiest
aerodrome in Bomber Command, because
when we moved in only the
runways
were just showing
through the water and when I inspected
the aircrew accommodation, most of it
was a foot under water as well
– Nissen huts and so forth. So the first
job I had to do even before we
unbogged one of the aircraft was to
billet all the aircrew out – eighty
of them anyway – in the local village
that same night. I must say that
the police really reacted pretty swiftly and we got them all out that
same evening.
Well now, by this time the expanded
unit, now 138 Squadron, was
operating over a wide area including
Norway, Poland, I don’t have to
tell you where it is, Denmark, Czechoslovakia, as well as France,
Belgium and Holland. Sorties were also
flown into Yugoslavia on one
or two occasions, staging through Malta.
This, we found. was not very
cost-effective, as our very few aircraft
were away from base so long,
often jeopardising other priority sorties, and so 148 Squadron,
which
94
was based in the Middle East,
took over this area, operating initially
from Derna in about 1942. A small number
of Halifaxes, Mark I and
Mark II aircraft,
were made available
in late 1941 for the longer
sorties, although Whitleys had been used for the initial flights
to
Poland and Czechoslovakia. The latter,
in October 1941, succeeded in
inserting radio signals facilities, allowing the first direct contacts
between
the Czechs and London since the occupation. The first
Halifax
sortie from the unit in December 1941 was also to
Czechoslovakia carrying the assassination squad which eventually
eliminated Heydrich. The provision
of larger aircraft
allowed more
load to be carried further.
Packing facilities of SOE to provide the
additional containers were sorely tried by the sudden increase of
capacity. The aircrew naturally always
wished to carry their maximum
load,
which could vary with range of sortie.
When SOE packers
caught
up with the capacity available
there were occasionally
complaints from the field as the load was
beyond the capacity of the
transport available.
A few experienced ex-bomber crews from the Polish Air Force
joined
138 Squadron in early 1942. These were trained on Halifaxes
with the squadron and were mad keen to
fly to their homeland. They
were a great acquisition to the unit and
performed excellently. In 1942
further
expansion took place by the formation of a further
squadron.
161 Squadron was formed from B Flight of
138 as a nucleus. Most of
the Whitley and all of the Lysander
aircraft moved to 161, leaving 138
to specialise in the longer sorties.
Other aircraft were considered from
time to time and in 1941 extensive
trials were conducted
during the
period we were at Newmarket and
Stradishall with a Martin Maryland
to determine whether
the season of the longer sorties could be
extended with a faster aircraft, up to
300 mph, particularly to Poland,
etc. Unfortunately the Maryland proved unsuitable due to fouling
of
the tailplane by parachutes causing
unacceptable damage. Also the
windscreen reflections at night were confusing
and could not be
improved without major fuselage
modification. I don’t think the
Americans ever flew them at night actually. The Curtiss electrical
constant speed propellers were also prone to run away without
warning
and rather liable to give a noisy greeting at an inopportune
moment. So we had to scrub that one. It
was an ex-French Maryland,
actually, originally ordered by the French and so of course the first
95
thing we had to do was to change the
throttle direction otherwise we’d
be in problems there. All our French
aircraft opened their throttles by
pulling
them back for some reason – I suppose that’s because they
drive on the right hand side of the
road.
The Halifax, I think, was a sturdy aircraft with enough redundant
structure to keep it flying if damaged
in action – this is very important,
I tell you, with military aircraft; it
was also good for servicing repair,
with the structure
subdivided for component
replacement. The
Liberator for example is all in one
piece, you can’t take the wings off
without taking the rivets out, so if you
have to repair it you’ve got to
put it back in the building jig. A
Merlin-engined version of the Halifax
was used because of its better fuel
consumption and longer range. The
later
Bristol-engined ones were rather thirstier
of course, so we kept
the Merlin ones. The fuel carried for maximum range was 2,732
gallons, if anyone is interested; I can
always remember it. With more
recent
machines an additional wing-tip tank gave 2,982 gallons,
so
that would keep your car going for a
little while! The later Merlin 20
and 22 engines
in the Halifax had a coolant mixture
of 70/30
water/glycol which was a great
improvement on the Merlin 10 or the
Whitley which had 100% glycol and so if
you had an engine fire and
you got to the flash point of glycol – it of course added to the
conflagration, which was quite dangerous for the Whitley.
In May
1944,
after my time in the unit, Stirling
aircraft replaced Halifaxes
when the Stirling
proved inadequate for main-force bombing
due to
height limitations. By that time the
longer sorties to Poland, etc, were
being organised from Foggia in Italy.
Now just
a few points about some of the problems. There were a
few problems, particularly with the
longer sorties in the early days but
we tried to anticipate as many as
possible. One of the major problems
was weather reporting. For our targets
in eastern Europe there was
little
information and generally
you had to assess and find out. The
Group
Met Offices were generally concerned
about Main Force
operations. and naturally could not give
priority to a few odd places on
the weather map, particularly with no reports
in the area. There was
also the problem of security, and going to the Met Office and saying
we want to know what the weather is ‘there’
was a breach of security
right
away, of course. Nearer sorties were easier and often results
of
Met Flight sorties
were available which could confirm probably local
96
synoptic changes. The service certainly
improved when we arrived at
Tempsford with our own Met Office.
It was the long jobs which presented
the problems, as conditions
may be suitable
over the target area and yet be bad en route.
Remember, we were still in the era of icing problems
so there were
often abortive operations, and it was
very frustrating for a crew to go
time after time on the same operation
and have to bring the whole load
back,
knowing that they or another
crew would have to repeat the
same trip again shortly. This required a
special type of crew on these
long operations, often 10 to 12 hours,
who were really dedicated to the
job, because there were no alternative
targets in this sort of work.
To deduce the weather pattern
whilst in flight,
analysis of wind
vectors
could help. One requirement is to set the altimeter, at the
correct
datum of course,
to monitor the height above ground in the
target
area. There were no radar altimeters in those times. The
operating height for parachuting was generally about 500 ft. This
datum setting could vary considerably
from one’s starting datum and
30 millibars lower would indicate about
1,000 ft over-reading. Rather
like Russian roulette of course, always
hoping you’re on the right side.
Having lost two trailing aerials in the
trees in Czechoslovakia, I have
some sympathy with it. The associated
navigation on the long sorties
was right back to basics. As electronic
boxes were developed so they
could
be used when within range (for example
Gee, also equipment
like Rebecca/Eureka and S-phone which were developed
later) but
these
could not be dropped in some countries
because of
compromising equipment, or where ground facilities for secure
transport of such loads were not available in difficult terrain.
There
were some enemy DF stations
(which needed decoding)
but were
generally too inaccurate at the range
required. So if the target was out
of range of sophisticated navaids one
had to navigate, above clouds –
successive star sights, more wind
vectors, reset the altimeter, decrease
height near the target, hoping to
identify a ground feature and be able
to map-read to the dropping
zone. It was often difficult
on a dark
night,
even with some moon to tell when you broke cloud if the
ground
was snow-covered, especially if the cloud was also snowing.
Anyway
we had a certain amount of success
which relieved the
monotony of course.
Undoubtedly the most
difficult country in which we operated was
97
Czechoslovakia – a long flight, all over enemy territory, much high
ground (the Tatras and associated
ranges), flights only in the winter to
benefit from the long nights, so terrain
was often snowbound, and no
reception facilities in Czechoslovakia.
Although Poland was also a long flight the terrain was fairly flat
and by routing
over the North Sea and Denmark intermediate
checkpoints were obtainable. There were also reception committees.
There
was also a very large river throughout Poland, the Vistula.
Unfortunately target areas in southern
Poland were out of range until
operations from Foggia started. After
serving continuously on this unit
in its formative
years (419, 1419 Flight, 138 Squadron) from
November 1940 until February
1943 I was posted to Mediterranean
Air Command to build up a similar
facility to operate from that theatre
into Europe. After forming 334 Wing which subsequently moved to
Foggia, I returned to the UK in early
1944 and found myself operating
38 Group squadrons
in support of SOE’s build-up
for D-Day. This
proved effective training for the units
which were subsequently to land
the Sixth Airborne Division in Normandy
on 6 June 1944.
In conclusion, I should add, as one of the planning staff for
OVERLORD, NEPTUNE, MALLARD, etc, that I
was very pleased to
include
my old squadron, 138, in the spoof raids over the Pas de
Calais.
They carried out this operation, whose timing was critical, in
the manner to be expected, which
certainly helped to delay the enemy
armour and movements towards the real
battle.
Air Chief Marshal Sir
Lewis Hodges
Group Captain Hockey has described the
beginnings of the Special
Duties
Squadrons supporting the work of the clandestine services,
SOE and SIS. He has explained the vast area over which we were
required to operate from Norway, through
Poland, Denmark, Holland,
Belgium, France, Czechoslovakia, and of course at the same time
parallel operations were going on in the Mediterranean covering the
countries there, Greece, Yugoslavia,
Albania and Italy.
To be able to do an efficient and
effective job we needed the right
aircraft, with the necessary payload and
range, and it was the arrival of
the Halifax that made this all possible.
As Group Captain Hockey has
explained, the Whitley in the early days
was all we had for the job and
we had to make the
best use of it, but its performance did restrict very
98
much indeed what we were able to do. I personally only did one
operational sortie in a Whitley, in fact my first operation
on the
squadron, 161 Squadron, when I joined it
in November 1942, and that
was to take two agents to France and to
drop them in the Loire valley
to a reception
committee, and by that I mean agents on the ground
who were
trained specially to lay out the lights, a
pattern of torches,
and then they would flash a pre-arranged code signal so that the air
crew could identify that the right
people were on the ground.
These operations were all arranged by
coded radio signals between
the agents in the field and London, and
then the final clearance on the
night, to say that the operation was on
for that night, would be given
by a pre-arranged personal message over the BBC after the news
bulletin.
