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Peenemunde, 17th and 18th August 1943
596 aircraft - 324 Lancasters, 218 Halifaxes, 54 Stirlings. This was
the first raid in which 6 (Canadian) Group operated Lancaster aircraft.
426 Squadron dispatched 9 Mark II Lancasters, losing 2 aircraft including
that of the squadron commander, Wing Commander L. Crooks, D.S.O., D.F.C.,
an Englishman, who was killed.
This
was a special raid, which Bomber Command was ordered to carry out against
the German research establishment on the Baltic coast where V-2 and
V-1 rockets were being built and tested. The raid was carried out in
moonlight to increase the chances of success. There were several novel
features. It was the only occasion in the second half of the war when
the whole of Bomber Command attempted a precision raid by night on such
a small target. For the first time, there was a Master Bomber controlling
a full-scale Bomber Command raid; Group Captain J. H. Searby, of 83
Squadron, 8 Group, carried out this task. There were three aiming points
- the scientists and workers living quarters, the rocket factory and
the experimental station - and the Pathfinders employed a special plan
with crews designated as shifters, who attempted to move the marking
from one part of the target to another as the raid progressed. Crews
of 5 Group, bombing in the last wave of the attack, had practised the
time-and-distance bombing method as an alternative method for their
part in the raid.
The
Pathfinders found Peenemunde without difficulty in the moonlight and
the Master Bomber controlled the raid successfully throughout. A Mosquito
diversion to Berlin drew off most of the German night-fighters for the
first 2 of the raid's 3 phases. Unfortunately, the initial marking and
bombing fell on a labour camp for forced workers which was situated
1.5 miles south of the first aiming point, but the Master Bomber and
the Pathfinders quickly brought the bombing back to the main targets,
which were all bombed successfully. 560 aircraft dropped nearly 1,800
tons of bombs; 85 per cent of this tonnage was high-explosive. The estimate
has appeared in many sources that this raid set back the V-2 experimental
programme by at least 2 months and reduced the scale of the eventual
rocket attack. Approximately 180 Germans were killed at Peenemunde,
nearly all in the workers housing estate, and 500-600 foreigners, mostly
Polish, were killed in the workers camp, where there were only flimsy
wooden barracks and no proper air-raid shelters.
Bomber
Command's losses were 40 aircraft - 23 Lancasters, 15 Halifaxes and
2 Stirlings. This represents 6.7 per cent of the force dispatched but
was judged an acceptable cost for the successful attack on this important
target on a moonlit night. Most of the casualties were suffered by the
aircraft of the last wave when the German night fighters arrived in
force; the groups involved in this were 5 Group, which lost 17 of its
109 aircraft on the raid (14.5 per cent) and the Canadian 6 Group which
lost 12 out of 57 aircraft (19.7 per cent). This was the first night
on which the Germans used their new schrage Musik weapons; these were
twin upward-firing cannons fitted in the cockpit of Me 110s. Two schrage
Musik aircraft found the bomber stream flying home from Peenemunde and
are believed to have shot down 6 of the bombers lost on the raid.
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