The specific
target in the Japanese capitol was the enormous Tokyo Arsenal
Area in the northwestern part of the city. The area was comprised
of probably the greatest arsenal complex in all of Japan. There
were over a dozen large and important arsenal targets in there,
interspersed with industrial and scientific research installations
transportation centers and worker's quarters, this made a fat
juicy target for the E46 incendiaries.
The Koriyama
attack had been a daylight formation mission. This Tokyo operation
was a night affair and the big Superfortresses went in, as usual
on missions of this kind, individually. With the large arsenal
complex, the target assigned to the four groups of the 314th
Wing - the 19th, 29th, 39th and 330th - was the savory
Japan Artificial Fertilizer works, probably converted since
the outbreak of war to the manufacturer of war chemicals.
Eight B-29s
from each of the 39th's three squadrons took off at 19:05 on
the 13th. Of the twenty-four planes airborne twenty-one bombed
the target, there were no losses of personnel or aircraft, although
three had to land away from base.
The Tokyo
mission that night was all that rumor said it would be. Flak
was reported meager to moderate, 120 enemy fighters were seen.
The eerie panorama of searchlight beams, Japanese fighters with
running lights winking, the smoke and flame of the fires, and
the flak bursts were sights that the bombing boys would never
forget. The weather was clear over the target, but because the
smoke obscured the ground for some of the latter airplanes,
they had to bomb by radar.
Bombing
results were excellent. For several days smoke obscured the
whole target area and it was impossible to assess accurately
all the damage done by the group, but visible new damage to
Tokyo was estimated officially at 10.7 square miles, raising
damage to Tokyo to that date to 27.5 square miles.
Aside from
the fact that this was the first experience the 39th's crew
had had of the night attack technique, they met for the first
time with the most dangerous hazard they were to encounter in
the bombing of Japan - the tremendous thermal currents and smoke
over the target generated by the massive fires below. When a
B-29 flew into one of these thermals, visibility was nil, and
the airplane would suddenly and violently gain several thousand
feet of altitude and might possibly flip over on its back. Oftentimes
it would take all the strength of the airplane commander and
pilot to right the plane after it had gone out of control in
a thermal.
One of the
best stories to come out of the Twentieth Air Force relating to
the dangers of the thermals was told by the crew of aircraft
number 21, whose commander was Captain William "Buck" Senger
of the 61st Squadron. After bombing Tokyo on this attack, all
the men swear that their plane did two loops over Tokyo Bay before
it was righted at an attitude of about 4,000 feet. Some of the
people say that a B-29 cannot be looped under any circumstances,
but the men of Senger's crew think otherwise. They said they did
it!