King pays tribute to RAF veterans as he marks Dambusters’ eightieth anniversary

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he King paid a heartfelt tribute to Second World War RAF veterans as he commemorated the eightieth anniversary of the well-known Dambusters raid.

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Charles visited the house of the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight (BBMF) in Lincolnshire the place well-known plane resembling Spitfires, Hurricanes and a Lancaster bomber – the plane used within the audacious 1943 raid – are saved airworthy for main shows.

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The veterans have been having fun with afternoon tea in an enormous hangar, with BBMF air, floor and assist crews surrounded by lots of the historic planes, when the King arrived, and lots of the aged males, of their late 90s and a few aged greater than 100, joined the friends in standing.

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When he stopped at one desk the King sat between two veterans and referencing the RAF servicemen sustaining and flying the plane stated, “thank God for all these men” and he put his hand on the arm of a aged man including “people like you looked after us”.

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At one other desk he requested the veterans “these sorties you went on to Germany, how long were you in the air for” and some moments later he stated: “Being shot at the whole time I suppose that’s the horror (of being) a target.”

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Colin Bell, a former flight lieutenant who flew Mosquito bombers with 608 Squadron, generally known as the Pathfinder Group, made the King snicker when he advised him “I’m 102 and a half – don’t forget the half”.

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The spritely pensioner solely stopped working as a chartered valuation surveyor when he was 99, joking “well, I thought I’d paid the Chancellor of the Exchequer enough money”.

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Commenting in regards to the criticism RAF Bomber Command has obtained over the many years for focusing on German cities throughout the struggle, he replied: “We’re criticised by people who would not have come into existence If we had lost the war.

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“And this is the most important thing, the objective of Bomber Command was to destroy the German capability of attacking us, that and nothing more.

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“We weren’t interested in killing civilians, we were only interested in destroying their cities that were producing armaments and other weapons to be used against us. And by and large, I think Bomber Command did a very good job.”

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Nineteen Lancasters, crewed by 133 airmen, took half in Operation Chastise on the night time of May 16-17, 1943 – the Dambusters raid.

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Led by Wing Commander Guy Gibson, the raid focused three dams within the industrialised Ruhr area of Germany utilizing the “bouncing bomb” invented by Barnes Wallis.

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They efficiently breached the Mohne and Eder dams whereas the Sorpe was broken.

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George “Johnny” Johnson, the final surviving member of the Dambusters died in December aged 101 however occasions have been staged this 12 months to mark the army milestone.

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Charles posed for a bunch image with the veterans and members of the BBMF, based mostly at Coningsby, Lincolnshire, within the shadow of the well-known Lancaster earlier than he left.

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Outside the hangar, Charles met Typhoon jet pilots who had flown over Buckingham Palace to mark Trooping the Colour and spelled out the King’s cypher CR with their formation flying.

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