If I could just digress and say a word on how I came to join 161
Squadron at Tempsford. I had been in Bomber Command since the
beginning of the war with 49 Squadron,
bombing targets in Germany
up until the spring of 1942. Then I went to a Whitley operational
conversion unit training crews for bomber squadrons. At that time
Wing Commander Charles
Pickard was the CO of 161 Squadron,
having
just taken over that squadron
at Tempsford. I knew Pickard
and we had both been serving on the same station in Bomber
Command
previously, and he asked me if I would be interested in
joining
this special squadron
as he was looking for a Flight
Commander and having already done a tour
of operations in Bomber
Command, I had a lot of experience of
night flying, night experience,
and having been at a Whitley OCU, I knew
that aircraft well and so in
November 1942 I was posted to 161 Squadron
at Tempsford to
command
a Whitley flight.
that is to say the parachuting job. Now I
mention
this just to illustrate the point that the crews that we had in
the Special Duty Squadrons were normally selected
on the old boy
network. They were personally selected
by the Squadron Commander
so that we were sure that we had people with really
good experience
and that they would fit in to these
special units for this special type of
work. It was done very much on a personal
basis.
When I joined the squadron,
there were two flights, the Whitley
flight,
later replaced with Halifaxes, and the other was the Lysander
flight
augmented later by Hudsons. 138 Squadron was the other
squadron at
Tempsford, as Group Captain Hockey has mentioned, and
99
he was commanding it at that time and they had already been re-
equipped with Halifaxes. As the Chairman
mentioned in his
introductory remarks, as special
squadrons undertaking this highly-
specialised role, we were not in the early days working
under the
operational control of Bomber Command at
High Wycombe, as were
of course the Main Force bomber squadrons, and we were regarded
certainly with considerable suspicion, as is usually
the case I think
with special units and we were certainly
not popular with the boss, Sir
Arthur
Harris. He looked upon us as a diversion of effort from the
main task of bombing Germany,
and hence the reluctance to give us
priority for the newer type of aircraft which were of course in great
demand for the bomber squadrons.
In fact this sort of tussle
went on throughout the war, not only in
Europe but also in the Far East where I went later on to command a
Special
Duties Squadron. We had exactly
the same experience in
south-east Asia.
And so I started operations on Whitleys and shortly after my
arrival at Tempsford we were re-equipped
with the Halifaxes and we
set out to convert the crews to the new
aircraft and to start navigation
training and parachute training,
dropping dummy loads to simulate
operational conditions. Dropping was normally from 500-600 ft and
we carried the normal Halifax crew,
except that we had in addition a
despatcher, whose job it was to look
after the parachuting side of the
business, and to see to the dropping of agents and stores carried
internally in the fuselage.
The lower turret of the Halifax had been
removed
and doors were fitted in the hole and it was through
this
aperture that agents, personnel
and stores were dropped. Heavy
containers for arms and ammunition were
carried on bomb racks in the
bomb bay. Thus from the beginning of 1943 with a
full complement
of Halifaxes we were poised to carry out our job for SOE and the
other clandestine services, delivering
people and stores to the various
resistance groups in north-west Europe. We ranged over all the
countries, but the largest effort in north-west Europe was directed
to
the resistance groups in France. 1943
saw the introduction of radar for
navigation in the form of Gee, which transformed the whole picture
for us and enabled us to get much greater
accuracy in penetrating
enemy territory, particularly in bad
weather.
Each different area
had its own problems. In Poland, Denmark and
100
Holland, for example, we had to penetrate the main defences
protecting the Ruhr and north-west Germany,
the fighter and anti-
aircraft belt, a particularly lethal area. In Norway we had extremely
difficult terrain, making parachuting in
the mountains very hazardous
both for the agents and for the air
crews. And then Czechoslovakia, as
Group
Captain Hockey has said, involved
a very long penetration
across
enemy territory, right across south Germany, a very long way
out and a long way back. We carried out
our operations and this was
usually
when there was a special
urgency. We sometimes
dropped
agents in the dark period with no moon,
and these were often what we
call blind drops – there was no
reception committee on the ground and
this method had security advantages, but then there was always the
risk of injury in the parachute landing.
But it was the moon period
which
dominated our lives, the moon period was all-important to us
and we were very conscious of it all the
time.
The tactics we used were to fly to the
enemy coast at low level to
avoid
radar detection and then to pull up to about 1,000-2,000 ft
crossing the coast to be able to identify
one’s position accurately by
visual means, but with Gee if one was
getting a good signal we could
penetrate at low level. Once over enemy territory
we usually kept
fairly
low, 500-1,000 ft depending on the terrain,
to avoid radar
detection. Routing was always very carefully
planned to avoid all
known
defended areas, such as enemy airfields, and very accurate
map-reading was essential and this
needed a great deal of training and
practice and close co-operation between
the captain, the navigator and
the bomb-aimer in the nose of the
aircraft.
All through 1943 the intensity of
operations increased and then in
early
1944 the American
squadrons arrived on the scene, part of the
Eighth Air Force, similarly engaged on
special operations for SOE and
also for the Office of Strategic Services,
the OSS, the American
equivalent of SOE. They were based at
Harrington, near Bedford, not
far from Tempsford
and we worked very closely
together and in the
early
months they came over to Tempsford quite a lot and learned
from our experiences. They were flying B-24 Liberators which were
ideally suited to the task and they had
an excellent range and payload,
and the addition
of the American squadrons more than doubled
the
available resources, and so you can see
that the build-up was gradually
taking place to
support our eventual return to the continent.
101
The Main Force bomber squadrons
of Bomber Command
by this
time were fully equipped with four-engined aircraft,
Halifaxes,
Lancasters and Stirlings but the
Stirlings were not capable of climbing
to high altitude with a full bomb load and suffered heavy losses, and
as a result they were largely withdrawn
from main force bombing
operations and became available for low
level work, parachuting arms
and ammunition in the period immediately prior to D-Day. And by
using Stirlings en masse and often in
daylight in the latter stages, very
large
quantities of weapons
were supplied to the Maquis groups,
particularly in France. And so a whole effort in support
of the
resistance, especially in France,
reached a peak in preparation for the
Normandy landings in June 1944.
To conclude, I would just like to say a word on security which
Professor Foot touched on. These operations demanded a very high
degree of security as you can imagine. The risks were very high and
could
involve whole networks
of agents in the occupied
countries.
When we parachuted agents into the field we never, or very rarely,
knew who they were. We perhaps knew
their codenames but that was
all. They were brought to Tempsford at
the last moment from a special
holding unit, a country house in the
vicinity, and they were brought on
to the airfield with as much secrecy as
possible. They were taken to a
special
building where their clothing was thoroughly and finally
checked for any incriminating evidence
such as English markings, rail
tickets, cigarette packets and so on. And then they were given their
false
identity papers and finally fitted with their parachutes with the
RAF despatcher present.
And they were then taken to the aircraft
dispersal where the Halifax was waiting
ready to start engines.
It is remarkable, I think, the degree of security that was achieved
on the station
amongst the aircrews
and the ground staff. It is only
since the war that we have got to know
many of these people who we
dropped
into occupied countries
and we have established many
friendships which have endured for the
last forty years, right up to the
present time.
Group Captain Hugh Verity
Between
October 1940 and September 1944, 400 people were
picked up by moonlight from France
alone. A handful of pilots in half
a squadron landed
their Lysanders or Hudsons secretly on rough fields
102
marked by a few torches. Now this was a
very small commitment of
aircraft and aircrew which returned a
major contribution to the success
of the French Resistance. Other
Lysanders based in Italy did pick-ups
in northern Italy, Greece and Yugoslavia
between May 1944 and April
1945.
Dakotas did them in Yugoslavia and Poland. Now all this
started, as you have heard, when the British
spy, if I may use that
word,
Pilot Officer Phillip
Schneidau, was picked up near
Fontainebleau in October 1940 in a modified Lysander.
Ron Hockey
told us that this flight ended in Oban
in western Scotland and you may
be wondering why. They had together designed
a flare path of three
torches
(they actually worked this one out on the tablecloth at
Oddenino’s) but the flare path was three torches
tied to sticks, 150
yards
long and 50 yards wide – an inverted L. The Lysander
was
modified by the removal
of all armament and the fitting of a fixed
permanent ladder on the port fuselage,
so that the agent could climb
into the cockpit. Well now, what went
wrong? I’ll tell you what went
wrong.
First of all, on taking off, a German sentry’s
bullet went
through
the compass. The next thing was that, to make it easier for
Phillip
to climb in, Wally Farley had taken off the roof and it was
pouring with rain, so the radio set had got soaking wet and wouldn’t
work; then they had cloud all the way up to about 16,000 ft
where it
was very cold, and the only way they
could let down was to wait for a
gap in the cloud and that didn’t happen
until they were over Scotland.
In 1941. the Special Duties Flight based
at Newmarket racecourse
used airfields near the south coast for
staging pick-ups, much closer to
the target
areas in France. In that year Gordon Scotter
did two pick-
ups and Squadron Leader John
Nesbitt-Dufort did three including the
first for SOE. In December 1941 when the
flight had grown into 138
Squadron, Flight Lieutenant Alan Murphy, known as ‘Sticky’,
attempted the only pick-up
ever in Belgium. He was ambushed, as a
result of treachery in the network, and
managed to bring his Lysander
back to Tangmere
with 30 bullet holes through
the aircraft and one
through his neck.
In February 1942, when 161 Squadron was
formed, it took over the
Lysander Flight. This new Squadron was commanded by Wing
Commander ‘Mouse’ Fielden who had been the King’s Pilot and
Captain
of the King’s Flight. Nesbitt-Dufort was hiding in France,
having failed to
penetrate heavy icing in cloud on the way home from
103
a pick-up. A month later Murphy rescued
him and his passengers in a
borrowed Anson. By June 1942, Murphy had completed
five
successful pick-ups and he was replaced
as CO of the Lysander Flight
by Squadron Leader Guy Lockhart who had
done his first pick-up as a
flying
officer in March. Just work it out – flying officer in March,
squadron leader in June! In August his
flare path was laid over a ditch
by an agent who later seemed to be drunk, and that finished off that
Lysander. Lockhart himself was picked up off a beach by a felucca
from Gibraltar, crewed by a rather
strange part of the Royal Navy. He,
Guy, flew back to Tempsford
a fortnight after his crash. The third
pilot to leave a Lysander
in France in 1942 was
John Mott who was
bogged
in the mud near Bourges.
He was imprisoned but he later
escaped. In October 1942, Group Captain
Fielden took command
of
Tempsford and, as you have heard, Wing Commander
Pickard took
over 161 Squadron.
