The RCAF in WW2 (Part 2) - HIE208-Canadian-Military
Transcription
The RCAF in WW2 (Part 2) - HIE208-Canadian-Military
HIE 208A Canadian Military History From Confederation to the Present Week 8: The RCAF in WW2 (Part 2) 1 •1 RCAF 2 Members of the Royal Canadian Air Force participated in various theatres throughout the war. At home, they were in charge of the BCATP, coastal defence and convoy escorts, and participated in US operations in the Arctic against the fleeing Japanese at Kiska during the summer of 1942. Transport squadrons served with the British in Burma, and a CANSO recce-squadron served in Ceylon. Across the Atlantic, Canadian units played a small role in the Battle of Britain although many BCATP graduates were filtered into RAF units, to Ottawa’s chagrin. The need to maintain “national” units for morale and political reasons were as much a part of the RCAF’s mandate as it was for the Army, and Minister for Air C. G. “Cubby” Power pursued “Canadianization” with fervour. His efforts, carried out with Ottawa’s support, resulted in the creation of No. 6 Bomber Group (RCAF) in January 1943, initially under the command of G. E. Brooks; he would later be replaced by the World War One flying ace Air Commodore C. M. McEwen. •2 RCAF at Beginning of War 3 On the 1st of September 1939, the Royal Canadian Air Force strength was 4,061 officers and airmen. They were scattered throughout eight regular squadrons flying a total of 270 aircraft of twenty different types. 146 of these machines were designated as training or transport aircraft and only 19 Hurricanes and 10 Battles could be called first line service types. The Department of National Defence believed the Air Force, on account of its speed and range, was best suited to counter armed raids against the vast and sparely populated territory of British Columbia. As a result, the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) established Western Air Command (WAC) on March 1st, 1938, and started building facilities to support a Pacific Coast-based air force. The September 1938 Munich crisis was evidence enough that war in Europe was as serious a threat. To be ready, the RCAF set up its Eastern Air Command (EAC) on September 15th, 1938, and prepared a new defence plan that included building bases and deploying squadrons in the Maritimes. Both the western and eastern commands were placed under the Home War Establishment (HWE). At the end of 1939, the HWE was comprised of 14 active squadrons, including No 110 (Army Cooperation) Squadron soon to be detached to serve overseas with the First Infantry Division. Only two of the other squadrons had the airplanes to carry out their mission: No 1 (Fighter) Squadron with seven Hawker Hurricanes, and No 11 (Bomber-Reconnaissance) Squadron with ten Lockheed Hudson. A far cry from the 16 squadrons and 574 aircraft allotted to the HWE in the air defence plan. In the early months of the war, the heavy commitments to Canadian air defence and to the development of the BCATP meant that only three RCAF squadrons could be spared for overseas service. This number was steadily increased so that by war's end there were 48 RCAF squadrons serving in the Western European, Mediterranean and Far Eastern theatres. In addition to those who served in the RCAF, thousands of young Canadians crossed the Atlantic to join the Royal Air Force. In Coastal Command, Bomber command, Fighter Command and other units of the RAF, they took part in all aspects of the air war over Europe. This Canadian contribution was recognized early in the war when the first all-Canadian unit with the RAF, the 242 (Canadian) Squadron, was set up. The squadron was in action from the very beginning conducting patrols across the Channel to protect the evacuation of Dunkirk, and participating in the struggle for the survival of Britain. •3 BCATP 4 As the focus of a Commonwealth-wide effort to instruct aircrew, Canada made a major contribution to Allied air superiority during World War II. Called the "Aerodrome of Democracy" by US President Roosevelt, Canada had an abundance of air training space beyond the range of enemy aircraft, excellent climatic conditions for flying, immediate access to American industry, and relative proximity to the British Isles via the North Atlantic. Canada had been the location of a major recruitment and training organization during the First World War and Britain looked to it again when war began again in 1939. To Prime Minister King, the scheme had the advantages of keeping large numbers of Canadians at home and avoiding the raising of a large expeditionary force. Canada agreed to accept most of the plan's costs but insisted that the British agree that air training would take precedence over other aspects of the Canadian war effort. The British expected that their Royal Air Force would absorb Canadian air training graduates as in WW I, but King demanded that distinct Royal Canadian Air Force squadrons be formed. The contstruction of the training schools was a massive undertaking in itself. On the prairies, farmer's fields were transformed in a matter of a few months into operational schools. This involved the levelling and paving of runways, taxiways, and tarmacs: the building of several huge hangars, and dozens of other buildings for