The 'Area bombing directive' was an
Air Ministry directive issued to
RAF Bomber Command on
14 February 1942, eight days before
Air Marshal Arthur Harris became
Air Officer Commanding (AOC) of Bomber Command.
[1]
The new directive was not radically different from previous ones, but it was needed to countermand the order of mid-November, 1941, which called on Bomber Command to conserve its force.
[2] The directive specified that "You are accordingly authorised to use your forces without restriction", and listing a series of 'Primary targets' which included
Essen,
Duisburg,
Düsseldorf and
Cologne.
'Secondary targets' included
Braunschweig,
Lübeck,
Rostock,
Bremen,
Kiel,
Hanover,
Frankfurt,
Mannheim,
Stuttgart and
Schweinfurt. It stated that "Operations should now be focussed on the morale of the enemy civilian population and in particular, the industrial workers". Lest there be any confusion,
Sir Charles Portal wrote to Air Chief Marshall
Norman Bottomley on the
15 February "... I suppose it is clear that the aiming points will be the built up areas, and not, for instance, the dockyards or aircraft factories."
[3]
The directive was superseded on
14 January 1943 by a new directive which gave priority to attacking
U-boat pens of
Lorient,
St Nazaire,
Brest and
La Pallice on the western French coast. In line with the bombing of Genoa and Turin on
23 October 1942 and a speech by the
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill six days later, warning the Italian government that
RAF would continue bombing Italian cities while Italy remained an Axis power, the directive also included Italian cities as potential targets.
[3][5]
See also
★
Aerial bombardment and international law
★
Butt Report
★
dehousing paper
References
★ Johnston, Philip Ralph ''
Bomber Command'' blog site RAF-Lincolnshire.info
★ Longmate, Norman: ''The Bombers: The RAF offensive against Germany 1939-1945'' Pub. Hutchinson 1983, ISBN 0-09-151580-7
Footnotes
1. Longmate references page 138
2. Brian Grafton ''Bomber Command: "Bomber" Harris''
3. Johnston References
4. Johnston References
5. European Air War