No. 200 Flight RAAF

No. 200 Flight RAAF
No. 200 Flight RAAF
Active 1945
Country Australia
Branch Ensign of the Royal Australian Air Force.svg Royal Australian Air Force
Type Special operations
Engagements World War II
Insignia
Squadron code NX[1]
Aircraft flown
Transport B-24 Liberator

No. 200 Flight was a Royal Australian Air Force special duties flight of World War II. The flight was formed in February 1945 to support the Allied Intelligence Bureau (AIB) and saw action over Borneo and the Netherlands East Indies (NEI) from March that year until the end of the war in August. No. 200 Flight was disbanded in December 1945.

Contents

History

From late 1943 B-24 Liberators of the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) 380th Bombardment Group were used on occasion to support Allied special operations units in the South West Pacific Area. In July two No. 24 Squadron RAAF B-24s were also modified to drop special operations personnel and conducted operations from Hollandia in this role during August.[2]

Roland Griffiths-Marsh, a member of Z Special Unit conducting parachute training at Leyburn

In June 1944 it was proposed that a specialised RAAF unit be formed to provide air transport for the AIB's Z Special Unit. This proposal was supported, and No. 200 Flight was formed at Leyburn, Queensland on 20 February 1945.[3] Many of the flight's air and ground crew were transferred to it from No. 99 Squadron.[4] The flight was controlled by the AIB and was tasked with the insertion and supply of intelligence gathering parties behind Japanese lines. Due to the secrecy of these tasks personnel from the flight were forbidden to speak about their duties at any time. No. 200 Flight's six B-24 Liberators had been modified for the unit's specialised role. The main changes were the removal of the mid-upper and ball turrets and all armour plate, the replacement of the normal radar with a 'Rebecca' radio set and the installation of a slide at the rear of the aircraft to drop personnel and supplies.[5][6]

No. 200 Flight began training operations with Z Special Force immediately upon formation. Despite the priority accorded to the unit, it experienced shortages of equipment and its accommodation and maintenance facilities at Leyburn were basic. By mid-March No. 200 Flight had a strength of nine eleven-man aircrews, 450 ground crew and six B-24s.[4]

The flight began its first operations on 15 March 1945. On that day two B-24s departed Leyburn for McGuire Field in Mindoro. On 18 March these aircraft conducted a reconnaissance flight over Borneo and were subsequently joined by a third B-24. After unsuccessful attempts on 20 and 21 March, two B-24s dropped a party of eight Z Special Force personnel near Bario on 24 March but the aircraft flown by No. 200 Flight's commanding officer, Squadron Leader Graham Pockley, disappeared on its way back to base. Australian and United States Navy aircraft searched for this B-24 for two days, but did not locate its wreckage.[4] No. 200 Flight continued to support Z Special Force's operations (designated 'Semut 1') around Bario for the next few months, and eventually flew in 30 of the 42 personnel involved.[7] Wing Commander E.V. Read succeeded Pockley on 15 April.[7][8]

No. 200 Flight continued supporting AIB operations until the end of the war. On the night of 15/16 April three of its aircraft dropped personnel assigned to the Semut 2 operation in Borneo. It subsequently flew over 30 operations to drop AIB personnel and supplies in Borneo, Ambon, Lombok, Sumatra and Timor. These operations were successful, though the flight was hampered by the difficulty of locating its drop zones and inadequate support from the Australian First Tactical Air Force at Morotai, its main forward operational base.[7] No. 200 Flight lost a further two B-24s in these operations; one was possibly shot down over Timor on 17 May and the other crashed either in or off the coast of north Borneo on or about 21 May. At least 46 men, including Z Special Force operatives, were killed in the three aircraft which were lost, and this represented the highest loss rate of any of the RAAF's B-24 equipped units.[9]

No. 200 Flight continued flying after the end of the war in mid August. It continued dropping AIB operatiives and supplies until mid-October whereupon it was used to fly AIB personnel from Bougainville Island and Finschafen in New Guinea to Australia as well as to conduct courier flights.[7] Mechanical problems were increasingly encountered in this period as a result of experienced personnel being discharged.[8] No. 200 Flight's last sorties were made to drop leaflets and the unit was disbanded on 15 December 1945.[10]

See also

  • B-24 Liberators in Australian service

References

Notes
  1. ^ "RAAF Squadron Codes". Encyclopedia. Australian War Memorial. http://www.awm.gov.au/encyclopedia/raaf_codes/codes.asp. Retrieved 26 December 2010. 
  2. ^ Nelmes (1994), pp. 129–130
  3. ^ Nelmes (1994), pp. 128–129
  4. ^ a b c Nelmes (1994), p. 131
  5. ^ RAAF Historical Section (1995), p. 174
  6. ^ Nelmes (1994), p. 130
  7. ^ a b c d Nelmes (1994), p. 132
  8. ^ a b RAAF Historical Section (1995), p. 175
  9. ^ Nelmes (1994), pp. 132–133
  10. ^ Nelmes (1994), p. 133
Bibliography
  • Nelmes, Michael V. (1994). Tocumwal to Tarakan. Australians and the Consolidated B-24 Liberator. Belconnen: Banner Books. ISBN 1875593047. 
  • RAAF Historical Section (1995). Units of the Royal Australian Air Force. A Concise History. Volume 4 Maritime and Transport Units. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service. ISBN 0644427965. 

Further reading

  • Powell, Alan (1996). War by Stealth: Australians and the Allied Intelligence Bureau, 1942-1945. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0522846912. 

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