'SPECIAL ORDER OF THE DAY'

FROM AIR CHIEF MARSHAL SIR A. T. HARRIS KCB OBE AFC

Date: 12 May 1945

Men and women of Bomber Command.

More than five and a half years ago, within hours of the declaration of war, Bomber Command first assailed the German enemy.

You were then but a handful, inadequate in everything but the skill and determination of the crews for that sombre occasion and for the unknown years of unceasing battle which lay beyond horizons black indeed.

You, the aircrew of Bomber Command, sent your first ton of bombs away on the morrow of the outbreak of war. A million tons of bombs and mines have followed from Bomber Command alone; from Declaration of War to Cease Fire a continuity of battle without precedent and without relent.

In the battle of France your every endeavour bore down upon an overwhelming and triumphant enemy.

After Dunkirk your country stood alone - in arms but largely unarmed - between the Nazi tyranny and domination of the world.

The Battle of Britain, in which you took great part, raised the last barrier, strained but holding, in the path of the all-conquering Wehrmacht, and the bomb smoke of the Channel ports choked back down German throats the very word 'Invasion': not again to find expression within these narrow seas until the bomb-disrupted defences of the Normandy beach-heads fell to our combined assault.

In the long years between much was to pass.

Then it was that you, and you for long alone, carried the war ever deeper and even more furiously into the heart of the Third Reich. There the whole might of the German enemy in undivided strength and - scarcely less a foe - the very elements, arrayed against you. You overcome them both.

Through those desperate years, undismayed by any odds, undeterred by any casualties, night succeeding night, you fought: the Phalanx of the United Nations.

You fought alone, as the one force then assailing German soil: you fought alone as individuals - isolated in your crew stations by the darkness and the murk, and from all other aircraft in company.

Not for you the hot emulation of high endeavour in the glare and panoply of martial array. Each crew, each one in each crew, fought alone through black nights rent only, mile after continuing mile, by the fiercest barrages ever raised and the instant sally of the searchlights. In each dark minute of those long miles lurked menace. Fog, ice, snow and tempest found you undeterred.

In that loneliness in action lay the final test, the ultimate stretch of human staunchness and determination.

Your losses mounted through those years, years in which your chance of survival through one spell of operational duty was negligible; through two periods, mathematically nil. Nevertheless survivors pressed forward as volunteers to pit their desperately acquired skill in even a third period of operations, on special tasks.

In those Five years and eight months of continuous battle over enemy soil, your casualties over long periods were grievous. As the count is cleared, those of Bomber Command who gave their lives to bring near to impotence an enemy who had surged swift in triumph through a Continent, and to enable the United Nations to deploy in full array, will be found not less than the total dead of our National Invasion Armies now in Germany. In the whole history of our National Forces, never have so small a band of men been called upon to support so long such odds. You indeed bore the brunt.

To you who survive I would say this. Content yourselves, and take credit with those who perished, that now the 'Cease Fire' has sounded, countless homes within our Empire will welcome back a father, a husband, or a son, whose life, but for your endeavours and your sacrifices, would assuredly have been expended during long further years of agony, to achieve a victory already ours. No Allied Nation is clear of this debt to you.

I cannot here expound your full achievement.

Your attack in the industrial centres of Northern Italy did much toward the collapse of the Italian and German Armies in North Africa, and to further the invasion of the Italian mainland.

Of the German enemy, two to three million fit men, potentially vast armies, were continuously held throughout the War in direct and indirect defence against your assaults. A great part of her industrial war effort went towards fending your attacks.

You struck a critical proportion of the weapons of war from enemy hands, on every front. You immobilised armies, leaving them shorn of supplies, reinforcements, resources and reserves, the easier prey to our advancing forces.

You eased and abetted the passage of our troops over major obstacles. You blasted the enemy from long prepared defences where he essayed to hold: on the Normandy beaches, at the hinge of the battle for Caen, in the jaws of the Falaise Gap, to the strong-points of the enemy-held Channel ports, St Vith, Houffalize, and the passage of the Rhine. In battle after battle you sped our armies to success at minimum cost to our troops. The Commanders of our land forces, and indeed those of the enemy, have called your attacks decisive.

You enormously disrupted every means of communication, the very life-blood of his military and economic machines. Railways, canals, and every form of transport fell first to decay and then chaos under your assaults. You so shattered the enemy's oil plants as to deprive him of all but the final trickle of fuel. His aircraft became earthbound, his road transport ceased to roll. Armoured fighting vehicles lay helpless outside of battle, or fell immobilised into our hands. His strategic and tactical plans failed through inability to move.

