In July 1943 British Bomber Command bombed the German city
of Hamburg. During these bombings Window
was used to deceive the Germans about the position of British bombers. British bombers were still shot down, but at
a lower percentage rate than in previous Hamburg bombings, thanks to
Window. The British could listen to the
radio telephony between the German nightfighters and the control stations at
the ‘Y Service’ station at Kingsdown.
They could overhear the German frustration caused by Window.
R.V. Jones was a scientist who served in the Official
Intelligence Service, specifically in Air Intelligence. In his book Most Secret War he writes:
“It would obviously be an encouragement to our bomber crews
if we could let them know something of the German reaction….German reactions,
such as those we were gaining from Enigma, could not be broadcast to our crews;
but fortunately a heavily-laden and very gallant pigeon arrived at its home
base, having been dropped by Bomber Command somewhere in North France with my
usual questionnaire. It had been picked
up by a Frenchman who had been present in one of the German nightfighter
control stations, perhaps as a cleaner, and when he saw there wasa question
about radar he had clearly delighted in describing the events one night in the
station at le Croix Caluyau as he had witnessed them. I have never seen a pigeon carrying such a
profuse message. It ended with the
exclamation by the German Station Commander, who had spent the night trying to
intercept seven hundred separate bombers without being able to locate one: ‘He
would rather be attacked by a hundred bombers than submit to that torrent of
paper again!’ Since no source could be
compromised by this message, we were able to circulate it to Bomber Command,
where the Commander’s comment was widely appreciated.”
This passage comes at the end of the Hamburg chapter.
Here is a link to a bio for R.V. Jones:
Here is the link to documentary Secret War-The Battle of the
Beams on youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DrXXBh-15KA
Might the National Archives have the intelligence brought back to Bletchley Park by the pigeons? I tried the Discovery search but there are hundreds of files. If not, where might they be?
ReplyDeleteBernard fquirk202@aol.com