accommodating, teaching, and providing other services to the young airmen: and the installation of electrical, water, sewage, and other services. As well, an aircraft construction industry was developed to provide the thousands of aircraft necessary. As just one example of this , 1832 twin-engined Avro Anson Mk II's were built at factories in Nova Scotia and Ontario during the war. At the plan's peak, 94 schools operating at 231 sites across Canada, 10,840 aircraft were involved, and the ground organization numbered 104,113 men and women, and three thousand trainees graduated each month. At a cost that reached CAN$ 2,231 million, Canada’s share amounting to CAN$ 1,589 million, 131,553 pilots, navigators, bomb aimers, wireless operators, air gunners, and flight engineers were graduated. The BCATP ended on March 31st, 1945. It had received 159,340 trainees, among which 131,553 (including 49,507 pilots) successfully completed the course of study. They belonged to the RAF (42,110), the RCAF (72,835), the Royal Australian Air Force (9,606) and the Royal New Zealand Air Force (7,002). The 72,835 RCAF airmen comprised 25,747 pilots, 12,855 navigators, 6,657 bombers, 12,744 wireless operators / gunners, 12,917 gunners, and 1,913flight engineers. Newfoundland, Free France, Poland and other nations at war with Germany also benefited from BCATP training. •4 Battle of Britain 242 RAF “Canadian Sqn 5 RCAF squadrons were engaged extensively in both fighter and bomber operations. As we have seen, No. 1 Fighter Squadron, after only a few weeks of training, had joined the Fighter Command in the Battle of Britain in 1940. Then, as the Luftwaffe was repulsed and the German invasion prevented, Fighter Command quickly moved to the offensive. Separately, or in conjunction with Bomber Command, fighters struck into Nazi-occupied France and Belgium to attack enemy troop movements, ammunition factories, airfields and gun positions. The RCAF’s No 1 (Fighter) Squadron is the only Canadian squadron that took part in the Battle of Britain. Transferred overseas in June 1940, the pilots went through intensive training to be up to the level of their RAF counterparts before being sent to the front. In their Hurricanes, the pilots of No 1 Squadron had their first encounter with the enemy on August 23rd, 1940, and took part in the action until October 8th. Three pilots were awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC): Squadron Leader E.A. McNab, Flight Lieutenant G.R. McGregor and Flight Officer B.D. Russel. While putting together the 1st Infantry Division for service overseas, the Canadian government also prepared a support squadron, No. 110 (Army Co-operation) under Squadron Leader W.D. Van Vliet. The squadron was dispatched to Great Britain in February 1940 with its 12 Westland Lysanders. Pilots and gunners immediately started specialized training at the School of Army Cooperation, near Salisbury, then operational training in Oldham, Hampshire. On account of their being assigned to the Army Co-operation Command, No 110 airmen did not take part in the Battle of Britain which was happening under their very eyes from July to October 1940; certainly a frustrating experience for young men eager to fly and fight. It may have been a good thing, though, as the Luftwaffe Messerschmitts 109 would have ripped through their outdated Lysanders. The squadron, on the other hand, was getting ready to support VII Army Corps under Lt Gen McNaughton. Which would be facing the German invasion that seemed then to be imminent. But the Battle of Britain proved the Luftwaffe unable to take control of the sky, and Hitler cancelled the invasion, which had been planned for October 12th, 1940. •5 Canadianization 6 At first the Canadian squadrons flew in formation with the RAF units, but as their numbers increased, all-Canadian wings formed. Senior RCAF officers were concerned that no consideration was being given by the RAF as to leadership development of senior RCAF officers, leadership that would be critical in the post war. Also, it seemed as if Canadians got posted to less well equipped units. Therefore, a change in overseas senior officers occurred that promoted “Canadianization.” Canadianization would require RCAF approval for all Canadian postings, that Canadians would be concentrated in their own squadrons, then wings, and finally groups in the key areas of heavy bomber and tactical air support. By D-Day 1944, there were three RCAF Spitfire wings, a wing flying dive-bombing Typhoons, and a reconnaissance wing of Spitfires and Mustangs. On August 19, 1942, eight of the 74 Allied squadrons which gave aerial support to the raid on Dieppe belonged to the RCAF. •6 6 Bomber Group 7 In 1940, as hundreds of Nazi bombers ravaged Britain, the RAF had only limited aircraft with which to fight back. The situation was desperate. However during the winter of 1940-41, the RAF bomber force was reinforced with young fliers from the air-training schools of Canada and by new aircraft from British and Canadian factories. These aircraft included the large four-engined bombers - Stirlings, Halifaxes and Lancasters - each capable of carrying from five to seven tons of bombs. With Britain unable to take army action against Germany, its only recourse was bombers. Throughout 