It was these two who pioneered the use of Hudsons for pickups,
twin-engined Hudsons weighing 11 tons, and one of these was the
King’s personal aircraft, which ‘Mouse’
Fielden had kept by him.
Now, while Lysanders
could squeeze in three passengers, the
Hudson
could take ten. They needed strips 1,000 yards long,
compared with the 500 yards which was
enough for the Lysander. The
Hudson’s so-called flare path was
450 yards long and it consisted of
four bicycle lamps, plus a fifth to the
right to show how wide the strip
was. ‘Pick’ did the first successful
Hudson pick-up in February 1943.
With a navigator, a wireless operator,
Gee, and a radio loop for
bearings, it is obvious
that the navigation of the Hudson was easier
than the pilot’s task in a Lysander – he
had to hold a map in one hand
and fly the aircraft with another and I
am going to go into this in more
detail before I sit down if you’ll permit me. But of course landing
a
Hudson
was a very much more difficult task than landing
a much
more manoeuvrable
Lysander, and this was particularly difficult on a
dirty night. In 1943, 161 Squadron’s
Lysander Flight had a very busy
and a very lucky year, at least until November.
Over half the
successful landings in France from 1940 to 1944 were completed
in
1943 – that is 104 out of 183 Lysanders
and 19 out of 36 Hudson
landings. Six of these Hudson landings
were by Wing Commander
Hodges,
who commanded the squadron from May 1943 to March
1944, after
commanding the Halifax Flight of that squadron.
104
Now to the ground side in France. In
spite of heavy losses during
the summer, the networks of agents in
France were building up during
1943 and needing more and more pick-ups
as well as parachute drops.
They worked for various intelligence organisations, co-ordinated by
MI6, for General
De Gaulle’s resistance, whose air operations were
laid on by SOE, for SOE’s own French
section and for MI9’s escape
and evasion lines. The agents responsible for finding fields and
receiving aircraft, most of whom had
been trained by pick-up pilots at
Tempsford, included Paul Reviere, who
handled 144 passengers on 14
operations, mainly near the Saone, and
Henri Dericourt, of whom you
have heard, the double agent, who handled
87 passengers on 15
operations, mainly near the Loire. One didn’t know at the time that,
because Dericourt’s security was
important to the Germans, we had a
safe conduct from the Luftwaffe
for those flights! It would have been
rather helpful if we had known that!
Losses of RAF pilots and aircraft were
surprisingly light, and due
more to fog and mud than to enemy action.
Although two Hudsons
were bogged for hours in mud, not one was lost. Thirteen Lysanders
were lost, four were shot down over France, four crashed on landing
in France for various reasons,
three crashed in fog on returning to
England and two were inextricably bogged
in mud. Seven of these 13
pilots survived, including one who is
sitting in the front row, and only
six were killed on pick-up operations.
On the other hand, the reception
teams
and the farmers and their wives who sheltered the agents and
their
passengers had heavy losses, and many of them died in
concentration camps in Germany.
The RAF’s operational control of Special
Operations was
streamlined as you have already heard – I would just like to say a
word about Air Ministry approval
of the fields we landed on. The
details of each field were sent to Air
Ministry AI2c by the air liaison
sections of MI6 and SOE. Fields for landings
were then specially
photographed by a photographic reconnaissance unit – high flying
Spitfires from Benson – and stereo pairs were scrutinised to see
whether the fields were acceptable for
landings. And then the decision
about whether the op was on on a
particular night or not was made at
Tempsford in the light of the rather
ropey weather forecasts that were
available in those days.
So much for a thumbnail sketch of the history of pick-ups. But I
105
have been asked to go into some detail
in answer to a question which I
am often asked – How did we find the fields? There are several
Lysander pick-up pilots in the audience
who may well give you
different answers, but this is my
answer, because we did generally find
them.
Two-thirds of all pick-ups attempted
were successful, and failures
were often because of fog or very low
cloud, and sometimes because
the agents couldn’t
make the rendezvous. Very few pick-ups
failed
because
of enemy action or errors in pilot navigation. With only a
voice back-bearing over the Channel, a map, a compass, a clock and
blind flying instruments, how was it
done? Well, there were six things
one had to do, and four of them before
taking off.
The first was to plan a route avoiding Flak,
with a good landmark
at the end of each leg. Second, cut
half-million maps to cover 50 miles
on each
side of the planned track, and fold it like a concertina. Now
this is an actual operational map from
1944, not one of mine, I was too
security-minded to keep target information like this, but another
pilot’s widow was kind enough to send it
to me, and you will see that
entry
point here near Caen, and the track marked down here past
Blois, down to near Issoudun, the gen
card here with the navigational
detail
for each leg, there and back. And then in the target area (that
was a half-million map), a
quarter-million map like this giving you the
detail on the approach to the actual target. Having prepared the map,
the third thing to do was to study it
for an hour or two before take-off,
memorising the shapes and the compass
bearings of major landmarks.
Fourthly, one had to calculate the gen card in the light of forecast
wind, and then, fifthly, and this was
the first thing you had to do after
taking
off, you had to fly the planned
headings and speeds very
accurately until the error in the
forecast wind showed up because you
had drifted off your planned track. Then
you had to do a bit of mental
geometry in the light of the different wind, and adjust your heading
and of course,
the sixth thing, very obviously, map-reading when
weather permitted. I mean, very often
you couldn’t see the ground on
the way to the target, so you couldn’t
do any map-reading, but when
there was a clear bit and you could see
the ground, that obviously was
vital. And for this water was the best
landmark, coast, rivers or lakes,
and, after that, forests and railways,
and the last leg, which could only
be a couple of minutes long, really, had to be from a really certain
106
visual
fix, a particular village or stream, or railway crossing
or
something like that which you could be certain
you were identifying
and from there do an accurate timed run
of two or three minutes when,
lo and behold, you would see the agreed
Morse letter flashing up from
the dark ground and that was really
quite a thrill.
Chairman
This is the man who delayed a German
armoured division for ten
days on its way to Normandy.
Tony Brooks
A lot of what I was going to say to you
about the ‘other end’, as it
were,
has already been hinted at, but I think it is worth repeating in
some ways.
’
I was dropped ‘blind
by parachute from a Halifax on 1 July 1942 |
near Limoges, and I operated
in France until overrun by the Allied
armies,
the French First Army and the American
Seventh Army, in
October 1944. My organisation was a
clandestine one, as opposed to a
paramilitary guerrilla type of organisation – as opposed to a Maquis.
The men and women who worked for me lived ordinary lives every
day, worked in the factories, were
doctors, farmers, railwaymen, quite
a lot of railwaymen, and after they had done their work, in the
evening, they had to return home and carry on with their ordinary
daily activities. Now my mission in
France, the Pimento mission as it
was called, and any aircrew
may remember doing drops to Pimento,
was firstly to attack specific targets
such as supplies of sulphuric acid
to the submarine bases on the Atlantic
coast in 1942, superchargers for
aero-engines being made by Pensavia,
which I see today is going to be
taken over by Lucas, and reinforcements to
Italy during the Anzio and
Salerno
landings when we had to muck about with Hermann
Goering’s armoured division going through the Mont Cenis tunnel.
And then, more importantly at the end, on London’s
orders, or
Eisenhower’s orders, to paralyse – that’s
what it said on my brief – the
French railway network in support of
D-Day. A small task, I was only
20 at the time, but nevertheless it was
very enjoyable. Derailing trains
comes
naturally. I used to put chewing gum on our toy railway
to
derail my brother’s steam engine when a
small boy.
To do this task we
obviously needed a lot of demolition stores. We
107
had a very small requirement for
weapons, ie the complete reverse of a
secret army. A clandestine organisation
with the task of preparing for
D-Day
was absolutely useless
unless we could get out demolition
stores, of various sorts, not just
explosives, but also incendiaries and a
thing
called abrasive grease,
which is a way of improving the
movement of railway trains!
We had to get these stores as near as
possible to the targets that we were to
deal with on D-Day. The only
way we liked to do this was to get the RAF to come along and drop
them as near as possible, and by as near
as possible – I mean say 100
km. But (I don’t mean an error of 100
km) I mean within 100 km of
our target we would have a dropping zone
where we could get at the
stores. But in the earlier part of the
war, when Whitleys were dropping
to us in October and November 1942, my
first two drops, they would
drop north of Lyon; but my targets
for dealing with sulphuric acid
were down near the Pyrenees.
This meant that we had to shift the
explosives across France, a very
difficult task, and a task, if you were
caught,
carrying the death penalty. The major casualties in my
organisation, seventy-two people in all, were caught shifting
explosives from A to B.
Now, in the early days, the south-west of France, down near
Toulouse, was where the Das Reich
SS Division was located, and this
was one of my top targets in 1944, the drops by parachute of stores
down to that area only began right at
the end of the winter of 1943 and
then the spring of 1944. You’ve already
heard about the way the
system
worked – there was a BBC message
on the radio, listened to
after the news through the jamming – that terrible racket! – at 21.15
and then, if the message came through,
the reception committee, who
only knew their own dropping
zones, perhaps three or four, and the
messages for those particular drops, would hear this and they would
go out on foot, or on
bicycles after curfew to the field, which, when
we could, we tried to make 400m by 400m. If the operation was
successful they would have to pick up
the containers, in the early days
only three or four: in 1944
sometimes seventy-two containers on the
ground – that is quite a lot of stores
to shift. After having picked up all
the equipment and hidden it away they
then had to go home and then
clean up and then go to work without
looking too excited the next day.
When an operation was successful, the
fact that the powers that be
in the UK thought
it worthwhile risking
a valuable aircraft
and a
108
highly-trained crew to fly 750 km to drop to us – a scruffy bunch of
terrorists on the ground – 150 kilos of
stores – it was a terrific boost to
their morale.
The early light pattern was a triangle
with pocket torches, les piles
vindaires as they were called, with red sweet papers on them. I
consumed a terrific number of lousy sweets to get the red sweet
papers,
but the RAF complained about this after a bit, and we went
over to white lights and the L formation. Now the light pattern was
laid out
in the field, indicating, as it was
an inverted L, indicating to
the pilot the direction of the wind, and
the speed of the wind indicated
where
we put the lights in relation to the dimensions of the field.
Windspeed was calculated by a lady’s stocking with the heel cut off
and held up in the wind on a stick or by
hand, and depending on the
angle we knew that if it was 45 degrees
it was 30 km an hour and
it
was pretty dicey.
