Training Fraser became a Naval Airman 2nd Class at
HMS St Vincent in Gosport, which after the outbreak of war had become an officer training establishment for the
Fleet Air Arm (FAA). During 1940, he learned to fly at RAF Elmdon, which was built as a civilian airport (now part of
Birmingham Airport), but for the duration of the war was taken over by the Air Ministry and used as an Elementary Flying Training School for the RAF and FAA. Fraser was trained as a torpedo bomber pilot and taught how to take-off from, and land on, an aircraft carrier. Fraser was commissioned as an officer in the
Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve. Rather than serving on an aircraft carrier, Fraser was loaned to the
Royal Air Force (RAF) where he flew the land-based
Beaufighter fighter-bomber with
No. 252 Squadron,
RAF Coastal Command.
Active Service in the Mediterranean In May 1941, Fraser arrived in Malta where he helped to shoot down an Axis transport aircraft, before being sent to the
Western Desert Campaign, where he was shot down and spent three days wounded and sheltering beneath the wreckage of his aircraft before being rescued. Fraser was treated in a hospital in Suez, where he was initially viewed as close to death and nearly had an arm amputated. Fraser was then sent to South Africa to recover, then returned to Britain and learned to fly again. Back with the FAA, Fraser was again posted to Malta in 1942 as a pilot in
830 Naval Air Squadron (NAS). In the
North Africa campaign, Malta was a base from which British aircraft, ships and submarines attacked Axis convoys shipping supplies and re-enforcements from Italy to Libya. The pressure on the Axis supply lines from British forces on Malta played an important role in wearing down the effectiveness of
Erwin Rommel's . Malta had been besieged and subjected to many Axis air raids since 1940. Malta's supply situation had become desperate and 830 NAS operated in Spartan conditions on an island that was in the midst of a battle that has been called 'The
Verdun of the Mediterranean'. In the face of heavy combat damage to aeroplanes and shortages, on their aerodrome at
RAF Hal Far, 830 NAS’s ground crews had to perform "miracles of improvisation" to keep aircraft flying. With 830 NAS, Fraser flew
Albacore torpedo bombers, which could operate from land or an aircraft carrier, and were also used for reconnaissance, dive-bombing and laying
naval mines. The Albacore was a biplane and obsolescent; although just a year earlier, in the eastern Mediterranean, Albacores from the aircraft carrier, had badly damaged the modern Italian battleship,
Vittorio Veneto, at the
Battle of Cape Matapan. Pilots compensated for the Albacore's shortcomings with their flying skills and courage. On 22 November 1942, Fraser carried out a night attack on three Italian navy cruisers off the coast of
Calabria. He released his torpedoes at a range of , that struck the light cruiser
Luigi di Savoia Duca degli Abruzzi. Flying at an altitude of , Fraser later said he was more concerned about hitting the mast of one of the ships than by the anti-aircraft fire from the ships.
Duca degli Abruzzi was badly damaged and saw no further action before Italy defected from the Axis in September 1943. It later saw service with the Allied
Italian Co-belligerent Navy. Fraser flew at the limit of his aircraft's range and had to return immediately after the attack, so only discovered how successful he had been thanks to Allied intelligence reports. On 22 December 1942, west of
Sicily, near the island of
Marettimo, Fraser piloted one of four FAA torpedo-bombers that attacked a Italian cargo ship, the
Etruria, which was escorted by three Axis destroyers, plus some gunboats. Kenneth Poolman wrote, "with the smell of some very close flak in his nostrils, Fraser dropped his torpedo. An explosion and a huge mushroom of black and white smoke rose from abaft the ship's funnel, and she was soon burning. The
Etruria was later announced sunk by the BBC". A torpedo dropped by one of the other FAA aircraft struck a destroyer. Fraser was awarded the DSC. The decoration was reported in the
London Gazette on 29 June 1943, which said the award was "for bravery in successful air-attacks on enemy shipping in the Mediterranean". Fraser's squadron began to mine Axis harbours, flying above the water on moonless nights, which Fraser described as "more nerve-racking and dangerous than attacking ships". In March 1943, Fraser completed his tour and had the option to return to Britain and become a training instructor but he volunteered to serve another tour.
Prisoner of War On 30 March 1943, Fraser's aircraft was hit by flak over
Palermo, Sicily, rupturing the fuel tank and he had to ditch in the sea. Fraser, and his crewman, Midshipman Michael Barbour, were adrift in a dinghy for days before they were rescued by a German patrol boat. Barbour, who was just 19 years old, died shortly after they were rescued. Fraser spent the rest of the war as a prisoner of war. He was the held in
Stalag Luft III, the camp where the
Great Escape occurred in March 1944. During this escape attempt, Fraser served as a lookout. Fraser finished the war as a Lieutenant. His brother, Gordon, also served in the FAA but was lost over the North Sea in poor weather conditions in September 1942. ==Post-war Career==