1941 and 1942 raids of steadily mounting intensity battered the industrial cities of Germany and struck U-boat bases, docks and railway centres from Norway to France. By the end of 1942 new radar devices enabled "Pathfinder" bombers with fire bombs and brilliant flares to guide the heavy bombers to their targets at night. In 1943 "saturation" bombing reached an appalling new level as German cities were subjected to massive bombing attacks. Canada's responsibility in bomber operations also expanded dramatically. The first Canadian bomber mission was carried out on the night of June 12, 1941. A year later 68 RCAF aircraft took part in the first 1000-bomber raid, and by the end of the war Canadian squadrons were sending out more than 200 heavy bombers in single raids carrying 900 tons of bombs. At the beginning of 1943, 11 Canadian bomber squadrons were brought together to form an all-Canadian Bomber Group, No. 6, under the command of Air Vice-Marshal G.E. Brooks, who was succeeded a year later by Air Vice-Marshal C.M. McEwen. In the beginning No. 6 Group suffered a grim casualty rate. Between March 5 and June 24, 1943, the group lost 100 aircraft, seven per cent of its strength. year, seven more squadrons took to the air, and on 1 January 1943, No. 6 Group of eight squadrons came into being. Based in Yorkshire, a long distance from their targets, the RCAF Group suffered serious teething problems. It flew older Wellington bombers; it had bad luck, and it lost more than a hundred aircraft and crews between March and June 1943; it suffered in consequence from morale problems. Not until the disciplinarian Air Vice&endash;Marshal 'Black Mike' McEwen took over command in January 1944, and not until Lancasters and Halifaxes had replaced the Group's Wellingtons, did matters improve. However, by mid-1944 with better equipment and training, more experience, a reprieve from bombing missions into Germany, and fighter protection up to the targets, the situation was reversed. At the end of 1944 No. 6 Group could boast the lowest casualties of any group in Bomber Command. The value of the Bomber offensive against Germany remains bitterly controversial. The aim was to destroy military and industrial installations and, by destroying the means to war, to force Germany to surrender. However, war production was only minimally reduced in the bombing raids while thousands of civilians died, and great cultural centres were ruined. This was a terrible example of total war. Yet, as democracies were fighting for survival, the mass bombing of civilians, rightly or wrongly, appeared justified. As well, the death toll in Bomber Command was tragically high. It took a special kind of courage to fly night after night across enemy territory in the face of German defences. Many of the big planes failed to return. Enemy night fighters and dense "flak" (anti-aircraft ground-fire) often inflicted heavy losses. When the Allies finally returned to the European Continent on June 6, 1944, the RCAF was there to provide support. Bombers of No. 6 Group dropped over 870 tons of bombs on gun positions overlooking the beaches of Normandy, and fighter wings dive-bombed enemy strongholds and guarded the Allied landings. The cost was 3,500 dead; another 4,700 RCAF officers and men died in other Bomber Command squadrons. In all, 17,101 members of the RCAF were killed during the war, a number almost exactly equal to the army's combat losses in the European theatre. In all, the group's aircraft flew 41,000 operations and dropped 126,000 tons of bombs, one-eighth of Bomber Command's total. •7 Loss Rates 8 6 Group suffered higher losses on average than the RAF using the Wellington. Note that these are night operations. •8 Halifax Lancaster 9 This improved with the Halifax, but losses could be high in day operations. Losses were much lower with the Lancaster, but so much depended on the target. It must be noted that German radar could detect 6 Group sooner than any other group. •9 10 On night operations with the Halifax, losses were higher then 4 group in 1943, but then average about the same. With the Lancaster, losses were higher than the Halifax, but lower than the RAF. •10 6 Group Targets 11 6 Bomber group participated in virtually all RAF heavy bomber raids 1943-5, including the fire storm raids. This has led to some controversy (The Valour and the Horror) as to why 6 Group didn’t stand up to the British policy of night time area bombing. What modern detractors don’t realize that the escalation to RAF/RCAF/USAAF area bombing was a long process that was not started by the Allies. Also, no senior officer would stand up and oppose such a policy because most believe it was the only doctrine that would work. (There was not enough analytical research to indicate what type of bombing should be done ie precision or area, night or day. The RAF did know that daytime losses by its less well defended bombers led to higher losses, and that night bombing meant precision was difficult.) •11 Accuracy of Night Bombing 12 Accuracy of night bombing increased as the war went on from 24% to 92% of bombs falling within 3 miles of the target. The chart illustrates how the introduction of radio navigation beacons helps, then pathfinders, master bombers and finally, radio navigation