No. 171 Squadron

Group
100 Group
Home station
RAF North Creake

About

No. 171 Squadron spent the last year of the war as one of the secret electronic-warfare units of No. 100 (Bomber Support) Group. Reformed in September 1944 at RAF North Creake in Norfolk, it flew first the Short Stirling and then the Handley Page Halifax in the radio-countermeasures role rather than as a conventional bomber.

Its task was to blind and confuse the German defences while the main bomber stream was over enemy territory: scattering “Window” to swamp the radar screens with false echoes, and operating the airborne Mandrel jammer to blot out the German early-warning radar. Its motto, Per dolum defendimus — “we defend by guile” — neatly described a squadron whose weapon was deception rather than bombs.

Sources: This page was compiled from publicly available historical sources, including RAF Heraldry Trust — 171 Squadron: Norfolk's Secret Squadron and Wikipedia: No. 171 Squadron RAF. The text is original and has been written from factual source material; no source text has been copied unless specifically quoted and attributed.

No service records linked to this squadron yet. Aircraft, crews and sorties will appear here soon.

Further reading & sources

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