It was very rare that we had in the
early days containers outside the
DZ: occasionally they did, but they
never landed in the middle where
we always had the cart, the wheelbarrows or whatever to shift the
stuff,
but nevertheless, the early drops were very accurate. The fact
that the RAF could find our small field and actually drop on four of
these
piddling little torches,
completely foxed the French, and still
foxes
me. But the trouble was when there was a ‘no show’ and the
message
had come out perhaps two or three times during the moon
period,
morale would go absolutely right down into their boots, and
the fact that these people risked their lives, moon period after moon
period, to go out or sit by and wait for
a BBC message and then go out
to the field. I might tell you in the better weather
we used to poach
crayfish in the streams, and have a
portable radio, but nevertheless we
used to sit around waiting
for this, which used to put their morale
down very much indeed. And it was very
difficult to explain to them
that over the UK there might be fog,
although it was a beautiful clear
moonlit night where they were, or that
the low ground mist was hiding
our torches from the pilot, although we
could see the Halifax circling
around in a great big sort of S looking
for the DZ.
But also we had a difficulty when a drop
was delayed. Contrary to
most clandestine networks
or contrary to most networks,
I was
fortunate in not having a wireless
operator. I had a very rapid courier
system through
Switzerland, where I had been brought up as a kid.
109
Thanks to French customs men who are
after all part-time smugglers,
or the other way round, I never quite know, and the railwaymen, it
only used to take five days from my headquarters in Lyon to Head
Office and back again for me to get my
instructions, which was a jolly
sight quicker than by W/T, ciphering and
skeds and moving the radio
set and so on. And so, one of our
problems was that we would have to
have a method of telling London that the
chap had sown or ploughed
the field that we were going to use as a DZ and this meant
that each
team had to have an alternative field in case the peasant
would say,
‘Look,
you can do it till the end of the month but then I’ve got to
sow,’
and of course if it was all nicely smooth and harrowed
there
would be a hell of a lot of round holes
where the containers had gone
and if
we’d driven a cart across it, he took
a dim view. That was all
right when the peasant was on our side;
sometimes of course the best
fields we had were ones where the
peasant was on the other side and
was hostile, because then we didn’t
really worry much what we did to
his field.
In late 1943 SOE decided
to standardise, and it has already been
mentioned, the preparation of the build-up
to D-Day, the increase in
the need for containers and stores, headquarters decided to make
standardised loads, ie a fifteen-container load on a Halifax would be
so much weapons,
so much ammunition, so many rifles, so many
dressings, food, tobacco and possibly a tiny amount of explosive,
which
meant that we were continually getting vast quantities of
weaponry which we didn’t want and we had to go and hide away
somewhere. And it meant also that we had
to organise an unnecessary
number
of drops to get the stores we wanted, therefore
aircraft were
being put at risk unnecessarily and so
were we on the ground, and so,
if ever there is a third war, which I
hope there never is, anyway not in
my time, that this should be very carefully
looked at. We’ve worked
out on the ground – I was over in France
only a month ago with one of
my most successful reception committee operators, Henri Mander –
we worked out that we could have had all
the stores we needed and all
the weapons we needed with 30 drops instead of the 100 successful
drops we did have.
Now the next point which I would like to make is also the way
stores
were packed, or delivered rather.
There were two types of
containers. The
C-Type, which was like a long tubular suitcase which
110
had three 50-gallon
drums in it and was all held together – nice and
solid
– very heavy. The other type was an H-Type,
which was five
canisters which were held together by
two rods from the cushion at the
bottom to the parachute box at the top
with two rods on each side. If
the ground was at all hard, either rocky
or frozen, on contact with the
ground
they broke open. That didn’t matter if you were in guerrilla
country
because the chaps could pick up these smaller units, which
had webbing straps on them, put them on their backs, and scarper.
They didn’t worry about leaving a few
Whitworth-threaded bolts lying
about in a French field. But our dropping
zones, some of them were
football fields, things of that sort, were very near a town. I was
working just before I came out, I was
looking at it, and we had about
thirty dropping zones which were within
25 km of the second biggest
city in
France. So to us, leaving a bit of hardware in the middle of a
field
was absolute death. So we loathed the H-Type. And again, I
think, from our point of view, it was much easier
to get four men to
lift a C-Type container or dump it into a cesspit and then come back
the next day and collect it. and sort it
out if we were a bit rushed on
the ground.
We noticed, of course, at the end, with
the terrific build-up for D-
Day, that the standard of dropping accuracy
did drop off. And this I
think is fairly obvious; it was because
of 38 Group, wasn’t it? – which
were not of the same skill and training as the Special
Duties
Squadrons.
Notwithstanding these various problems
we did have 100
successful drops and received
140 tons of stores. And we had 122
dropping zones marked out and registered in London and all they
needed
to do was to broadcast
a codeword at the beginning
of the
moon period and I knew which DZs were going to be operating that
month,
and then teams were alerted
and then they listened for their
individual messages each night.
I haven’t included in those figures the drops that we had on what
we used to call in 1944 – I think it was
about February or March 1944
– we were asked to provide ‘dump grounds’,
ie grounds that would be
manned throughout the moon period so
that if the RAF could not find
them, because of low cloud or no show-up
of the team, the reception
committee, they didn’t fly all the way home with their stores as they
could drop them to
someone who could use them and on one occasion
111
we had over 100 containers but, thank goodness,
that was in August
1944 down in the south-west and we were
pretty well, at least a chap
called Colonel Starge (Hilaire) was
pretty well in command of the area
by then, and so there was no disaster.
But we did have several drops of
72 containers and that needs an awful
lot of manpower on the ground
to actually shift it.
112
BOOK REVIEWS
RAF Flying Training
and Support Units since 1912 by Ray
Sturtivant. Air Britain; 2007. £37.50.
This is an updated and extensively revised
edition of a book that
first
appeared ten years ago. It is a real tour
de force providing
the
essential facts (dates of formation, disbandment and changes of
location plus a brief summary of function, examples
of specific
aeroplanes on charge and, where appropriate/available, some
indication of the numbers
involved) about practically all RAF, and
RFC, units, world wide, other than the
(aeroplane) squadrons that have
been adequately recorded elsewhere, from
1912 to date. The spectrum
runs from Command HQs, down thorough
Groups and Wings, taking
in all the OTUs, OCUs, HCUs, AFUs, FTSs, ANSs, B&GSs, MUs,
RSUs,
etc along the way. That batch of abbreviations will be well
known
to most members of this Society but RAFFT&SU’s glossary
runs to five pages and has something
like 750 entries, so this book will
also tell you about, for instance, the
far less familiar BBU, BCRS and
LAAGS of WW II, the CDCF and IAAD of the
1920s and the various
SoMAs, TDSs and SoAGs of WW I.
The parameters that governed a unit’s
inclusion in the first edition
were that it needed to have ‘owned’ an
aeroplane at some time, or to
have been involved
in training aircrew
or controlling aircraft
operations, although these ‘rules’
were interpreted fairly liberally to
permit
the inclusion of, for instance,
Staging Posts, the OASC, and
various
OCTUs and Staff Colleges. The net has been considerably
widened for the 2007 edition which now
runs to some 8,000 entries, a
third
of them additions, and with amendments having been
incorporated to some 2,000 of the
original selection. Among the more
significant additions are a variety
of Marine Craft, including Air-Sea
Rescue,
Units, the numbered
Serving Commandos and Servicing
Echelons, and a bewildering array of Aviation
Candidates Selection
Boards,
Recruit Centres, Personnel
Transit Centres, Personnel
Holding
Units, Personnel Despatch
Centres and the like. Another
important gap has been filled by the
inclusion of details of the Balloon
Flights and Squadrons.
Since
units are listed alphabetically by title, RAFFT&SU is
virtually self-indexing, although one may have to use one’s intuition
113
on occasion. For instance, the SofTTs are under ‘T’ for Technical
Training, not ‘S’ for School. On the other hand, while the Air
Headquarters Middle East Communications Flight is under ‘M’,
Headquarters RAF Middle East is under ‘R’. So, if you do not find
what you are looking for where you
expected to find it, persevere; it is
almost certainly in there somewhere. If
you know where the unit was,
of course, you can find it via the very useful cross-index by place
name which will take you to the relevant
page(s). To assist the many
folk who are chiefly focused
on squadrons, there is even a cross-
reference to the units in which they happened
to be mentioned,
notably the wings and bases to which
they were subordinated.
Errors?
In a work of this size and complexity, there are simply
bound
to be. That said, they are, I am sure, few and far between,
although I did spot one. An AONS was an
Air Observers Navigation
School (not an Air Observer &
Navigator School) – it is correct in the
glossary, but not in the actual entries.
Photographs? Yes, about 200 of
them, all of aeroplanes actually
operated by units identified in the text,
running from Handley Pages of WW I via
Harts, Harrows and Hornets
to today’s Hercules and Harriers.
Astonishingly, while this edition
contains substantially more
information than its predecessor, it is presented
on fewer pages, 336
vice 368 – a triumph
of the typesetter’s art. Furthermore, the new
edition uses a higher quality, coated
paper which makes it much more
pleasant to handle. While this book is
undoubtedly excellent value for
money,
it is not cheap – unless you join Air Britain, of course, in
which case you can save yourself £10.
Ray Sturtivant, ably assisted by John Hamlin,
has added yet
another feather to his cap with this
essential work of reference. Mine
is never far out of reach.
CGJ
History of Air Intercept Radar & The
British Nightfighter, 1935-
1959 by Ian White. Pen and Sword; 2007. £25.00.
This well researched and highly detailed
account opens with the
pre-1939 experiments to build a radar set light enough and small
enough to go into an aircraft, and ends
with the full deployment of the
Gloster Javelin force in 1959. Its 326
pages take the reader through the
problems of building a working AI radar, getting
it into production,
114
into service and then into action. This, against a background of
wartime shortages and competing
priorities. As a separate, but equally
important matter, it describes
the problems of recruiting people with
the intelligence to become effective AI
operators or radar technicians,
and of training the instructors to teach
them.
It was well into
the spring of 1941 before Fighter Command
was
able to bring together the disparate elements
of an effective night
fighter
arm. By then it had six squadrons
of Beaufighters equipped
with AI Mk IV either fully worked up or
in the process of doing so.
