The Battle of Britain



The Battle of Britain

By Dr Chris Bellamy

The story of the Battle of Britain resounds through the years as one of the defining moments of recent British history. Dr Chris Bellamy examines what happened, and explodes some enduring myths concerning this crucial conflict.

The Battle of Britain 1940

In the summer of 1940, the German Luftwaffe attempted to win air superiority over southern Britain and the English Channel by destroying the Royal Air Force and the British aircraft industry. This attempt came to be known as the Battle of Britain, and victory over the RAF was seen by the Germans as absolutely essential if they were eventually to mount an invasion of the British Isles.

The Germans had overrun Belgium, the Netherlands and northern France in May 1940, using the Blitzkrieg ('Lightning War') technique that relied, among other things, on close coordination between ground troops and the air force. Although the Luftwaffe proved very competent in this role, it was not trained or equipped for the longer-range operations that became part of the Battle of Britain.

It is widely believed that had the Germans succeeded in their aim of destroying the RAF, they would have been able to invade Britain relatively easily. This was, after all, at a time when the country was the only European power resisting Nazi Germany, even though she did enjoy massive support from her Commonwealth partners.

'Never in the field of human conflict has so much been owed by so many to so few.'

The Soviet Union did not enter the war against Germany until June 1941, and the United States didn't get involved until December of that year. It was this state of affairs that lay behind Winston Churchill's famous speech to Parliament on 20 August, right in the middle of the concerted German air attacks on southern Britain, in which he said, 'Never in the field of human conflict has so much been owed by so many to so few.'

Although the fear of a German invasion was real, it was perhaps unfounded, however, as German plans were in fact somewhat amateurish - when planning the air attacks they made the mistake of regarding the Channel as a relatively minor obstacle, little more than a wide river crossing. In addition even if Hitler had achieved his aim of destroying the RAF, Germany might still have failed to establish a foothold after any invasion, because the British Royal Navy was enormously strong, and very capable of repulsing German troop ships.

Suppression of the British air force would have been the first difficult step to a German victory, but it was not the only factor, and the British would have found they had plenty more tricks up their sleeve. There was nothing to stop them from withdrawing their aircraft northwards, out of range of the German fighters, if they started to lose the air battle, keeping the aircraft in reserve to counter an attempted German invasion.

The combatants

There were plenty of indications that the Luftwaffe might face real problems in accomplishing their initial step towards the conquest of Britain. The first came during the evacuation of Allied troops from the Dunkirk beaches at the end of May.

The Luftwaffe's principal modern fighter, the Messerschmitt Bf109E (Me-109), had limited range and was operating from bases some way from Dunkirk, making the German bombers very vulnerable to the most modern RAF fighters. This was a foretaste of the problems that they would soon face over Britain itself, and during the operation they lost 240 aircraft to the RAF's 177. German loss in the Battle of France was also heavy - 30 per cent - and the German aircraft industry was already falling behind the Allies in aircraft production.

'The Germans underestimated the strength of the RAF.'

A plan to use the Luftwaffe as the prelude to the invasion of the UK had been discussed in 1939, and was at first rejected. However, in view of the strength of the Royal Navy, the Germans did eventually decide they had to eliminate the RAF first. They had won convincingly in the Polish campaign in 1939, and the Scandinavian and French campaigns in 1940, but they were now up against a well-organised air defence system, and things were going to be more difficult for them. Furthermore, they were operating at the limit of the range of the fighters needed to protect their vulnerable bombers.

Another factor counting against a German success was their underestimation of the strength of the RAF and the British aviation industry's production capacity. They believed they could eliminate RAF Fighter Command in four days and the aviation industry in four weeks.

The British, on the other hand, over-estimated German strength and competence. This was worrying, but not something that would lose them the battle, and they also had a new invention - radar - to help direct the fighters to intercept attacking German aircraft. Furthermore, the British were starting to get intelligence from intercepting German communications, having cracked the Enigma code system.

Thus, in the struggle for air superiority, the two sides were about evenly matched. All the German aircraft had first seen action in the Spanish Civil War. The Me 109E was the principal German fighter. However, with a range of 700 km, it had only 15 minutes' fuel over Kent and was at the limit of its range over London. The two-engined Me-110 had a slightly longer range.

The Germans used relatively fast two-engined medium bombers - the Dornier 17, the Junkers 88 and the Heinkel 111, as well as the gull-winged Junkers 87 'Stuka', which was very effective in direct support of the army but proved extremely vulnerable to the RAF.

Strategy and Fact

The RAF's high performance fighters were the Hawker Hurricane, the mainstay of its effort, and the Supermarine Spitfire. The Spitfire was faster and more manoeuvrable but the Hurricane carried slightly more ammunition, was a more stable gun platform, and was absolutely lethal against the German bombers.