devices on the continent increased accuracy. Note thought that the trying years of 1943 and 1944, accuracy was only at 50% (within 3 miles of target). •12 Tonnage of Bombs Dropped in Europe 13 6 Group dropped about 10% of bombs in North west Europe during the strategic campaign. •13 6 Group Minelaying 14 Minelaying operations were carried out by strategic bombers when it was time for a rest after a gruelling mission or after high losses. This reassured the survivors and broke in the new crews. •14 Aerial Mine 15 •15 Eastern Air Command Catalina aka Canso Hudson Liberator 16 At the beginning of the war the RCAF's Home War Establishment had two operational commands. Eastern and Western Air Commands and seven under strength squadrons equipped with a variety of obsolescing aircraft, with which to defend the country. The largest threat to Canada and allies at the time were the German U-boats in the North Atlantic so top priority was given to expanding the facilities and capabilities of the Eastern Air Command. In December 1941 when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbour and later occupied the Aleutian Islands off Alaska and the priorities were reversed with the focus now on Western Air Command. Through out 1941 and 1942 the Home War Establishment was to achieve its maximum growth. With squadrons dispersed as far east as Newfoundland and supporting the Americans in Alaska serious problems arose with in exercising operational control. To overcome these difficulties, both air-commands were authorized to form operational groups as require. Odd numbered groups were assigned to Eastern Air Command and even numbered groups to Western Air Command. In November 1942 the Home War Establishment reached its peak strength with a total of 37 squadrons - 19 in Eastern Air Command and 18 in Western Air Command. In the East, Eastern Air Command (EAC) was tasked with coordinating air defence in the Atlantic region. The Dominion of Newfoundland – not yet a part of Canada – was placed under Canadian military protection so that EAC territory included Eastern Quebec, Labrador, Newfoundland, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island. EAC headquarters were located in Halifax, next to those of the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN), since maritime protection entails close cooperation between navy and air force. A network of air force bases expanded rapidly: Halifax, Dartmouth, Yarmouth, Sydney, Gander, Torbay, Bagotville. Flying boat bases were built in Gaspé, Shelburne, and Botwood. The Air Force’s role on the East Coast was to be worked out as early as September 1939 when the first transatlantic convoy, HX-1, left Halifax. The Stanraer flying boats of No 5 (Bomber-Reconnaissance) Squadron patrolled the approaches of Halifax Harbour to locate possible enemy submarines; as the convoy put out to sea, they ensured aerial protection within a 400-km radius. This was only about one-third of the plane’s actual range but one had to take into account the trip back to the base and adverse winds. Starting in November 1939, the Dartmouth-based 11 Squadron’s Lockheed Hudson made it possible to extend the range of patrols to 550 km. Bolingbroke and Digby bombers were also used. During the war’s early years the best performing plane for naval escort duty remained the Consolidated Catalina flying boat (or Canso under its Canadian version), with an effective range of 960 km. Unfortunately, EAC’s squadrons did not receive those aircraft before June 1941, as U-boat attacks against Allied convoys got as close as 1000 km off the coats of Newfoundland. Until 1942, RCAF air patrols were no serious threat to U-boats: insufficient training, lack of experience, inadequate equipment, all those factors prevented Canadian airmen from getting significant results against German submarines. In Great Britain, Coastal Command aircraft were equipped with radar systems and Torpex depth charges, set to explode in shallow waters. It would be month before their Canadian counterparts could get such equipment. The technical progress made by the British finally reached Canada. For instance, RAF-sponsored research showed that lookout men tended to watch the horizon rather than straight above, simply because it was less tiring. An aircraft painted white under and dark grey above disappears against the sky’s brightness. It can therefore get much closer to a U-boat before being detected, drop down on it and launch its depth charges before the submarine can dive. RCAF Squadron Leader N.E. Small, 113 (BR) Squadron, must be credited for introducing white camouflage and raising flight altitude from 1,200 to 1,500 metres, a strategy that earned him a kill against U-754. Despite the presence of RCAF squadrons along the eastern seashore, there remained in the middle of the Atlantic a weak spot, too far from the shore to be covered by the Canso. The RCAF’s repeated requests for very-long range bombers were not met before the summer of 1943. No 10 (Bomber-Reconnaissance) Squadron was then provided with four-engine Lockheed B-24 Liberator bombers modified to be able cross the Atlantic and equipped with U.S.-made ASG radars. 