Eight Ground Controlled Interception
radars were in position to cover
the south and much of the east of
England, to direct them into action.
At last Britain had a night air defence
system worthy of that title.
Then in June 1941, as Britain’s air
defences were getting into their
stride against the night raiders, Adolf
Hitler packed off the bulk of his
bomber force to airfields in central
Europe in readiness for the attack
on the Soviet Union. Few of the aircraft and crews would return to
attack Britain, when they did the
defenders exacted a heavy toll.
For this reviewer’s taste the author
strikes the right balance in the
depth
to which he goes with his technical
descriptions. However,
those who wish to skip over these can do
so without losing the thread
of the story.
Quibbles? This reviewer has a couple of relatively minor ones. It
would have been nice to have had some
photos of the various items of
equipment. The only ones in the book are seven images on the dust
jacket,
which lack captions
and therefore convey little useful
information.
The other quibble
concerns the treatment
of the Gloster Javelin.
The author goes into great and
fascinating detail on the failings of the
other night fighter types, but there is
a lack of similar criticism of the
Javelin. That might be taken to imply
that it was perfect, and it wasn’t!
The aircraft exhibited
some tricky handling
traits, and during its
service
life stalling and manoeuvres in the vertical
plane were
prohibited.
Overall, however, this book can be strongly recommended to
anyone interested in following the
evolution of Britain’s night and all
weather
fighter force during World War II and the early part of the
Cold War.
Dr Alfred Price
115
RAF Harrier Ground Attack Falklands
by Jerry Pook. Pen and
Sword; 2007. £19.99.
‘It does exactly what it says on the tin’,
could apply to Jerry Pook’s
graphic account of RAF Harriers in
action in the Falklands campaign
where
the ponderous title RAF Harrier
Ground Attack Falklands
describes exactly what is contained in
this fascinating book. It is based
on the diary which the author kept
during his time as a Harrier Flight
Commander spanning the weeks of Operation
CORPORATE when
No 1 Sqn was embarked aboard HMS Hermes.
By the spring of 1982,
ten years after converting to the Harrier,
he had gained wide
experience in the ground attack and
reconnaissance roles in the Hunter
in the Arabian
Peninsula, in the Harrier both in Germany
and in the
UK and, while on exchange
duties elsewhere in NATO, flying the
RF-104G
Starfighter. Thus he is well qualified to publish his views,
many of which are contentious.
The author reminds
the reader that the RAF had very little
experience of operating the Harrier from ships. His squadron had
carried out trials some twelve years
earlier on board the conventional
carrier
HMS Ark Royal but the aircraft modifications identified for
regular
maritime activities had not been incorporated. Although
several
of these were common to the Sea Harrier it took time to
prepare
the RAF aircraft for the campaign and to train the pilots for
deck operations where he describes
the pressures which affected his
unit during the preparation for the
deployment to the South Atlantic.
The transit from Wittering via Ascension and cross decking
to and
from Atlantic Conveyor to HMS Hermes
are described in detail, as are
the inadequate arrangements, both domestic and operational, to
accommodate No 1 Sqn on board the
carrier. Clearly, the relationship
between
the squadron and HMS Hermes
was difficult and it is no
surprise that the patience and diplomatic skills of
his Boss, who was
the senior RAF officer on board, acted as a shock absorber
between
the captain and the squadron
pilots. At working
level the author
reserves praise for the RN flight deck
crews who performed superbly
throughout and there appeared
to be an easier bond between the
Harrier
and Sea Harrier pilots where, as an experienced Flight
Commander, Jerry Pook’s status helped to
preserve harmony.
The initial
planning assumption was that the Harriers would
116
become
attrition replacements as day fighters
to cover Sea Harrier
losses,
hence the urgent modifications to enable the carriage and
launch of the Sidewinder, but this was
overtaken by events. Of the six
Sea Harriers
which were lost, only two were thought to be the direct
result
of combat operations, one to anti-aircraft guns and one to a
surface-to-air missile. So the traditional, but more risky, role of the
RAF Harriers, offensive air support, for
which the pilots were trained,
became
the main reason for the squadron’s presence,
leaving air
defence to the specialist Sea Harriers.
However he does admit to being
slightly envious of the air defenders’ more benign role compared to
that of the mud movers who were being placed regularly in harm’s
way. He goes on to suggest that the Harriers
could also have been
tasked
to provide visual air defence
against Argentinean air attack
using Aden guns and the excellent AIM-9L Sidewinder. Perhaps this
was not altogether a balanced view in
the face of the high volume of
ground
attack tasking which faced No 1 Sqn’s small number of
aircraft and pilots.
His narrative style captures vividly
several dramas in his cockpit
where
the reader can sense the tension of low level attack and
reconnaissance operations while in action. The author and his
colleagues were hit several times by
ground fire, sometimes following
a second pass over the same target, an
ill-advised tactic but necessary
where target acquisition was difficult.
On one occasion battle damage
to his aircraft resulted in a major fuel
leak which led to its loss when
he ran out of fuel and was forced to eject during his return to HMS
Hermes. Two days earlier he had flown one of the three Harriers
which attacked Goose Green on 28 May in
support of the beleaguered
2 Para. This mission was described
by the ground force
commander,
Brigadier Julian Thompson, as crucial to
the outcome of the battle and
led to the capture of the settlement and surrender of Argentinean
forces in the area.
He is very critical, repeatedly, of the
Royal Navy’s command and
control of these vital ground attack
assets and the inadequate tasking
and briefing procedures on board. Perhaps
his evident anger and
frustration serve to counter
some of the views expressed
by
Commander Nigel Ward in his book, Sea
Harrier over the Falklands,
where the latter made scathing reference
to RAF actions in the South
Atlantic. In Ward’s eyes the RAF should have been restricted to
117
supporting the RN’s war and that
operations by the RAF, such as the
BLACK BUCK Vulcan raids, contributed
little and detracted from the
associated PR visibility which the RN
wished to retain exclusively. To
illustrate this bias, Jerry Pook cites the desperate
need for additional
Harrier
GR3s to replace those lost in action and the refusal by the
captain
of HMS Hermes to accept such reinforcements which were
planned to fly directly to the ship from
Ascension Island, some 3,800
miles
to the north, taking fuel from Victor tankers. In the captain’s
eyes this was a publicity stunt by the
RAF and it took a finely judged
intervention by OC 1 Sqn who put his case directly
to the Flag
Officer’s staff, also based on board HMS Hermes. The captain was
over-ruled and the Flag authorised
the deployment of four additional
aircraft. After flights which lasted some nine hours these arrived
in
two pairs, about a week apart, piloted
by crews from Gütersloh and
Wittering in unique feats of courage and
superb airmanship.
The author is critical too of the Harrier’s electronic equipment,
beginning with the inertial
platform which could not be aligned
satisfactorily while at sea, despite the use of the FINRAE trolley
which,
although developed from an earlier
model, failed to perform
this essential function. So the
navigation and weapon aiming computer
could not be used, thus committing
pilots to navigate using only map
and stopwatch and deliver weapons
using the HUD’s fixed
reversionary display. He claims that the IFF, which was essential for
operations, was unreliable, as was the reconnaissance pod carried on
the centre pylon, and he expresses
particular frustration at the radio’s
performance, particularly when communicating with forward air
controllers.
After the cease fire he asserts that his
Harrier Force contemporaries
in Germany were reluctant to reinforce the Falklands but this is a
narrow
criticism of his colleagues. The Gütersloh Harrier
Force was
declared to NATO as a primary
asset and despite several approaches
to the MoD to reduce this declaration in recognition of the Harrier
Force’s commitments in the South
Atlantic, these pleas were ignored.
The station
remained under a formal obligation to produce sufficient
aircraft and crews to fulfil this political task at a time of military
tension
in NATO with a Tactical
Evaluation of the Force scheduled
for September. In the absence
of a satisfactory response from MoD,
pilot availability criteria were set aside and replacements from No 3
118
Sqn were sent by Hercules to Stanley by
early July. Furthermore some
Sea Harrier pilots and two of his squadron colleagues who flew
directly from Ascension were Gütersloh men. Also the other
Gütersloh squadron, No 4, was preparing
to embark several
Harriers
aboard
HMS Illustrious, the RN’s new
aircraft carrier to provide her
crew with experience of the aircraft.
She was undergoing an
accelerated commission to replace HMS Invincible
as the air defence
guard ship pending the introduction of
land based radar units and the
activation of RAF Stanley with Phantoms.
Following his return from the Falklands,
Pook drafted parts of the
post-conflict report but records
his irritation that, in his eyes,
headquarters and MoD staff marginalised
the contribution made by the
Harrier
GR3 and its crews to the successful outcome of Operation
CORPORATE. He does not seek self aggrandisement but is puzzled
also by the lack of interest from other RAF ground attack and
reconnaissance units in hearing
and debating the conclusions and
recommendations from those involved
in the short, but very active,
campaign.
Some of the thirty-eight photographs are
familiar, although that of
the Harrier with its outrigger in the catwalk is
printed in reverse, but
there
are several new illustrations including
the author’s personal
photographs, maps and HUD recorder film which, despite
some
images
being ill-defined, are dramatic. Only one factual
error was
noted
where the author’s
caption accompanying the vertical
photograph of Stanley airfield
states that it was the last bomb of the
first
BLACK BUCK mission
which cratered the runway. It was, of
course,
the first bomb which did the damage.
Also some names are
misspelt and others wrongly
identified but these are very minor
observations.
Although frank and outspoken, and in
parts unbalanced, the author
tells
the story of RAF Harrier
Ground Attack Falklands from his
personal experience, both the good and
the bad, and in recognition of
his bravery and leadership under fire Jerry Pook was awarded the
DFC. Setting aside inter-Service rivalry,
he and his eleven Harrier
pilot
colleagues, together with their thirty-six Sea Harrier
counterparts, several of whom were seconded
from the RAF, were
‘the Few’ of Operation CORPORATE and any
personal account of the
air war in the South
Atlantic bears testimony to their courage. Despite
119
his uncompromising views, I recommend
this excellent 219-page
book as a selective reference
for military historians and as gripping
reading
for fellow combat aviators, operations staff officers and
aircraft enthusiasts.
