For Bomber Command, the term 'Phoney War' never really meant much. Five
Blenheims of 107 Squadron were among the blood and bullets the day after
war was declared and only one came back.
On 14 December 1939, in a disastrous raid on shipping, 99 Squadron lost
six Wellingtons with only three survivors out of thirty-six crew. Even
worse, in the biggest air battle so far, 18 December, Wilhelmshaven,
five Wellingtons of 9 Squadron went down, four of 37 Squadron and two of
149 Squadron.
Bomber Command lost sixty-eight aircraft and crews in action in the four
war months of 1939, and a further seventy-eight in accidents. In the
months up to the French surrender, losses rose spectacularly as the
Germans triumphed wherever they went. In a few hours on 14 May,
resisting the Blitzkrieg, forty-seven Fairey Battles and Bristol
Blenheims were shot from the sky. Through the Scandinavian defense, in
France and Belgium, at Dunkirk and, at last, over Germany, for Bomber
Command there was no Phoney War. It was real war from the start.