Interesting book about one aspect of the technical arms race between the UK and Germany during WWII, namely the control of the radiomagnetic spectrum. I had always assumed that “radar” referred to one particular technology or machine, but this book made me understand that there were probably a dozen techniques that fell under that heading.
The book focuses most on the early days of the war and the efforts of R. V. Jones, a “science boffin”, to convince the military leadership that the Nazis did, in fact, possess guiding beams that helped their bombers find their targets during the Blitz. With the help of Enigma decrypts, espionage reports and the recorded conversations of German prisoners-of-war, he was able to understand the Knickebein, X-Gerät and Y-Gerät equipment and their applications. This was well explained in the book, with helpful diagrams.
It seemed like the author then decided to broaden his focus, for instance, by describing the raid on Bourneval, where 120 paratroopers captured a German radar on the French coast and carried off across the Channel, or the principle of “Window”, which consisted of dropping strips of metal foil to amplify the radar signal and thus give a smallish squadron the radar appearance of a huge air fleet. “Confusion to our enemies!” , as the motto of one of these groups said.
The author seems to be rather skeptical about how these cat-and-mouse games in the electromagnetic spectrum may have contributed to victory and points out how hard it is to gauge the effect of the measures taken.
The writing is of the journalistic type: smooth, keeps the action going, but with an occasional cringe-inducing misstep. One sentence I won’t easily forget is on Page 50 and refers to the interrogation of German prisoners of war: “When an engine failed, an anti-aircraft battery got a rare hit or a pilot got lost and ran out of fuel over Britain, whoever survived of the crew found themselves crossing the desk of AI.1.(k). So, too, did those who did not survive.”. Somehow this evoked the ghastly mental image of mangled corpses being pushed across some pencil pusher’s desk… but it was meant to convey that AI.1.(k) was tasked with extracting information from wreckage and from surviving German air crews.
All in all, a good overview of an interesting topic in technological warfare.