10 Squadron’s Liberators were to play a key role in the September 1943 campaign launched by U-boats against transatlantic convoys. Allied successes against German submarines in 1943 led to changes in the doctrine on maritime patrols, such as conducted by Canso and Liberator squadrons. Warned of approaching U-boats by land-based radio-detection stations, by the decipherment of wireless communications and by British intelligence services, EAC would send out patrols to locate, and attack them. They were to maintain contact with the EAC at all times, in order to allow the RCAF and RCN enough time to dispatch a combined force to sustain the offensive effort. Unfortunately, cooperation between the Air Force and the Navy, although it is essential to the success of anti-submarine operations, was often marred by an ancient and deeply rooted attitude of distrust among RCAF superior officers, wary that the RCN may take over air operations. This was, however, the way things worked in Great Britain, where the RAF’s Coastal Command was taking its orders from the Admiralty. In Canada, the situation did not improve after a first restructuring following the Anglo-American agreement signed in the fall of 1941 that placed the naval forces in the Atlantic under U.S. command. The RCN followed unwillingly the orders of the U.S. admiral based at Argentia; the RCAF, for its part, tried to maintain its autonomy by arguing that its responsibilities extended beyond escort and submarine warfare operations. It is only in the spring of 1943, following another reorganization of British, U.S, and Canadian forces involved in merchantmen protection, that better •16 Tactical Air Wing 17 By the spring of 1944, with the Luftwaffe virtually driven from the coastal area, preparations began for the Allied invasion of the continent. The Spitfires became fighterbombers carrying a 500-pound bomb under each wing and, together with a wing of Typhoons, engaged in bombing bridges, railways, radar posts and coastal defences. The RCAF Reconnaissance Wing, equipped for ground attack as well as for taking photographs, made regular sorties across the Channel. The RCAF Fighters were also to work in close support of the invading armies when the Allies returned to the Continent. For the invasion of Europe two complete groups of air support organizations were formed. The fighters, fighter-bombers, and reconnaissance squadrons would keep in touch with the front-line troops and help develop ground attack. It was hoped that the RCAF would support the Canadian ground forces when the time came to go into battle. In June 1943 No. 83 Group, to which the RCAF reconnaissance and fighter squadrons were transferred, was assigned to the First Canadian Army. Six home-defence squadrons were also sent overseas to join it. While No. 83 Group was not an all-Canadian formation, 15 of its 29 squadrons and half its ground establishment of 10,000 were Canadian. The expectation that Canadian land and air forces would go into battle together came to a disappointing end when on D-Day the highly experienced No. 83 Group was transferred to support the Second British Army which had been designated to manage the actual landing. The (all RAF) 84 Group was assigned to the Canadians. During the bitter fighting which followed around Caen, the RCAF gave air support to the Canadian and British forces, and when enemy troops were caught in the Falaise pocket, Spitfires and Typhoons attacked the long columns of vehicles with deadly machine-gun fire. The RCAF then helped cover the advance of the armies across northern France and Belgium, into the Netherlands, and finally across the Rhine and into Germany itself. Outstanding exploits were performed by RCAF pilots as they drove the German Air Force from the sky and prepared the way for advancing armies. The Reconnaissance Wing carried out photographic and tactical reconnaissance to gather information, first for planning the operation itself and then in aid of the advance. This wing was to end the war deeper in Germany than any other RCAF unit. As D-Day was approaching, Fighter Command and Army Co-operation Command squadrons were integrated into the 2nd Tactical Air Force (TAF) and both were dissolved as such, the latter being replaced by the British Air Defence. In preparation for Operation Overlord, the Allies put together an immense air force by combining the British 2nd TAF and the U.S. 9th TAF, as well as many squadrons from Coastal Command, Bomber Command and the U.S. 8th Army Air Force. All RCAF fighter and fighter-bomber squadrons, including the six territorial defence squadrons that were sent overseas in 1943 and 1944, were assigned to the 2nd TAF, except for No 402, which served with the British Air Defence. Each squadron prepared for the very specific role it was to play. Those that were to ensure air superiority by attacking enemy aircraft used Spitfires IX or XXI. Fighter-bomber squadrons specialized in ground attacks flew Typhoons. Night fighters were equipped with Mosquitos or sometimes Beaufighters, obsolete by then. Reconnaissance and photography units were supplied with Mosquitos, Mustangs and non-armed versions of the Spitfire, their role being to provide the army with data on the terrain and on enemy positions. On D-Day, June 6th, 1944, when the Allies set foot on the beaches of Normandy, the Luftwaffe put up almost no resistance to the massive