Operation Chastise was the official name for the attacks on German dams on May 17, 1943 in World War II using a specially developed "bouncing bomb". The attack was carried out by Royal Air Force No. 617 Squadron, subsequently known as the Dambusters.
The mission developed out of a bomb designed by Barnes Wallis and developed into a working device by a team at Vickers. Wallis was an aircraft designer and had the successful Wellesley and Wellington bombers to his credit. While working on the Warwick, he also began work on bomb design with dams specifically in mind.
His initial idea was for a 10-ton bomb to be dropped from 40,000 feet (12,200 m). However, research showed that a bomb sufficient to breach a dam without a direct hit would be too heavy for any available bomber to carry. A much smaller charge would suffice if it could be exploded directly against the dam wall below the surface of the water. The major German dams were protected by heavy torpedo netting to prevent such an attack, and Wallis's breakthrough was to overcome this. A drum-shaped bomb, spinning rapidly backwards (over 500 rpm) and dropped from a sufficiently low altitude at the right speed, would skip for the required distance over the surface of the water in a series of bounces before reaching the dam wall and then, using its residual spin, run down the wet side to the dam's base. An accurate drop could bypass the dam protection and let the bomb be detonated against the dam with a hydrostatic fuse. After testing, and many meetings, the idea was adopted on February 26, 1943. The bomb was codenamed 'Upkeep'. The dams were to be bombed in May of that year, when water levels would be highest.
The operation was given to 5 Group which formed a new squadron to undertake the mission. Initially called Squadron 'X', it was led by Wing Commander Guy Gibson, a veteran of over 170 missions. A further 21 crews were chosen from 5 Group to join the new squadron based at RAF Scampton, 5 miles north of Lincoln.
The targets were the three key dams near the Ruhr area, the Möhne, the Sorpe and the Eder Dam on the Eder River. The loss of hydroelectric power was important but the loss of water to industry, cities and canals would have greater effect.
The aircraft were adapted Avro Lancaster Mk IIIs, dubbed Type 464 (Provisioning). To reduce weight, much of the armour was removed, as was the mid-upper turret. The substantial bomb and its unusual shape meant that the bomb doors were removed and the bomb itself hung, in part, below the body of the aircraft. It was mounted in two crutches and before dropping , it was spun up to speed by an auxiliary motor.
Bombing from 60 feet (18 m) at 240 mph (390 km/h), at a very precise distance from the target, required expert crews, intensive night and low-altitude flying training, and the solutions to two technical problems. The first was to know when the aircraft was the correct distance from the target. The two key dams at Möhne and Eder had a tower at each end. A special aiming device (a device with two prongs making the same angle as the two towers at the correct distance from the dam) showed when to release the bomb. The second problem was to measure the aircraft's altitude (the usual barometric altimeters lacked sufficient accuracy). Two spotlights were mounted under the nose and under the fuselage such that their beams would intersect 60 feet (18 m) from the underside of the plane. At the correct height, the two spots of light would merge into one on the surface of the water. The crews practised over the Eyebrook Reservoir in Leicestershire (built in 1940 to supply Corby steelworks), and the Derwent Reservoir, Derbyshire.
The bombs were delivered to the squadron on 13 May, after the final tests on 29 April. With promising weather reports the pilots, navigators and bomb aimers were informed of the targets on 15 May, the rest of the crews on the following day.
Formation 1 was of nine aircraft in three groups — Gibson, Hopgood, Martin; Young, Astell, Maltby; and Maudslay, Knight, Shannon. Formation 2 was of five aircraft, those of McCarthy, Byers, Barlow, Rice and Munro. Formation 3 consisted of the aircraft of Townsend, Brown, Ottley and Burpee. Two crews were unable to make the mission because of illness.
The operations room for the mission was at 5 Group headquarters in Grantham. The codes (transmitted in morse) for the mission were agreed on as Goner for bomb dropped, Nigger for the Möhne breached and Dinghy for the Eder breached. The Nigger code was after Gibson's black dog * that had been run over and killed on the morning of the 17th. Dinghy was from the nickname of Gibson's friend Young who would be flying A-Apple - Young had had to make forced landings in the sea several times on operations, he and his crew having to resort to the aircraft's inflatable liferaft. Thereafter, he had been known-as "Dinghy Young".
The outbound flights were flown at treetop level (between 75 and 120 feet) to avoid detection by the German air defence radar. The aircraft flew two routes, carefully skirting known flak hot spots.
Formation 1 entered continental Europe between Walcheren and Schouwen, crossed the Netherlands, skirting the airbases at Eindhoven and Gilze-Rijen, curved round the Ruhr defences and turned north to avoid Hamm before turning to head south to the Möhne. Formation 2 flew further northwards, cutting over Vlieland and crossing the IJsselmeer before joining the first route near Wesel and then flying south beyond the Möhne to the Sorpe.