Gp Capt Jock Heron
Black Night For Bomber Command
– The Tragedy of 16th
December 1943 by Richard Knott. Pen and Sword; 2007.
£19.99.
This is a good read and I have no hesitation in suggesting that a
better way of spending a winter’s
evening would be difficult to find.
There are some quite slim volumes that
purport to cover, not only a
number
of war years, but vast intricate campaigns; this modest 260-
odd page book focuses on a single day, 16 December 1943, and a
specific Bomber Command mission
to Berlin and, of course,
back
again..
I do not like dramatic reconstructions
or ‘thought up’ dialogue, no
matter
how ingeniously based on probabilities and I was relieved to
find that the author has avoided that pitfall, most reported speech
being
reproduced from first-hand written accounts or from
contemporary crew or squadron
members and they read pretty
authentically.
In some respects, when you are sitting
in the comfort of your 21st
Century home, it is not very nice to be transported back almost sixty
years
to be reminded of those atrocious winters
of the 1940s – I
shudder at the thought. Exactly two
years before the events described
in this book, I was with No 21 OTU at
Moreton-in-the-Marsh, flying,
it seemed, nearly all the time in
similarly awful weather conditions but
without the pressures of actually being
on operations. For this reader,
Richard Knott has certainly succeeded in
recreating the contemporary
atmosphere. Once or twice, my spine
actually tingled as he describes
the events of 16 December 1943, when,
with the weather just about as
bad as it could be, a formidable force
took off on the seven plus hour
trip to Berlin. More than 300 of those
airmen lost their lives. Read of
their time you young men – and marvel.
Some of Knott’s
book is devoted to statistics and, while I found
little to surprise me in the facts and
figures, I found it all very readable
and was pleased to see this information
presented without resort to the
sort of hyperbole and
unnecessary superlatives that mar too many TV
120
documentaries.
From a strictly
personal point of view, I really felt for those air
gunners
with heated flying suits and heating for the mid upper. The
Wellington of two years previously had had no heating for the air
gunners and I, for one, had not heard of
heated flying suits, so we just
froze and hoped we could walk again
after a longish cross country in
sub-zero temperatures. No aids for the
navigator, just DR and a spot of
astro,
but I was surprised that the training
appeared shorter and less
comprehensive in later years than it had been for us and also that
crewing-up was still left to chance and
a few minutes conversation.
It would be churlish of me to nit pick
as the author has, as result of
a great deal of painstaking work, gathered together
a mass of very
interesting information and I would not begrudge him the occasional
error.
The odd little slip aside, I reckon it is a good 19.99
poundsworth.
Tony Richardson
Vulcan Test Pilot – my experiences in the cockpit of a Cold War
icon by Tony Blackman. Grub Street; 2007. £20.00
Stand under the bomb bay of a Mk 2
Vulcan at the RAF Museum
at Hendon or at Cosford, look towards
either wing tip, and just marvel
at the beautiful shape of that
extended wing. That sculpting, because
surely
that is what it is, did not come about by accident
or by
Computer Aided Design. It came, to a certain
extent, from trial and
error
but primarily from imaginative and consistent application of
basic design principles.
In this gem of a book, Tony Blackman, who test flew 105 of the
136 Mk 1 and Mk 2 Vulcans
built, explains how the aerodynamic
shape
of the Vulcan gave the aircraft several
unusual flying
characteristics; he tells how this most advanced aircraft
for its time
was made to fly so safely that young pilots like me, with only two
year’s
experience as a co-pilot on top of Jet Provost
and Vampire
training, could be allowed to captain a
nuclear qualified crew and take
the aircraft all over the world.
When the ‘Ministry
of Defence’ (surely
the Air Ministry then)
issued operational requirement OR229 in
1946(!) for a nuclear armed
bomber with a range of 3,350 nm at
50,000 feet at 500 kts, not much
was known about the
flying characteristics of the delta wing so Avro,
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very sensibly now with hindsight, built the 707-series of single
engined, small deltas. The author
describes the development period in
detail; then the emergence of the Mk 1
Vulcan and the first flight, by
Roly Falk in 1952, just in time for that year’s SBAC show at
Farnborough – the pilot wearing a grey,
pin striped suit, shirt and tie.
And then the hard work of sorting
out the more potentially
dangerous flying characteristics of the shape especially at high Mach
numbers – for example, violent buffeting at the planned cruise Mach
number of 0.85 was obviously going to be
unacceptable.
Tony Blackman
joined the Avro team as Deputy Chief Test Pilot
on 1 January
1958 having flown the first production Mk 1 a dozen
times
as an RAF test pilot (part of the initial
evaluation team) at
Boscombe Down. Three modifications incorporated into future
production aircraft, namely a Mach trimmer, a yaw damper and
then
pitch
dampers, gave the test pilots enough confidence to explore the
flight envelope right up to Mach 1.
The author, with impressive recall and research,
not least from
former
colleagues whose help he acknowledges, sets out in two
detailed chapters how Avro went about developing first the Mk 1
Vulcan and then the considerably
different Mk 2. A short chapter on
demonstration flying follows and the final third of the book is given
over to analyses
of Vulcan ‘accidents and incidents’ beginning,
inevitably, with the infamous Heathrow
landing accident on 1 October
1956 where Blackman
concludes ‘……but, in my opinion, the key
cause was the pilot coming below his
decision height under the great
pressure put on him to land and without
his accustomed co-pilot
to
help him by warning him of the aircraft altitude.’ Other accidents,
including a few I know of intimately,
are concisely and, as far as I can
judge, accurately and dispassionately
described.
Tony Blackman concludes
with a chapter about the ‘Vulcan
(XH558)
to the Sky’ project – the RAF’s first Mk 2 that he helped
deliver to Waddington on 1 July 1960,
and that was the last to fly in
1993.
He states, accurately, that designing
the Vulcan and making it work
from its inception 60 years ago to its
first flight eight years later, and
then further developing it into the Vulcan Mk 2 was a monumental
task for Avro, for Bristol Siddeley, for
the RAF, and for the politicians
who had to justify
the project. Ordinary RAF squadron pilots like me
122
have much to be grateful for.
One cavil: I would like to have seen some discussion of the one
black mark that, in my opinion and that
I am sure of many ex-Vulcan
captains, hangs over the Vulcan’s otherwise
distinguished history:
what did those early test pilots think
and say about the lack of ejection
seats for the rear crew? When the man
who took over command of No
50 Sqn at Waddington from me in 1979,
the then Wing Commander
Tim Garden, was asked just before he
died recently if he was bitter at
being
so suddenly struck down, he typically said that many of his
fellow aircrew had had even less luck and were lost in their twenties
and thirties. I know what he meant.
Tony Blackman says in his Introduction
that, ‘The book is mainly
for people not particularly associated with the Vulcan.’
Don’t you
believe him!
AVM Nigel Baldwin
Avro Vulcan by Phil Butler and Tony Buttler. Aerofax; 2007;
£19.99.
The thing that rankled with Handley Page throughout the Second
World
War was the way their Halifax was overshadowed by the
Lancaster, which they ascribed
to the fact that the Lancaster was
capable
of carrying far greater bomb loads. Charles
Joy, Handley
Page’s
Assistant Chief Aerodynamicist in 1947, told me that they
strove to give their Victor a bomb load double that of the Lancaster.
But although the Victor could carry
35,000lb of bombs as against the
Vulcan’s 21,000lb, once again it was the Avro design that stole the
limelight. Just as the awesome,
preternatural Vulcan invariably starred
at air displays,
so too books on the Vulcan seem to be churned out
every six months or so.
Messrs Butler and Buttler admit that
their book ‘does not claim to
be the ultimate
narrative for the type but should be seen as a
complementary work to those that have gone before.’
They are spot
on. Harking back to my flying training
days, I will start with the good
points such as, ‘You strapped in well,
Bloggs and you taxied out to the
holding point in good order. It was just
the section after take-off that
let you down.’ In like fashion, the illustrations in this book are
comprehensive and the reproduction
quality is first rate. There is much
here that will interest the modeller and
the 25 pages of colour photos
at the back are
particularly noteworthy.
123
But the words are something else. The
prose is laboured, the story
unstructured and the information is all over the place. A massive
amount
of detail has been culled from flight tests reports
and
specifications and Ministry files, but
it has just been dropped in front
of us with no attempt
at analysis, defining
time lines or historical
evaluation. And some information is just
plain wrong. Avro designers
did not start off thinking that the
delta was the solution to the Ministry
of Supply requirement. The Project Team
in Manchester began with a
conventional tailed aircraft of 45
degrees sweepback. However, swept
wings produce less lift than
conventional wings of equivalent size, yet
the requirements of altitude demanded
greater, not smaller,
coefficients of lift. To compensate for this Avro had to increase the
swept
span, but this resulted in a design of poorer performance that
weighed
80,000-90,000lb too much. It took nearly a month to
dispense with the tail altogether. Since a bomber carries its load
concentrated around its centre of gravity,
and as a swept wing
increases longitudinal stability, all the old reasons for having a rear
fuselage supporting a tail no longer applied and it could be deleted
once longitudinal controls were fitted
to the wingtips. But even though
this gave an immediate saving in weight
and drag, the wing itself was
still
disproportionately large for its purpose
and much heavier
than
required. There was nothing
left but to reduce the span. To chop
pieces
off the wing just meant decreasing the wing area, thereby
upsetting all the carefully calculated
factors of wing loading, thinness,
and aspect ratio. As the wings got broader and stubbier, the Project
Team kept the wing area constant by
filling in the space between the
wing trailing edge and the fuselage. By the time the span had been
reduced
sufficiently to get the weight within acceptable limits while
maintaining sweep and reducing
tip chord to give adequate
induced
drag for maximum range, the gap between
the short body and the wing
trailing edges had been virtually filled
in, forming a natural triangular
plan form resembling the Greek letter delta.
This then was the logical
evolution of the distinctive Vulcan
shape.
The authors’ use of phrases
such as ‘metal bashing by now was
underway’ not only grate but also
demonstrate a limited understanding
of how much advanced technology and
structures went into V-bomber
design and construction. It is also
annoying to see material lifted from
other authors’
works without any acknowledgement or bibliography.
124
There is no index, which limits this book as a work of reference. As
for the sections on Service History and
Memories, the authors are at a
disadvantage by their lack of understanding of V-force operations.
