An audacious RAF bombing raid into the industrial heartland of Germany last night has wrecked three dams serving the Ruhr valley.
The attack disrupted water and electricity supplies in a key area for the manufacture of Germany’s war munitions.
The Secretary of State for Air, Sir Archibald Sinclair, called the raid “a trenchant blow for victory”.The mission, known as Operation Chastise, has been planned for months.
The crews were specially selected for the job, and have been training in absolute secrecy.
The bombs themselves were invented specifically for the task by the aircraft engineer Dr Barnes Wallis, the designer of the Wellington bomber.
They were barrel-shaped, and used the principle of a “ducks and drakes” stone bouncing on the water to bypass the defences around the dams.
The Lancaster bombers flown by 617 Squadron were extensively modified, and the crews trained to fly at less than 100ft (30.48m) above the water, the height required to drop the bombs successfully.
The mission began yesterday evening, under the command of Wing Commander Guy Gibson.
The targets were three huge water barrage dams – two on the rivers Möhne and Sorpe, and a third on the River Eder.
The Möhne and Sorpe dams control about 70% of the water supplied to the Ruhr basin, and were built to prevent water shortages during the summer.
Wing Commander Gibson led the attack on the Möhne dam personally.
A flight lieutenant who watched what happened at the Möhne dam described the scene:
“The wing commander’s load was placed just right and a spout of water went up 300 feet (91.44m) into the air,” he said.
“A second Lancaster attacked with equal accuracy, and there was still no sign of a breach.
“Then I went in and we caused a huge explosion up against the dam. It was not until another load had been dropped that the dam at last broke.
“I saw the first jet very clear in the moonlight. I should say that the breach was about 50 yards (45.72m) wide.”
The Eder dam – the largest in Europe – was also breached in two places.
Reconnaissance flights showed flood waters sweeping through the Ruhr valley, damaging factories, houses and power stations.
The power station at the Möhne dam has been swept away, rivers are in full flood, and railway and road bridges have disappeared.
Courtesy BBC News
In context
The mission became popularly known as the Dambusters raid, and was immortalised in a 1954 war film.
It was one of the most famous air operations of World War II.
Casualties for the raid were high.
Eight of the original 19 Lancaster bombers were damaged or shot down, and of the 133 aircrew, 53 were killed and three captured.
On the ground, too, almost 1,300 people were killed, including 749 Ukrainian prisoners of war based in a camp just below the Eder dam. […]
The spectacular, daring nature of the raid was a significant boost to British morale.
But militarily, it was a failure. […]
The aircrew, however, became famous as war heroes, and the leader of the raid, Wing Commander Guy Gibson, was awarded the Victoria Cross.
He died less than 18 months later, shot down at the age of 26 in September 1944.