The mission leader concentrated on his instruments as his
B-29 worked its way into the thick cloud base that obscured Okinawa. Behind him
the four others did the same. One by one, they climbed into the rainy overcast
and disappeared in an invisible line that stretched ten miles behind their
leader. What was left of his two flights flew; follow the leader fashion in
what many would refer to as a bomber stream. During the climb through the
overcast the bombers would maintain the same compass heading, power settings,
and rate of climb. Their interval sequence when they took off would keep them
safely separated as they flew deeper into the clouds.
The weather recon B-29 that took off hours before them
provided a constant flow of weather information. Of prime interest to the
bombing crews was cloud cover over and near the targets. Crews also were
concerned about cloud cover near assembly points. Weather recon had reported
the top of the cloud cover over Okinawa as variable with a mean ceiling of 2300
feet several hours ago. Weather observation forecasters reported the front was
stable and slow moving and the weather would clear as they neared their target
area. Over the dense clouds, a bright three-quarter moon and clear skies
waited. Brilliant stars would watch the lumbering giants as they worked their
way to the target. In the unending emptiness of night, there is absolute
silence. In the clouds, the rain gradually diminished as the B-29s climbed, a
sign they were near the top of their blanket of gray. When a heavly defended
target was expected the 29s flew on moonless nights. A lightly defended target
the moon was okay. They also flew low to advoid leaving contrails in the sky.
There was no way to conceal the vapor trails and the MiGs and flack could zero
in on the “point” of the discernible mark across the sky. Command went so far
as to order gun-muzzle blast suppressors installed on the turret machine guns
to help keep the B-29s hidden.
Engine sounds muffled by heavy clouds were the first signs
of the B-29s presence. In the isolated seclusion of night, darkness waited as
it had for millions of years. The mission leaders’ B-29 slowly and cautiously
emerged from the depths of the clouds. It seemed to hesitate, only showing its
back as the clouds swirled about, reluctant to release it. Then like a creature
rising out of the gloom of a prehistoric swamp, the giant struggled free of the
clouds entering the shapeless night.
Ahead, the cockpit crew observed a continuous blanket of
rolling gray cloud tops. Leveling off, the lead bomber skimmed the top of the
clouds and was trimmed to cruise at 2500 feet and 190 MPH. The strike force
would maintain this altitude most of the way to the target.
The mission leader nodded to his co-pilot and turned the
controls over to him. Unbuckling his seat harness, he walked a few steps to the
navigator's observation dome behind him. Sitting in the navigators’ sling-like
seat, with his head in the small clear dome, he gazed behind his craft looking
for his strung-out flight. The gale like wake his bomber created by its passage
pulled wisps of clouds from the cloud tops and they swirled away and
disappeared behind the tail of his aircraft. He ordered the landing lights on
his slow moving bomber turned on.
Behind him, one by one, like ducklings popping to the
water's surface, B-29s emerged from the cloud cover unseen. Each in-turn as
they cleared the clouds, turned on their landing lights. They were scattered,
but strung out in the right order. It would take them twenty minutes to catch up.
Slowly, they closed and gathered in a single line, some 600 feet separating
each bomber in a formation that would save many hours of exhausting stress from
standard formations. Landing lights were turned off, then navigation lights.
All that remained was the soft glow of formation lights, blue engine exhaust
and the deep rumble of engines.
The clattering sound of ice striking the fuselage as it was
slung off the inboard props lasted only a few seconds. It was a good sign that
the outside temperature was above freezing. The mission leader alerted his two
flights and ten pairs of clamshell-shaped bomb bay doors on black bellies swung
open. The dry air boiled into the bomb bays, jostling the bombs. Arming wires
were whipped into a shaking frenzy as they tried to break loose from their
secured ends.
The two flights flew this way for fifteen minutes in an
effort to dry out the bomb rack mechanisms. The warm moist air of Okinawa
accumulated and seeped inside the racks and shackles. Over Korea, cold air
froze the clinging moisture, causing malfunctions in the arming and releasing
mechanisms. Many bombs that were dropped hot and armed bounced harmlessly for
thousands of yards dragging their arming wires with them. Some thought,
however, that the World War II era racks were just wore out.
There was also a dilemma of a different kind. If the bombs
release mechanism froze up and failed, and a bomb hung up, a daunting task
faced the crew. After bombs away, apprehensive crews peered through the small
glass in the compartment hatches that sealed the compartments from the front
and rear bomb bays. If there were a bomb still hanging from its rack, sometimes
by only one lug, it would have to be released manually. This would be done once
the bomber was out to sea. The pilot in command would slow his B-29 to its
slowest maneuvering speed and the bomb bay doors would be opened. One
crewmember with a screwdriver in hand would venture out onto the wind-blown
catwalks of the bomb bay. Slipping the screwdriver into the manual release
slot, he would manually activate the release mechanism and cross his fingers.
If they were lucky the bomb dropped harmlessly away and, the crewmember stayed
on the catwalk.
Many crews, wanting their bombs to count, tied one end of the
arming wires to a structural member in the bomb bay. When the bombs dropped
they were hot and armed period. Those that fused their bombs this way planned
on cutting the arming wires before the bombs were salvoed safe enabling the
arming wire to drop with the bomb. Anyway, the bombers were over water
ninty-five percent of the time and what harm could there be from bombs dropping
hot.
Barely visible in the moonlight, the mission leader's strike
force was strung out behind him. They slowly rose and fell individually in
rhythmic sequence that repeated itself over and over again. As he watched, the
faint shadow of his B-29 danced on the cloud tops. He took stock of what he had
and what lie ahead. His ship carried 500-pounders and the Korea intelligence
officer was still with them as was one leaflet carrying aircraft. Both of these
bombers carried light anti-personnel fragmentation bombs, as did the rest. Two
of them were packed with eighty 100-pounders and the other two, with fifty
300-pounders. The weight fell short of the maximum load, but it was all the
bombs that could be crammed into the two bomb bays.
Their target tonight was a concentration of some 20,000
North Korean and Chinese troops being massed on a six mile long front. The
front and the billeting locations were about two miles deep. The dug-in allies
at the top of a low mountain ridge faced the possibility of being overwhelmed