BLUE STEEL’s ‘Achilles Heel’ was not the
time it took to prepare it
for operations.
It could be a pig to mate all 471
electrical connectors
between aircraft and missile but once done, and
with volatile fuel on
board, the combination sat happily on
QRA. BLUE STEEL’s Achilles
heel was its relatively short range.
From a historian’s point of view, it is
sad that there is so little new
research material in this book. To be sure, the authors
have dug up
‘what if’ archival data on a possible
supersonic Vulcan (with that wing
root!). But they have largely confined
themselves to reproducing other
folks’
work, such as Nigel Baldwin’s
presentation on the Akrotiri
Bomber
Wing delivered to the RAFHS Spring 2006 Seminar. Even
when they capture
original recollections, they make limited
use of
them. My old Vulcan QFI, Joe L’Estrange,
talks about his time on the
Vulcan
B.2 but it is a bit of ramble which includes such memorable
insights as ‘a high rate of descent….was a good way of getting down
quickly’ and Vulcan crews had ‘old fashioned dials, gauges and
switches – none of the modern
computerised equipment was available
as yet.’ I think I’m right in saying that the Nav Plotter’s Ground
Position Indicator, although analogue,
was an outstanding piece of
computerised equipment for its time. How I wish
they had asked Joe
what qualities made a good Vulcan crew or what it was like to slow
roll the beast!
In sum, this is a bit of cut-and-paste
job. There is some fascinating,
if arcane, Vulcan material and if you
are one of those who argues in
cyber
space about whether
BLUE STEEL Vulcans
were officially
designated Vulcan B Mk 2As or not, this book is for you. The
individual airframe histories also provide a good record.
For those
looking for new, serious historical
insights into a topic that has pretty
much been done to death over the last two decades – fear not. I
suspect there will be another Vulcan
book along any time soon.
Andrew Brookes
Constant Vigilance – the RAF Regiment in the
Burma Campaign
by Dr Nigel W M Warwick. Pen and Sword;
2007. £25.00.
It is unusual for the
author of a Foreword to be asked to review the
125
book for which it was written. However,
I trust that I shall be found
sufficiently objective!
Unlike
most regimental histories, those concerning the RAF
Regiment should always be read in the context
of the application of
Air Power in war and the success
or otherwise of the Regiment
in
defeating enemy counter-air action. With
Allied Land and Tactical Air
Forces
throughout the Burma campaign uniquely
and totally
dependant upon the air for offensive
support, troop reinforcements,
medical evacuation and logistic support,
never was the RAF’s security
on the ground so essential as it was in
this theatre of operations. Nigel
Warwick
has grasped this principle unequivocally throughout his
painstakingly researched book, with its copious
footnotes, seven
colour
maps, twelve tactical
sketch maps, nineteen
appendices, and
two pages of bibliography, which stands now as a definitive history,
full of
eternally relevant lessons
for RAF (and Joint) Staffs involved
in preparing for future conflicts, let alone for members of the RAF
Regiment.
As repeatedly transpires in every major war involving
a threat to
the RAF on the ground since 1939, as the
Japanese advanced headlong
into Burma, the desperately-pressed Army could not spare resources
from the front line to protect the RAF,
whilst every local distraction of
the RAF from its primary
combat role into self-defence simply
compounded the problem. The new RAF Regiment, which in Burma
eventually amounted to over 2,500
officers and men optimised for air-
base defence, was not found wanting, as Constant Vigilance makes
clear from the cited despatches and
plaudits from the Supreme Allied
Commander downwards.
This book, like other RAF Regiment histories, pinpoints many
lessons
which are as applicable today as they were over sixty years
ago. Most pertinent are those concerning
the paucity or inadequacy of
equipment and ill-conceived
organisation. For example, units with the
20mm Hispano as their primary AA
armament had no organic Control
and Reporting element
and lacked self-destructing ammunition.
Between them these factors denied
reaction time and limited the guns’
maximum
depression against low-level
attack, for fear of collateral
damage
on the ground. These ineffectual AA guns were never
replaced by 40mm Bofors guns, which constituted the Regiment’s
primary (and highly
effective) AA armament in all other theatres, but
126
as the Japanese
Air Force dwindled,
they became increasingly less
relevant.
However, the RAF Regiment’s infantry or ‘field’
squadrons
steadily grew in significance, because
there was a potent threat, even
during the Japanese retreat, of
determined enemy special forces raids
against
our air installations, resulting in many vicious
patrol-level
actions. Indeed, with a view to a long war of attrition
post-Burma, a
parachute assault squadron was formed,
for forward air control duties
in the planned invasion to liberate
Malaya.
Undoubtedly, the RAF Regiment
in Burma benefited
from bitter
earlier lessons in other theatres. In particular,
pre-deployment training
was taken very seriously indeed.
As a result, individuals and units
were well prepared at the RAF Regiment
Depot and at battle schools
to which they were assigned on arrival
in India, resulting in the troops’
remarkable physical and psychological endurance once deployed.
Many marched over 1,000 miles across appalling
terrain and in
dreadful climatic conditions as the
battle-fronts and their associated air
forces
moved. Moreover, despite
wounds and disease,
many refused
evacuation and some even promotion, so that
they could see the war
through
with their squadrons. Individuals and sub-units
were
sometimes attached to Army units for
experience or as reinforcements,
some winning gallantry awards whilst
attached. Worst must have been
the early months of relative inactivity
or at best, low-level patrol work,
whilst the Japanese were being held at
the limit of their advance and
before
Allied Command South East Asia (ACSEA) could turn the
tide. Yet three years later, in March
1945, when the retreating enemy’s
last desperate counter-offensive was broken in the crucial
battle for
Meiktila, an intensive, sustained
month-long action, involving British,
African
and Indian Army units, the RAF Regiment
acquitted itself
magnificently. The wing commander
in command was killed and
many other officers
and men were killed and wounded, but the
Japanese lost even more, whilst the
vital airhead remained operational.
Meiktila was arguably the RAF Regiment’s
major encounter-battle of
the entire Second World War. It
certainly was the last one against the
Japanese; and it was victorious.
The Regiment’s war did not end with
Japan’s surrender. Wings and
squadrons were moved via Malaya and Singapore into Thailand,
French Indo-China and
the Dutch East Indies to help hold the ring in
127
these territories until their own
legitimate Governments could reassert
their
authority. However, considerable fighting ensued in the French
and Dutch territories as nationalist partisans, well armed and trained
by allied agents as a resistance to the Japanese,
turned upon their
erstwhile liberators. An RAF Regiment
wing HQ and nine squadrons
thereby found themselves fighting for a
further full year post-VJ-Day,
at times alongside Japanese units
co-opted as allies.
Nigel
Warwick draws not only upon UK and Australian war
records, bibliography and photographs, but he has interviewed many
of the few surviving RAF Regiment
veterans of the Burma campaign.
Reporting the perspectives of the individual officers and men on the
great
events in which they participated, he deftly weaves a tapestry
embracing not only the high-level policies
and strategies of the war,
but also the brutish reality of
trench-level life in this worst-imaginable
theatre. In doing so, he allays the
reader’s instinctive suspicions of the
old soldier’s propensity to exaggerate his experiences, the limited
perspectives of very young and junior
participants in great happenings
and the fogging of their memories over
sixty years, by validating the
more significant personal
anecdotes through footnotes
linking them
with the historical record. Nevertheless, the veterans’ inputs are
remarkably perceptive, frequently revealing
a sound grasp of the
strategic aims. That surely is a tribute to the leadership exercised
within ACSEA at all levels, for these
men clearly knew exactly what
they fought for in the grand scheme.
Air Cdre Marcus Witherow
Freedom in the Air. A Czech Flyer and His Aircrew Dog by
Hamish Ross. Pen and Sword; 2007.
£19.99.
The Czech flyer here is Václav Bozd_ck who made his way to
Britain
via the French Foreign Legion and the French Air Force. He
served
as an air gunner and wireless operator
in No 311
(Czechoslovakian) Sqn which was equipped
with Wellington ICs and
was the
only Czech unit to have flown with Bomber Command.
The
RAF’s liaison and training officer with
No 311 was Sqn Ldr Charles
‘Pick’ Pickard who went on to feature as
the pilot in the film Target
for Tonight and gets a very good press here. By 1942 No 311 Sqn’s
losses
could not be made good with Czech personnel and it was
transferred to Coastal Command
where it incurred
fewer losses and
128
flew Liberators. In 1945 Bozd_ck went with the squadron
to Prague
and took up residence in his own country again. In 1948 he left for
Britain
once more, this time escaping
from communist persecution,
and was welcomed
back into the RAF. After retirement from the
Service he became an entrepreneur in
Devon, where he died in 1980.
That is an outline of the book – but what lies between the lines?
There
is a mixture of interlocking themes. One of them is familiar
enough
in accounts of No 311 Sqn’s actions
but those accounts
embody
a major theme of the whole book – that of Bozd_ck’s
relationship with his dog Antis, an
Alsatian he had rescued as a puppy
during
the Blitzkrieg in France. He smuggled Antis into Britain
to
avoid
the separation of quarantine and the dog flew with him on
bombing
missions, being twice wounded by Flak and having had an
oxygen
mask made for him by the squadron’s ground crew. Such
behaviour drove a cart and horses through Service
regulations but
Bozd_ck got round all the obstacles placed in the dog’s path, both in
the air and on the ground. When the
press got wind of what was going
on, Antis became popularised as ‘The Dog of War’, which made it
even more difficult
for any Service objections to prevail. If animal
lovers become alarmed at this point,
Antis was not ordered on board
by his master but made his own way there. On his first sortie,
when
the Wellington was en route to its target, he emerged from a hiding
place
he had selected – to the initial
consternation of the crew who
subsequently found his presence on
missions reassuring.
When European airmen arrived they
brought courage and skills to
the Service and some political baggage.
The majority of that baggage
was carried by the various
politicians who had gone into exile with
them, who were concerned with the
post-war politics of their nations.
The history of the complex
wranglings between them and the
headaches which that gave to both HM Government and the Air
Ministry has been set out admirably in
Alan Brown’s Airmen in Exile
(Stroud: 2000) which, I am pleased
to see, is cited in the author’s
bibliography. At the sharp end other issues gained most of the
airmen’s immediate attention. For
example, on arrival many had been
embodied in the RAFVR but morale was
boosted if they could still see
themselves as members of their own
national air forces, even if those
were under RAF operational control.