invasion. Fighter squadrons escorted invading troops and attacked enemy ground positions; air superiority was easily established over the bridgehead. Later, as ground forces forged ahead, that superiority was easily maintained over an area that now reached some 100 km behind enemy lines. Allied ground forces could then move freely while German troops, whether they used roads or railways, or moved across fields could not do so without being targeted by RAF and RCAF fighters. Two days after D-Day, maintenance and construction commando squadrons arrived in Normandy to build airstrips. Ground crews of No 144 Wing (including Nos 441, 442 and 443 Squadrons) were deployed near Banville as early as June 9th, 1944. Both air and ground crews had to get used to the dust and lack of comfort of their temporary facilities. The bases and support personnel of the other Spitfire and Typhoon squadrons were also transferred to Normandy, as the bridgehead became more solid. As the campaign unfolded, encounters between RCAF fighters and the Luftwaffe became less and less frequent. Fighter attacks were mostly directed at ground targets: trucks, tanks, and artillery positions. When German troops in the Falaise Pocket were surrounded, on August 18th, 1944, fighters of all types were thrown into the battle. On that single day, No 127 Wing (Nos 403, 416 and 421 Squadrons) destroyed or put out of commission over 500 military vehicles, totalling some 290 hours of flight and firing 30,000 20-mm rounds. When the Campaign of Normandy was over, fighter units moved up their bases to remain close to the front. Their role did not change much as the Allies moved ahead slowly through North-Western Europe: support to the ground forces, bomber escort missions, attacking bridges, canals and enemy vehicles, road and rail convoys. The Luftwaffe, as weakened as it was, put up a bitter resistance as the Allies came closer to Germany. It still had a secret weapon, the Me 262, the first jet-propelled fighter plane. Much faster than the British Spitfire, it came in too late, the Third Reich was doomed. •17 The Hump and Burma 18 In the Far Eastern theatre of war the Dakotas of Nos. 435 and 436 Squadrons did similar work in vastly different surroundings. Supporting the Fourteenth Army Operations in Burma they dropped supplies by parachute on DZs (drop zones) which were usually small clearings in the jungle where from the air appeared to be no larger than "geranium pots." In addition to the hazards of the jungle and the storms and diseases of the tropics, the crews often had to run a gauntlet of intense ground fire from Japanese positions close to their DZs or landing strips. On one occasion the unarmed Dakotas were attacked by enemy fighters. •18 Coastal Command 19 Canada, like Great Britain, was convinced that the development of the air force should concentrate on strategic bombing and fighter operations. For that reason, the RCAF’s overseas aeronaval involvement was limited to eight squadrons. Let us not forget that the RCAF was also responsible for protecting maritime traffic along the coasts of Canada within the framework of the Home War Establishment mandate. The first RCAF squadrons to serve under the British Coastal Command were formed in Great Britain in 1941. Three squadrons, No 404, No 407, and No 415 took part in attacks against German ships along the coasts of north-western Europe. Equipped with Bristol Beaufighters in the spring of 1943, No 404 played a role in the development of a new weapon, the three-inch (7,6 cm) rocket with a 25-pound (11.3 kg) armour-piercing charge, as it hunted down Axis ships off the coasts of Norway. Anti shipping strikes were carried out by Blenheim and later Beaufighters. Their primary weapons were rockets. Operations were also carried out in Norwegian waters. A salvo of 8 5 inch rockets was equal to a broadside by a cruiser, more than enough to destroy a merchantman, or even a destroyer. After an initial period where it flew Blenheim and Hudson light bombers, No 407 Squadron received twin-engine Vickers Wellingtons. Those were improved aircraft that allowed No 407 to attack and sink more ships than any other squadron of its group. No 415 Squadron, for its part, experienced many frustrations as its planes were poorly suited for their missions, and as it was frequently forced to relocate. Those problems were solved in 1944 when the squadron was assigned to Bomber Command. No 413 Squadron was created in the summer of 1941 and equipped with Consolidated Catalina flying boats, then one of the best aircraft for anti-submarine warfare. Less than a year later, the squadron was transferred to Southeast Asia where the Japanese fleet threatened to annihilate the Royal Navy and invade Bengal. No 413 Squadron’s first Catalina reached Koggala in Ceylon (today Sri Lanka) on March 28th, 1942. Patrols started a few days later on the morning of April 4th. In Koggala, an airstrip is being built for No 413 Squadron’s Catalinas, February 10th, 1943. Coolies quarried, crushed and carried all the stone required without any mechanical help.National Defence Image Library, PL 18412.On his first patrol, after twelve hours of unsuccessful search, Squadron Leader L.J. Birchall and his crew of eight located the Japanese fleet. They closed in to