At the time, these aircraft were the best the respective sides could produce. Had the Germans had the Focke-Wulf 190 in their armoury - it was eventually introduced in mid 1941 - that might have made a real difference. The Germans had no heavy four-engined bomber of the type being developed by the British and US. These bombers were used in the great Allied bombing offensives later in the war.

'Churchill resented Dowding's independence.'

The Battle of Britain began on 30 June 1940. Reichsmarschall Hermann Göering, head of the Luftwaffe, ordered his force to draw the RAF into battle by attacking coastal convoys and bombing radar stations along the south coast, installations of the British aircraft industry, and RAF airfields. This dilution of effort, which became more marked as the battle progressed, was one of the principal reasons why the Luftwaffe eventually lost the battle.

The short range of the German aircraft and the fact that they were fighting over enemy territory were two major disadvantages for the Germans. A downed German pilot was lost to Germany, and a damaged aircraft was likely to ditch in the sea - whereas damaged RAF aircraft could limp home, or land somewhere friendly, and downed RAF pilots parachuted onto English fields. They were returned to their units almost immediately, not infrequently after a spell in the pub.

The head of the British fighter command since 1937 was Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh Dowding, who had been involved in the procurement of both the Spitfire and the Hurricane aircraft, and in the development of radar.

He had resisted demands by Churchill to send his fighter reserve to France, holding it back for the defence of the UK, and refused to commit it in large numbers to defending sea convoys. Both decisions were subsequently proved to have been good ones, but Churchill resented Dowding's independence of mind.

Fighting

The Battle officially began on 13 August, with an all-out assault on Adlertag ('Eagle day'). Five waves of bombers and fighters were sent against nine airfields - from Eastchurch to Portland. At times the Luftwaffe threatened to overwhelm the Kent and Sussex sectors, but airfields were rapidly repaired and there was a continuous flow of replacement aircraft and pilots.

Many of the pilots were from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa and from central European countries overrun by the Germans, in particular Poland and Czechoslovakia. The experienced Polish and Czech squadrons achieved a better kill ratio against the Germans than the British squadrons.

The Luftwaffe lost a total of 1,733 aircraft from July to October, the RAF 915. The Germans were actually winning the battle of attrition but, frustrated by the unexpected numbers of Allied planes opposing them, switched in early September to night bombing of cities. This was a fatal mistake. The earlier dilution of effort was made worse as the Luftwaffe wandered between attacks on transport, civilian morale and the aviation industry.

The Blitz, as it was known, continued after the Battle of Britain had finished. During the Blitz, between September 1940 and May 1941, the Germans dropped more than 35,000 tons of bombs for the loss of 650 aircraft. London was attacked 19 times with 18,800 tons of bombs.

The RAF defence was well organised. The brunt was borne by 11 Group, covering Kent and Sussex. Radar would pick up an approaching force and relay the information to a sector airfield, which in turn passed it to 11 Group HQ at Northolt. The Group would inform Fighter Command and, if appropriate, bring in aircraft from other sectors.

Switching to attacks on London took the German fighters to the limit of their range and brought them within range of 12 Group, defending the Midlands. The switch to city bombing also allowed Fighter Command to recover.

The Victory

On 17 September, two days after the Luftwaffe's worst day in the Battle of Britain, Hitler cancelled Operation Sealion - the name of his plan for the invasion of Britain. The campaign of city bombing continued, but Hitler by now was focusing on Russia - and on 22 June 1941, he launched the greatest land-air campaign in the history of war. This campaign was called Operation Barbarossa - and its aim was the invasion of the Soviet Union.

'The Luftwaffe that attacked Russia was not the Luftwaffe of 1940. The RAF had seen to that.'

The end of the Battle of Britain allowed the Luftwaffe just enough time, before the invasion of Russia, to make good some of its losses. However, although it could replace equipment, it could not replace the skilled pilots and aircrew who had been killed or captured.

Hitler had already made one bad mistake, when he'd switched his tactic to focus on the bombing of British cities, just at the time when he was winning the air battle over England. Invading Russia was an even worse blunder. And the Luftwaffe that attacked Russia was not the Luftwaffe of 1940. The RAF had seen to that.

Strangely, though, the British did not immediately learn from their victory. In retaliation for the German bombing of British cities, instead of recognising that it was not a productive tactic, the RAF began a limited bombing campaign against German targets, using similar medium, two-engined bombers such as the Wellington. Attempts at precision attacks were so ineffective that Bomber Command then switched to 'area bombing'. Only when the big four-engined bombers - such as the British Lancaster and the US B-17 'Flying Fortress' - came in, from 1942, did Allied bombing start becoming effective.

There was one final irony. Having praised 'the few', Churchill made them one fewer. Mindful of their past disagreements, he sacked Air Chief Marshal Sir Hugh Dowding, the man responsible for the victory.

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