Shuttle bombing

Shuttle bombing is a tactic where bombers fly from their home base to bomb a first target and continue to a different location where they are refuelled and rearmed. The aircraft may then bomb a second target on the return leg to their home base.[1][2][3] Some examples of operations which have used this tactic are:

Operation Paravane was based on a similar concept. In September 1944 No. 9 Squadron RAF and No. 617 Squadron RAF flew from their home bases in Scotland to a temporary base at Yagodnik, near Archangel in the Soviet Union. From there they bombed the German battleship Tirpitz in a Norwegian fjord and continued on back to Scotland.

References

  1. ^ Staff. Shuttle bombing McGraw-Hill's AccessScience Encyclopedia of Science & Technology Online
  2. ^ Edward T. Russell (1999). Leaping the Atlantic Wall: Army Air Forces Campaigns in Western Europe, 1942–1945(PDF), United States Air Force History and Museums Program pp. 26,27. (HTML copy on the website of USAAF.net)
  3. ^ Dear, I.C.B and Foot, M.R.D. (editors) (2005). "Shuttle bombing". The Oxford Companion to World War II. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. p.778. ISBN 9780192806703. 
  4. ^ Christopher Chant (1986). The Encyclopedia of Codenames of World War II, Routledge, ISBN 0710207182. p. 15
  5. ^ Jon Lake (2002). Lancaster Squadrons 1942-43, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 1841763136. p. 66
  6. ^ Charles T. O'Reilly (2001). Forgotten Battles: Italy's War of Liberation, 1943-1945 Lexington Books, ISBN 0739101951. p. 343
  7. ^ Combat Chronology of the US Army Air Forces September 1944: 17,18,19 copied from USAF History Publications & wwii combat chronology (pdf)