assess the number of warships but were rapidly spotted by Japanese Zero fighters that were covering the ships. The Zeros attacked the Catalina that Birchall tried desperately to keep in flight while the wireless operator sent in coordinates of the fleet. The badly damaged plane dived and Birchall, together with six of his crewmates, managed to get away from the wreck, only to be rescued by a Japanese destroyer and made prisoners of war. Birchall’s call, however, had warned the Allies that a Japanese attack against the island was imminent and earned him to be known as “the Saviour of Ceylon”, After the April and May 1942 Japanese attacks, the Southeast Asia theatre grew much quieter and months after months of monotonous patrolling were to be the lot of No 413 Squadron. Created in 1942, No 422 and No 423 Squadrons flew aboard Short Sunderland flying boats. Those were heavy, four-engine aircraft with less autonomy and range than Catalinas; they had been originally designed for passenger service. The hull was actually so huge that it could be fitted with two decks. On the lower deck a small kitchen equipped with an oven provided the crew with a wartime luxury: coffee and hot meals. Given the defensive nature of their missions, most Coastal Command squadrons had to fly lengthy patrols without even a glimpse of the enemy. Bad weather was actually a worse threat. Patrols followed one another and men had to fight boredom that would make them less vigilant. Encounters with the enemy may have been rare but they certainly were not without danger. U-boats were tough targets for planes to fire at, and one had to get really close to get a hit. With its machine-guns and antiaircraft 20-mm guns, a U-boat could certainly fire back in a sustained manner (Type IX U-boats even had an additional 37-mm gun). Risks were high and so were losses in lives and material. An average of 2,000 to 3,000 Canadians served with the Coastal Command during the war’s last two years. In April 1944 the aircrews, ground personnel and administrative support personnel of all RCAF squadrons amounted to 2,065 men; 919 more Canadians were with various RAF units. As implied in its slogan "Find the enemy; strike the enemy; protect our ships," from September 1939 to May, 1945, was the waging of war against the enemy's U- boats, warships, and merchant shipping, in close co- operation with the Admiralty and Royal Navy. Coastal's other responsibilities embraced photographic reconnaissance, airsea rescue, meteorological flights and in the early months of the war, minelaying. From an embryo organization of five headquarters and 25 subordinate units at the beginning of the war the Command developed into a powerful force which at the end of the campaign comprised 10 headquarters and 247 subordinate units. •19 20 •20 Beaufighter Sunderland Rocket Strike 21 To the cause of keeping Britain's life-lines open and strangling the enemy's commerce, Canada contributed large numbers of aircrew and ground personnel as well as a small group of civilian and service scientists familiarly known as "the back-room boys" or "boffins." There was indeed virtually no sphere of endeavour within Coastal Command in which the RCAF did not participate. At one time or another, while Coastal was fighting the Battle of the Atlantic and clearing the seas for the invasion of North-West Africa and the landings in Normandy, seven RCAF squadrons served under its banner. These included three squadrons, Nos. 404, 407, and 415, equipped with landplanes - Blenheims, Beaufighters, Mosquitos, Hudsons, Wellingtons, Hampdens, and Albacores; three squadrons, Nos. 413, 422 and 423, equipped with Catalina and Sunderland flying-boats; and No. 162 squadron on detachment from Eastern Air Command, flying the amphibious Canso. The war records of the seven Canadian units illustrate the versatility of Coastal Command's operations. No. 404 Squadron spent most of the war in northern Scotland and the Shetland Isles. Its career began as a coastal fighter unit, sending its Blenheims on long reconnaissances and escort missions across the North Sea to the coast of Norway. Once re-equipped with rocket-firing Beaufighters, it became a strike unit, harrying Nazi shipping from the fiords of Norway to the ports of southern France. No. 407 Squadron gained fame as an anti-shipping unit that made daring mast-height attacks on enemy convoys off the Frisian Islands and the Dutch coast. With a record of 83,000 tons sunk or damaged in a single month, it was acclaimed as the most successful strike squadron in Coastal Command during the latter part of 1941 and early 1942. When the Hudson became obsolete for this work No. 407 Squadron was converted to an anti-submarine role, using Wellingtons equipped with powerful Leigh Lights to illuminate the target for night attacks. Four definite kills were credited to the crews of this squadron in addition to a number of other U- boats and midget submarines more or less severely damaged. After a period of service on Hampden torpedo-bombers attacking enemy shipping, No. 415 Squadron was reequipped with Wellingtons and Albacores and won many successes in night attacks on flagships, motortorpedo-boats and merchant vessels in the North Sea and English Channel before transferring to Bomber Command in the