RAF strategy Before the outbreak of war,
RAF Bomber Command firmly believed that air power could win wars without the need for naval and land fighting, since "
the bomber will always get through." Tightly flown bomber formations with heavy defensive armament were thought capable of warding off enemy fighters even without fighter escort. The RAF lacked a four-engine bomber with adequate defensive protection which could carry heavy bomb loads to German targets. The only possible targets within range of British bombers were those in the industrial region of the
Ruhr. The
Netherlands and
Belgium wished to remain neutral and refused to allow the RAF to establish bases from which they could fly deeper into Germany. They also forbade overflying by British bombers to and from Germany. After the outbreak of war, the French refused to allow RAF bombers to bomb German cities from French airfields. The French felt secure behind the
Maginot Line but their air force did not possess the modern bombers to attack the Luftwaffe. French fighter forces were not yet ready for an all out defensive campaign against the Germans either. A fear of retaliation was the main French reason. The only recourse was to fly missions directly from Britain and only ports or coastal cities in northern Germany were within easy reach. This state of affairs suited the British, in particular, the
Admiralty. The most immediate threat to the Allies during the
Phoney War period was the
U-boat. Some German submarines had been sent to sea before the British declaration of war. Once war was declared, the U-boats began operations against British ships that were bringing in supplies from
North America and areas of the
British Empire. sank the battleship at
Scapa Flow in October 1939, with the loss of 786 crew. As a consequence the Admiralty pressed for the RAF to concentrate its efforts on
RAF Coastal Command rather than a strategic bomber force. This was debated within the British establishment well into 1941. To avoid the bombing of civilian targets, the British formulated the Western Air Plan 7B (WAP 7B), which planned for attacks on German warships. German ships were legitimate targets and, at sea or in port, were far enough away from civilian areas to avoid unnecessary casualties. The Plan revolved around their elimination to prevent their use as supplements to the U-boat fleet.
3 September – 17 December To fit in with this strategy, the initial plans of the RAF involved raids against German shipping on receipt of the results of aerial reconnaissance. This was attempted on 3 September, when a
Bristol Blenheim (flown by
Flying Officer Andrew McPherson of
No. 139 Squadron RAF)—on a reconnaissance flight over the
North Sea—spotted a large naval force in the
Schillig Roads off
Wilhelmshaven. The radio failed and an attack could not be launched until McPherson returned to base, when 15
Handley Page Hampdens and nine
Vickers Wellington bombers were sent against the German ships. The weather was poor and the bombers failed to find any targets. A similar attempt was made on 4 September, when McPherson again spotted warships off
Brunsbüttel, Wilhelmshaven and in the Schillig Roads. The radio failed again and no attack could be launched until McPherson's return. A force of 10 Blenheims from
No. 110 Squadron RAF and
No. 107 Squadron RAF along with five more from No. 139 Squadron and eight Wellingtons of
No. 149 Squadron RAF took off to locate the German warships , and , which some aircraft found. No. 149 Squadron was not prepared for war. At least one of the crews—Flying Officer (F/O) Bill McRae—nearly took off without a bomb load; looking in, he noticed the bomb bay was empty. On the way to the target,
Squadron Leader Paul Harris ordered his gunners to test their weapons. They all failed and he was heading into German territory defenceless. Not wanting to turn back on his first raid, he pressed ahead. The same targets were attacked by
9 Squadron later in the day, in and around Brunsbüttel. Results were poor with five Blenheims and two Wellingtons lost and only minimal damage caused to the German warships.
Admiral Scheer was hit by three bombs that failed to explode, while the
light cruiser —not one of the priority targets—was present and also damaged by a Blenheim that crashed into the
forecastle of the ship. The crash killed 11 sailors and injured 30. One Wellington bomber accidentally strayed over Danish territory and dropped five bombs on the town of
Esbjerg, mistaking it for Brunsbüttel; one bomb hit an apartment block, killing one and wounding seven. The accidental bombing led to false rumors that British forces had occupied
Southern Jutland. II./
Jagdgeschwader 77 (II.
