| Air Marshal Sir Arthur Harris | |||
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Arthur Travers Harris, born on April 13th, 1892, in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire,
England; died on April 5th, 1984, in Goring-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, England.
British Air Force Officer, Commander-in-Chief Bomber Command, Royal Air
Force (RAF), from 1942 to 1945. Educated at a public school, Arthur Harris turned away from the military
career his family hoped he would embrace and tried his luck in Rhodesia
as a gold digger and a cattle breeder. When WWI broke out, young Harris
enlisted as a bugler with the Rhodesia Regiment. Dissatisfied, he returned
to England and showed up at the Brooklands airfield to train as a pilot. His real military career started in November 1915 when he joined the
Royal Flying Corps, forerunner of the RAF. He served with territorial
defence against Zeppelin attacks, fought with an artillery-support squadron
on the French western front; later, he returned to Britain to fight against
German bombers. When the war ended, he had been squadron leader for some
time and was awarded the Air Force Cross. Between the wars, Harris served in several colonial postings throughout
the British Empire: in India between 1919 and 1924, back in England from
1924 to 1926, in Egypt from 1926 to 1933, then again in England and finally
in Palestine and Transjordan in 1938-1939. He was already known for his
frankness of speech. In September 1939, the RAF appointed Harris to lead Bomber Command's
5 Group. In November 1940, Harris left his operational command to join
the Air Ministry as Deputy Chief of Air Staff. He made it clear to the
Ministry's civil servants that their role was to support the operational
personnel, not the other way around. As to his attitude towards the enemy,
it was clearly expressed the night of a German attack on London when,
climbing on the roof of the Air Ministry building as bombs were exploding
all around, he stated "They have sown the wind, and so they shall
reap the whirlwind." On February 23rd, 1942, Arthur Harris was appointed Commander-in-Chief,
Bomber Command and left for the Command's HQ near High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire.
The situation was desperate: Bomber Command was criticized for its lack
of efficiency, the Butt Report, released a few months earlier, having
demonstrated that the majority of British bombers could not reach their
targets within a 5-km radius. Harris strongly believed that strategic
bombing could force the enemy into submission. He demonstrated his theory
by mass-bombing Cologne, as over a thousand aircraft took part in a single
raid in the night of May 30th-31st, 1942. Although the success of the Cologne raid could not easily be repeated,
Harris' resolution did not weaken. He mustered all resources available
to turn Bomber Command into a weapon that could not only destroy the Nazi
war industry but also strike Germany's cities and civilian population.
Personnel was increased, new instruments provided better accuracy, heavy
bombers, such as the Lancaster, were able to carry larger loads of bombs
with more destructive power. Starting in 1943, there was a wave of bombing
campaigns on the Ruhr, on major urban centres, as well as on Berlin. Under
Harris, Bomber Command carried out the destruction of German cities well
into the last months of the war, with an interruption only to ensure support
to Allied invasion forces during the campaign of Normandy. At the end of the war, Sir Arthur Harris was promoted to RAF Marshal;
he wrote his memoirs, published in 1947 as Bomber Offensive. Nicknamed "Bomber Harris", Bomber Command's Commander-in-Chief
remains the most controversial of all WWII Allied officers. As early as
1945, damage assessment studies conducted in Germany raised doubts whether
the massive destruction he ordered was at all warranted. Even nowadays,
historians do not agree on the value of strategic bombing. Some blame
Harris for the death of innocent civilians, especially during the last
months of the war; others argue that he acted with full support of the
British government and of Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and therefore,
that he cannot be held personally responsible for actions that his government
deemed to be essential to the final victory. Sir Arthur Harris was, nevertheless, a leader appreciated by his men.
Many who served under him gave him their support in the controversy surrounding
the decisions he made, highlighting how indispensable those operations
were and what an upright man Harris was.
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