The first aircraft, those of Formation 2 and heading for the longer northern route, took off at 21h10. McCarthy's aircraft had a hydraulics fault and he took off in a reserve craft twenty minutes late. Formation 1 took off from 21h25.
The first casualties were taken soon after the craft reached the Dutch coast. Formation 2 did not fare well: Munro's aircraft lost his radio to flak and turned back over the Zuider Zee while Rice flew too low and lost his bomb in the water but recovered the aircraft to return to base. The aircraft of both Barlow and Byers crossed over the coast around Harderwijk and were shot down shortly thereafter. Only the tardy aircraft of McCarthy survived across the Netherlands. By contrast, Formation 1 lost Astell, somewhere over Roosendaal.
| Aircraft Call Sign | Commander | Target | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| First Wave | |||
| G George | WGCDR Gibson | Möhne Dam | Raid leader. Mine exploded short of dam. Used aircraft to draw AA fire away from other crews. |
| M Mother | FLTLT Hopgood | " | Hit by AA fire outbound. Mine bounced over dam. Shot down over target whilst attacking. |
| P Peter (Popsie) | FLTLT Martin | " | Mine missed target. |
| A Apple | SN Young | " | Mine hit dam and caused small breach. Shot down over Dutch coast inbound. |
| J Johnny | FLTLT Maltby | " | Mine hit dam and caused large breach. |
| L Leather | FLTLT Shannon | Eder Dam | Mine hit target - no effect. |
| Z Zebra | SN Maudsley | " | Mine overshot target and damaged aircraft. Shot down over Germany inbound. |
| N Nut | PO Knight | " | Mine hit dam and caused large breach. |
| B Baker | FLTLT Astell | N/A | Crashed after hitting power lines outbound. |
| Second Wave | |||
| T Tommy | FLTLT McCarthy | Sorpe Dam | Mine hit target - no effect. |
| E Easy | FLTLT Barlow | N/A | Crashed after hitting power lines outbound. |
| K King | PO Byers | " | Shot down over Dutch coast outbound. |
| H Harry | PO Rice | " | Lost mine after clipping sea outbound. Returned without attacking target. |
| W Willie | FLTLT Munro | " | Damaged by AA Fire over Dutch coast. Returned without attacking target. |
| Third Wave | |||
| Y York | FLTSGT Anderson | Lister Dam | Could not find target due to mist. |
| F Freddy | FLTSGT Brown | Sorpe Dam | Mine hit target - no effect. |
| O Orange | FLTSGT Townsend | Ennepe Dam | Mine hit target - no effect. |
| S Sugar | PO Burpee | N/A | Shot down over Holland outbound. |
| C Charlie | PO Ottley | " | Shot down over Germany outbound. |
After a public relations tour of America, Gibson returned to operations and was killed on a mission in 1944.
Following the dams raid, 617 Squadron was kept together as a specialist unit. The squadron badge ("on a roundel, a wall in fesse, fracted by three flashes of lightning in pile and issuant from the breach, water proper") was chosen and a motto "Après moi le déluge" (After me the Flood). The squadron went on to drop Wallis' massive Tallboy bomb and Grand Slam bomb, using an advanced bomb sight which enabled the bombing of small targets with far greater accuracy than was routinely obtained with conventional bomb aiming techniques. The squadron is still active today.
However, on closer inspection, Operation Chastise did not have the military effect that was at the time believed. By 27 June, full water output was restored, thanks to an emergency pumping scheme inaugurated only the previous year, and the electricity grid was again producing power at full capacity. The raid proved to be costly in lives (more than half the lives lost belonging to allied POWs), but in fact no more than a minor inconvenience to the Ruhr's industrial output. However, the pictures of the broken dams proved to be an immense morale boost to the Allies, especially to the British, still suffering under German bombing.
This was the middle period of the war when the Japanese had relatively recently brought the United States into it on Britain's side (see Attack on Pearl Harbor). Germany had a little earlier done the same with the Soviet Union (see Operation Barbarossa). However, the Soviet Union was in a very serious position, although by the time the preparations for the raid were complete the USSR had found the capacity to begin its counter-offensive on the Don and Volga. (See Battle of Stalingrad). The Dams Raid enabled Churchill, in negotiations with the leaders of these new allies, to point to an effective strike against the hitherto apparently invincible German state so that he was taken more seriously as an ally than might otherwise have been the case. This was relevant vis-à-vis Stalin but also in the USA. Although Churchill had the sympathetic ear of Roosevelt, many of the US military staff were less persuaded of the value of British experience and capabilities. (See Churchill, W.S. (1951).)
A 1954 movie, The Dam Busters was made about the raids and was very popular.
The PC game Call of Duty features a mission in the British campaign where players must suppress the Eder Dam's AA defenses and destroy the dam's generators in order to clear the way for the bombers to make their raid on the dam.
Battles and operations of World War II | Conflicts in 1943
Operation Chastise | Opération Chastise | Operasjon Chastise | Operação Chastise
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