|
2,589 RAF sorties involving daytime raid) nighttime raid) (Braunschweig)) 323 aircraft (other operations) 10,050 tonnes bombs dropped〔"Total tonnage of bombs dropped in 24 hours: approximately 10,050 tons''", a total never "''exceeded in the war" (''Campaign Diary'' October 1944).〕 |strength2 = |casualties1 = 5 bombers1 fighter (USAAF marshaling yards) daytime raid) night time raid) Brunswick (Braunschweig) uncertain |casualties2 = }} Operation Hurricane was a 24-hour bombing operation to "demonstrate to the enemy in Germany generally the overwhelming superiority of the Allied Air Forces in this theatre" (in the directive to Harris ACO RAF Bomber Command)〔Bishop p. 334.〕 and "cause mass panic and in the Ruhr, disrupt frontline communications and demonstrate the futility of resistance" (in the words of the Official RAF History).〔 During the day of 14 October 1944, 957 RAF Bomber Command aircraft dropped of high explosive and of incendiaries on Duisburg.〔 Also during the day, USAAF VIII Bomber Command Mission 677 made PFF attacks on Cologne marshaling yards at Gereon, Gremberg, and Eifelter; as well as Euskirchen.〔McKillop October 1944〕 A second RAF raid on Duisburg during the night of in two waves about two hours apart dropped a further 4,040 tonnes of high explosive and 500 tonnes of incendiaries. In some cases RAF crews flew both the daylight and night-time raids; a total of nearly eleven hours flying time in During the same night the RAF also bombed Brunswick (), destroying the town centre. Nearly fifty Mosquitos carried out nuisance raids and from No. 100 Group targeted German night fighter operations. In RAF Bomber Command had flown losing dropping approximately of bombs and killing over in Duisburg alone. ==Notes== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Operation Hurricane (1944)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|