Gruppe of JG 77; II Wing, Fighter Group 77,
Oberstleutnant Carl-August Schumacher) took off from
Nordholz Airbase and intercepted 9 Squadron.
Feldwebels Hans Troitzsch and Alfred Held each claimed a victory and
Leutnant Metz another. These aircraft from No. 9 Squadron were the first RAF aircraft to be shot down by enemy fighters during the war and Troitzsch was most likely to have been the first enemy pilot to shoot one down. Another four Blenheims of No. 107 Squadron were shot down by anti-aircraft fire. The Germans believed their air defences had established an effective defence from Allied attack. Use of the early
Freya radar had given the German fighters eight minutes warning of their approach. The delay between spotting German warships and the arrival of the bombers was considered to be too great, and it was decided to carry out
reconnaissance in force, with formations of bombers being sent out over the North Sea to find and attack German warships. Their orders forbade them from attacking ships in port, infringing neutral airspace or even attacking German warships escorting merchant ships. A patrol on 29 September resulted in five Hampdens being shot down by
Messerschmitt Bf 109s of II./JG 77 but an attack by 24 Wellingtons of 149,
38 and
115 squadrons on 3 December was more successful, claiming a German minesweeper sunk (confirmed by German archives), while defensive fire from the Wellington gunners repelled attacks by German fighters, shooting one down for no loss. The German pilot shot down was future German ace
Günther Specht. He was shot down by
Corporal Copley of No. 38 Squadron RAF. The German ships were the
Brummer and the minesweeper
M1407 both sunk by unexploded bombs passing through the ship. A German report stated the attack was cleverly executed from out of the sun and delivered to avoid the nearby civilian areas. An armed reconnaissance by twelve Wellingtons on 14 December resulted in five being lost as the formation, at very low level because of the low cloud base, was engaged by fighter aircraft and anti-aircraft guns. The RAF believed that none of the lost Wellingtons had been shot down by fighters and so maintained faith in their defensive capabilities when flown in tight formations. This summation was odd considering that several of the surviving bombers had damage from small-arms fire. The Luftwaffe claimed five bombers for the loss of one fighter while none of the German
FlaK units claimed a victory.
German defences The Luftwaffe's air defence organisation went through a number of changes in the first months of the war. The defence of the northern German
ports and vital strategic targets was given to the local or nearest
Luftverteidigungskommando (Air Defence Command). In this case the unit responsible for the protection of German warships of the
Kriegsmarine was the
Luftverteidigungskommando Hamburg (Air Defence Command Hamburg). The system was impractical; the Hamburg air defence district controlled air and ground defences but each was geographically in no position to help the other. There was no
combined arms synthesis, meaning that the
FlaK arm did not directly support the German defences thereby forming one mass defence. Instead, fighter units protecting the coast were held there, with
Kriegsmarine FlaK units, while the Hamburg air defence artillery was held too far inland. The Luftwaffe fighters and
FlaK units were located too far apart to coordinate. Coordination was not helped by the poor relations between the Luftwaffe and
Kriegsmarine Commanders-in-Chief,
Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring and
Großadmiral (Grand Admiral)
Erich Raeder. The system required both services to work together but it produced co-operation difficulties. A solution to the problem was twofold. Fighter units defending the North Sea coast were subordinated to
Luftgaukommando XI (Air District Command 11) in
Hanover. These fighter units would function as an autonomous fighter command or
Jagdfliegerführer (Fighter Flyer Leaders). The command of Fighter Command unit was given to
Oberstleutnant Carl-August Schumacher, a former commander of II./
Jagdgeschwader 77. Schumacher had served in the
Kaiserliche Marine (Imperial German Navy) during the
First World War and as an
officer cadet had seen combat at the
Battle of Jutland. It was hoped with his naval background and easy personality it would ease any difficulties with naval service cooperation. Schumacher and his counterpart in the Navy were of the same rank, so each lacked authority over the other, an arrangement that stifled unity of command. ==Forces involved==