From his war industries supplies of ore, coal, steel, fine metals, aircraft, guns, ammunition, tanks, vehicles and every ancillary equipment, dwindled under your attack.

At the very crisis of the invasion of Normandy, you virtually annihilated the German naval surface fleet then in the Channel; a hundred craft and more fell victim to those three attacks.

You sank or damaged a large but yet untotalled number of enemy submarines in his ports and by mine-laying in his waters. You interfered widely and repeatedly with his submarine training programmes.

With extraordinary accuracy, regardless of opposition, you hit and burst through every carapace which he could devise to protect his submarines in harbour. By your attacks on inland industries and coastal ship-yards you caused hundreds of his submarines to be stillborn.

Your mine-laying throughout the enemy's sea lanes, your bombing of his inland waters, and his ports, confounded his sea traffic and burst his canals. From Norway throughout the Baltic, from Jutland to the Gironde, on the coasts of Italy and North Africa, you laid and re-laid the minefields. The wreckage of the enemy's naval and merchant fleets litter and encumbers his sea-lanes and dockyards. A thousand known ships, and many more as yet unknown, fell casualty to your mines.

You hunted and harried his major warships from hide to hide. You put out of action, gutted or sank most of them.

By your attacks on Experimental Stations, factories, communications and firing sites, you long postponed and much reduced the V weapon attacks. You averted an enormous further toll of death and destruction from your Country.

With it all you never ceased to rot the very heart out of the enemy's war resources and resistance.

His Capital and near 100 of his cities and towns, including nearly all of leading war industrial importance, lie in utter ruin together with the greater part of the war industry which they supported.

Thus you brought to nought the enemy's original advantage of an industrial might intrinsically greater than ours and supported by the labour of captive millions, now set free.

For the first time in more than a century you have brought home to the habitual aggressor of Europe the full and acrid flavours of war, so long the prerequisite of his victims.

All this, and much more, have you achieved during these five and a half years of continuous battle, despite all opposition from an enemy disposing of many a geographical and strategical advantage with which to exploit an initial superiority in numbers.

Men from every part of the Empire and most of the Allied Nations fought in our ranks. Indeed a band of brothers.

In the third year of war, the Eighth Bomber Command, and the Fifteenth Bomber Command, USAAF, from the Mediterranean bases, ranged themselves at our side, zealous in extending every mutual aid, viewing in every assault upon our common foe. Especially they played the leading part in sweeping the enemy fighter defences from our path, and finally, out of the skies.

Nevertheless, nothing that the crews accomplished - and it was much, and decisive - could have been achieved without the devoted service of every man and woman in the Command.

Those who attended the aircraft, mostly in the open, through six bitter winters; endless intricacies in a prolonged misery of wet and cold. They rightly earned the implicit trust of the crews. They set extraordinary records of aircraft serviceability.

Those who manned the Stations, Operational Headquarters, Supply lines and Communications.

The pilots of the Photographic Reconnaissance Units, without whose lonely ventures far and wide over enemy territory we should have been largely powerless to plan or to strike.

The Operational Crew Training Organisation of the Command, which through those years of ceaseless work by day and night never failed, in the face of every difficulty and unpredicted call, to replace all casualties and to keep our constantly expanding first line strength in crews trained to the highest pitch of efficiency; simultaneously producing near 20,000 additional trained aircrew for the raising and reinforcement of some 50 extra squadrons, formed in the Command and despatched for service in other Commands at home and overseas.

The men and women of the Meteorological Branch who attained prodigious exactitudes in a fickle art and stood brave on assertion where science is inexact. Time and again they saved us from worse than the enemy could have achieved. Their record is outstanding.

The meteorological reconnaissance pilots, who flew through anything and everything in search of the feasible.

The operational Research Stations whose meticulous investigation of every detail of every attack provided data for the continuous confounding of the enemy and the consistent reduction of our own casualties.

The scientists, especially those of the Telecommunications Research Establishment, who placed in unending succession in our hands the technical means to resolve our problems and to confuse the every parry of the enemy. Without their skill and labours beyond doubt we could not have prevailed.

The Works Services who engineered, for Bomber Command alone, 2,000 miles of runway track and road, with all that goes with them.

The Works Staff, Designers, and Workers who equipped and re-equipped us for Battle. Their efforts, their honest workmanship, kept in our hand indeed a Shining Sword.

To all of you I would say how proud I am to have served in Bomber Command for four and a half years, and to have been your Commander-in-Chief through more than three years of your saga.

Your task in the German war is now completed. Famously you have fought. Well you have deserved of your country and her Allies.

(sgd)

A. T. Harris
Air Chief Marshal
Commanding-in-Chief
Bomber Command