A good example was the
emergence of a Polish
Air Force in Exile. Although the Czechs were
129
less numerous in Britain than the Poles
they did gain recognition for a
Czechoslovakian Air Force in Exile – consisting of one bomber and
three fighter squadrons – but all its
members remained in the RAFVR.
Politics on a much broader canvas,
involving British, Czechs,
and
Russians, emerge here and there is quite
a lot of detail, both about the
pre- and post-war political situations
in Czechoslovakia. In brief here,
the post-war seizure
of power by communists resulted
in the kind of
persecution of Czech individuals – and
by association their families –
judged to be enemies of the state which
was familiar to people in the
USSR itself. Bozd_ck became an object of suspicion for reasons
which included his service with the RAF.
In 1948 he decided to escape, leaving
his wife and infant son
behind
but taking Antis with him. The interdependence of this man
and his dog appears again in an account of their perilous
journey to
reach
the US Zone of Occupation in Germany. Reliance
on Antis’
intuition and courage saved Bozd_ck’s life during that
journey. When
he re-enlisted the 1946 Aircrew Scheme
was in force and on p134 the
author says that his initial designation
as a Sig IVA was equivalent to
sergeant in the traditional scheme. I think that corporal
is a better
approximation. The 1946 Scheme is an arcane episode
anyway in
Service history and didn’t last for
long. His post-war service saw him
instructing, flying with Transport
Command, serving in Nicosia
during
the Suez crisis and ending up as an air traffic controller in
1961. Antis, long dead by that time, had
a well established reputation
with the British press and the PDSA, a
veterinary charity, had initiated
steps which led to him being awarded the
Dickin Medal – the animal
equivalent of the VC – which was
presented to him by Field Marshal
The Earl Wavell in March 1949.
Hamish
Ross has written
an interesting story about Bozd_ck and
Antis. His book is illustrated by decent
photographs, has a set of Notes
for each chapter
and an appropriate bibliography. However,
I think
that the degree of detail concerning political
situations in
Czechoslovakia before and after the war –
whilst necessary at times to
understand the lives of men like Bozd_ck – may place some
strain on
a reader not primarily interested in politics. That said, the book is
worth reading for the account it gives
of an extraordinary relationship
between man and dog.
Hence, unless you have an informed interest in
130
Czechoslovakian affairs, you may prefer to savour that account by
asking your library for a copy of the
book.
Dr Tony Mansell
The Military Airfields
of Britain
– a series of volumes by Ken
Delve. Crowood; 2006-07. £16.99 each.
Between 1979 and 1985 Patrick Stephens
(PSL) published its ten-
volume
Action Stations series in which a variety
of authors
summarised the histories of most of the
military airfields in the UK. In
effect, Ken Delve has set out to
supersede these and, while I am not in
the habit of relying on a publisher’s publicity material, in this case
Crowood’s description is hard to beat.
It says:
‘This series of books provides a fresh
user-friendly look at the
military airfields of the British Isles. The series is split
geographically, each book including a
number of counties on a
regional basis. Entries cover every military
airfield within the
counties, from WW I to the present day and comprise:
brief
history
of the airfield, construction and use, including
decoy
sites; comprehensive list of
flying units with dates and aircraft
types;
list of HQ units based at the airfield; details
of
memorials; maps and plans of almost every airfield;
location
details; selection of period
photographs.’
I would not take issue with any of that.
So has it done the trick? Is
the new series an improvement? Yes. The tabulated
presentation of
user units is both comprehensive and far
more accessible than PSL’s
purely
narrative approach which left the reader to rummage about in
the text in the hope of finding
arrival and departure
dates for a unit
which, in the event, might never actually
have been mentioned. That
said, there is still a narrative summary
in Delve’s version which serves
to flesh out the raw dates. Similarly, while the PSL series included
some site plans, the Crowood books have
lots of them. Since these are
reproductions of contemporary drawings,
they are, inevitably, of
variable quality, ranging from excellent to adequate, but they all
suffice
to indicate the layout on the date in question. Another
useful
feature
is an extract of airfield
data as at December 1944 which
provides comparative information on
runway construction and length,
available hangarage
and accommodation capacity. Many photographs
131
are provided, although these too are of
variable quality, some because
of the nature of the originals but others because
they appear to have
been scanned from other publications,
resulting in tell-tale interference
patterns.
To keep the cost down, this series is being produced as softbacks
and, regardless of size (the six volumes
that have appeared
thus far
contain
between 256 and 352 pages),
at a standard price of £16.99
apiece.
There must be at least two more to come, as Scotland
and
Northern Ireland have yet to be covered,
along with the East Midlands
and its dozens of Bomber Command
airfields.
To sum
up, these books are useful and, as claimed, user-friendly.
The only problem is that, if you are an
anorak like me, and just have to
have them all, it is going to set you
back a tidy sum.
CGJ
The Daily Telegraph
Book of Airmen’s Obituaries, Book Two
edited by Jay Iliff. Grub Street; 2007.
Price £18.00.
Some five years ago, Grub Street published
a selection of Ted
Bishop’s obituaries of aviators
that had appeared
in the Daily
Telegraph. As its title
suggests ‘Book Two’ offers a further selection,
most of
which have been written by his successor, Air Cdre Graham
Pitchfork, whose name will be familiar
to members of this Society.
Since
the format mirrors
that of the original volume,
my comments
will inevitably reflect much of what I
wrote in Journal 28. As before,
this book is a substantial A5(ish) hardback, running
to some 416
pages.
There are no illustrations. There is an index. The entries are
grouped under convenient headings:
Fighter Boys; Bomber Boys; The
Girls;
Maritime; Industrialists and Engineers; Test Pilots and so on.
Among the 100 folk who feature in this
edition, all of whom have died
since
2001, are Sir Kenneth Cross, Edward Crew, Sir John Grandy,
Jack Furner, Sir David Lee, Frank Carey, Dame Felicity
Peake, Sir
Ivor Broom, Neville
Duke, John Cunningham, Sir George Edwards,
Stanislaw Skalski, Sir Christopher Foxley-Norris, Alex Henshaw, Sir
Fredrick Page, Pierre Clostermann and Sir Lewis Hodges – to name
but a few.
The presentation generally
involves an anecdote
or two, focusing
on the more spectacular of the subject’s
achievements, accompanied
by a summary of the
rest of his/her career. Since most of the featured
132
personalities achieved a degree of
prominence in one field or another,
their stories are interesting and/or entertaining and the book makes a
handy reference to some of the great and good, and to one
or two of
the more colourful
members, of the aviation community.
Recommended.
CGJ
133
ROYAL AIR FORCE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The Royal Air Force has been in existence for over 80 years; the
study
of its history is deepening, and continues to be the subject of
published works of consequence. Fresh
attention is being given to the
strategic assumptions under which
military air power was first created
and which largely
determined policy and operations in both World
Wars,
the inter-war period,
and in the era of Cold War tension.
Material dealing with post-war
history is now becoming available
under
the 30-year rule. These studies
are important to academic
historians and to the present and future
members of the RAF.
The RAF Historical Society was formed in
1986 to provide a focus
for interest in the history of the RAF.
It does so by providing a setting
for lectures and seminars in which those
interested in the history of the
Service
have the opportunity to meet those who participated in the
evolution and implementation of policy. The Society believes
that
these events make an important
contribution to the permanent record.
The Society normally
holds three lectures
or seminars a year in
London,
with occasional events in other parts of the country.
Transcripts of lectures and seminars are
published in the Journal of the
RAF Historical Society,
which is distributed free of charge to
members. Individual membership is open to all with an interest
in
RAF history, whether
or not they were in the Service.
Although the
Society
has the approval of the Air Force Board, it is entirely
self-
financing.
Membership of the Society costs £18 per
annum and further details
may be obtained
from the Membership Secretary, Dr Jack Dunham,
Silverhill House, Coombe,
Wotton-under-Edge, Gloucestershire. GLI2
7ND. (Tel
01453-843362)
134
THE TWO AIR FORCES AWARD
In 1996 the Royal Air Force Historical Society established, in
collaboration with its American
sister organisation, the Air Force
Historical Foundation, the Two Air Forces Award, which was to be
presented annually on each side of the Atlantic
in recognition of
outstanding academic work by a serving officer
or airman. The RAF
winners have been:
1996Sqn
Ldr P C Emmett PhD MSc BSc CEng MIEE
1997Wg
Cdr M P Brzezicki MPhil MIL
1998Wg
Cdr P J Daybell MBE MA BA
1999Sqn
Ldr S P Harpum MSc BSc MILT
2000Sqn
Ldr A W Riches MA
2001Sqn
Ldr C H Goss MA
2002Sqn
Ldr S I Richards BSc
2003Wg
Cdr T M Webster MB BS MRCGP MRAeS
2004Sqn
Ldr S Gardner MA MPhil
2005Wg
Cdr S D Ellard MSc BSc CEng MRAeS MBCS
THE AIR LEAGUE GOLD MEDAL
On 11 February
1998 the Air League presented
the Royal Air Force
Historical Society with a Gold Medal in recognition of the Society’s
achievements in recording aspects
of the evolution of British
air
power and thus realising one of the aims
of the League. The Executive
Committee decided that the medal should
be awarded periodically to a
nominal holder (it actually resides at
the Royal Air Force Club, where
it is on display) who was to be an individual who had made a
particularly significant contribution to the conduct
of the Society’s
affairs. Holders to date have been:
Air Marshal Sir Frederick Sowrey KCB CBE
AFC
Air Commodore H A
Probert MBE MA
135
SECRETARY
Gp Capt K J Dearman
1 Park Close
Middleton Stoney
Oxon
OX25 4AS
Tel: 01869 343327
MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY
(who also deals with sales
of publications)
Dr J Dunham
Silverhill House
Coombe
Wotton-under-Edge
Glos
GL12 7ND
Tel: 01453 843362
TREASURER
John Boyes TD CA
5 Queen’s Close
Stansted
Essex
CM24 8EJ
Tel: 01279 814225
EDITOR and PUBLICATIONS
MANAGER
Wg Cdr C G Jefford
MBE BA
Walnuts
Lower Road
Postcombe
Thame
OX9 7DU
Tel: 01844 281449
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