Operation Biting

Missing image
Bruneval_Wurtzburg_1.jpg
RAF photo-reconnaissance picture of the Bruneval Wuerzburg (the dish-shaped object in the left-foreground)

During World War II, Operation Biting was a Combined Operations raid to capture components of a German Wuerzburg radar set at Bruneval, France, on 27/28 February, 1942.

Missing image
Bruneval_Wurtzburg_2.jpg
The Bruneval Wuerzburg from another angle, showing the equipment in profile

British scientists lead by R.V. Jones needed to find out more about Wuerzburg radar so that they could come up with counter measures in their on going battle of the beams with German scientists. Jones thought that the Germans might locate Wuerzburg radars at the same sites as Freya radar so he requested aerial reconnaissance of known Freya sites. On 22 November 1941, a reconnaissance Spitfire took photographs of a Freya radar site in the grounds of a cliff top hotel at Bruneval, a village on the French coast near Le Havre, which contained unknown structures. On 5 December a low level reconnaissance flight by Tony Hill took very clear front and side pictures of the Wuerzburg radar with a person in the frame which allowed the size of the radar dish about 3 meters (10 feet) in diameter to be assesed.

On the advice of R.V Jones, who judged that it was probably a Wuerzburg installation, Combined Operations, which was under the command of Lord Louis Mountbatten, looked at the feasibility of a raid. A plan was drawn up to use a commando team recently trained as paratroopers and known as 1st Parachute Brigade to carry out a raid. A RAF radar operator, Flight Sergeant C.W.H. Cox would accompany them and they would photograph the radar in detail and carry off whatever components they could..

On 27 February 1942, the raiding party of 120 men from C Company, 2nd Battalion, led by Major John Frost was dropped on Bruneval from twelve Whitley bombers. The raid met considerable enemy resistance but they were able to photograph the installation, rip out some of the key electronics and capture of a Wuerzburg technician. As planned they then retreated from the cliff tops down onto a beach where their naval evacuation was covered by No.12 Commando providing protection during the naval evacuation stage. It was later discovered the Royal Navy flotilla had been playing 'cat-and-mouse' with a German force of a Destroyer and E-boats who passed within a mile of the landing. The British losses were two killed and four capture. Five Germans were killed and two taken prisoner, including the technician.

Back in Britain examination of the Wuerzburg components showed that it only operated over a very narrow band and had no provisions for dealing with countermeasures. However it was of modular design that aided maintenance and made the hunting down faults simpler than on similar British models. This was confirmed during the interrogation of the captured German technician proved to be less well trained than his British counterparts.

The success of Operation Biting was splashed across the British press and went some way to improve the publics' morale after a string of failures of which the armed forces attempt to stop the German Channel Dash two weeks earlier was a recent example. The success of the raid also highlighted to the British authorities how vulnerable British installations close to the sea were to enemy commando raids. This prompted the relocation of the TRE at Swanage, to Malvern where it has remained ever since.

In response to the Biting raid the German fortified their radar sites. During the large but very costly Dieppe Raid, a subsidiary raid to capture Freya components failed because of the new fortifications. As is the tendency with the military in all countries, detailed plans were drawn up as to how fortification should be done. This helped with aerial reconnaissance because the defences had a signature design which were much easier to spot from the air than were the sites had been previously without the defences. Once found the sites could when necessary be bombed.

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