summer of 1944. Nos. 422 and 423 (Sunderland) Squadrons were continuously employed in the campaign against the U-boat escorting convoys and searching the seas from Iceland to Gibraltar. Six submarines were sent to the bottom by crews of these squadrons. Early in 1944, No. 162 Squadron flew its Cansos from Nova Scotia to Iceland to join Coastal's forces in the Battle of the Atlantic and its crews killed six U-boats, five of them in a period of less than a month. •21 RCAF Tiger Force 22 Three "Very Long Range" (VLR) bomber groups, each consisting of 22 Squadrons, (one RAF, one RCAF, and the third a composite British Commonwealth formation), were created and code-named "Tiger Force". By Spring 1945, "Tiger Force" was scaled down to two groups, considerably smaller than originally proposed. By 8 May 1945, almost immediately, the RCAF units earmarked for "Tiger Force" were converted to Canadian built Lancaster Bombers (MK X's) and returned to Canada for training and reorganization. No. 6614 Wing Greenwood was created. The plan called for the Wings to commence training for the Pacific in August, with the first Wing to arrive in the Pacific Theater by December. The arrival of the new bomber Wing overlapped the phasing out of No. 8 (RCAF) OTU. The disbandment order for the OTU was to be effective 31 July 1945. By 1 August 1945, No. 664 (Heavy Bomber) Wing and its two squadrons (No. 405 and 408 Squadrons) were officially formed. Training was to commence 24 August 1945. With the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the subsequent capitulation of Japan on 14 August 1945, No. 6614 Wing (and Tiger Force) became superfluous. On 5 September 1945, No. 6614 Wing officially disbanded as part of Tiger Force. •22 RCAF Casualties 23 The cost was 3,500 dead in 6 Group; another 4,700 RCAF officers and men died in other Bomber Command squadrons. In all, 17,101 members of the RCAF were killed during the war, a number almost exactly equal to the army's combat losses in the European theatre. In all, the group's aircraft flew 41,000 operations and dropped 126,000 tons of bombs, one-eighth of Bomber Command's total. •23 Leadership (In General) Crerar McNaughton Kitching & Simonds Burns Hoffmeister Vokes Foulkes Keller Murray McEwen 24 Historian Jack Granatstein has noted that nations not only get the politicians they deserve, but also the generals. Both the senior political and military leadership of Canada played no role in the higher direction of the war. While Canadian Rear-Admiral Leonard Murray was placed in charge of the Northwest Atlantic Command in 1943, it was a small theatre of war and the only one with a Canadian at the head. As we have seen in other conflicts, Canada plays its military part alongside larger allies who plan the strategic game, and the Second World War was no different. The struggle to keep units together in all services against other Allied military priorities did remain a primary and contentious issue for Canadian commanders, especially General A. G. L. McNaughton. The development of independent RCAF units, particularly No. 6 Group in Bomber Command, perplexed and upset Canada’s allies who could not see past their own needs for homogeneity. The RCN, which, more than most, operated with British and American units, was perhaps the first branch to see that the future lay in closer cooperation with Canada’s southern neighbour. While Canada never produced the same calibre of operational thinkers as her allies (there are no equivalent Pattons, Montgomerys, Zukovs, or Rommels), her senior military leadership had its merits, and failings. The nationalist McNaughton was loved by his men and saw clearly some of the future issues with atomic energy. He was also hated by his British superiors, and deemed unfit for battlefield command. Harry Crerar would be the premier Canadian to command the First Canadian Army in battle, though Guy Simonds may have been the best tactician and innovator to lead that army, though not without his own faults. Effective commanders E. L. M Burns and Charles Foulkes, both former commanders of the 1st Canadian Corps in Italy, would find their skills used to greater effect during the Cold War. For their part, Murray and McEwen were admirable for the conduct of their respective commands in the difficult and trying early days of the war for both the RCN and RCAF. In examining Canada’s participation in the Second World War, keep in mind the importance of alliances and issues of national sovereignty. These mantras were evident in the First World War, critical to the Second World War, and would become further entangled in the Cold War when Canada, for the first time in its history, joined not one but two peacetime alliances. The composition of those post-war alliances represented another shift in Canada’s position on the world stage that was fostered by her efforts through six years of war •24 Questions What were the criteria for a successful Canadian commander in the Second World War? Was it simply a matter of technological backwardness that caused the RCN so much trouble during the initial phase of the war? Of all the theatres and roles in which RCAF members served, which was their greatest contribution to the war effort? 25 •25
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