Britain’s Clever Use of Delivery Vans to Impersonate Armored Units and Mislead Germany
Автор: WW2 Recode
Загружено: 2025-11-20
Просмотров: 6318
In June 1940, German reconnaissance pilots reported hundreds of British armoured cars patrolling invasion beaches. Wehrmacht intelligence warned troops to expect "mobile armoured reconnaissance elements" that could rapidly counterattack landing forces.
The truth? They were photographing converted Morris delivery vans, Standard family cars, and Humber saloons with 10mm steel plates bolted to their sides. Bakery trucks turned into "armoured cars" overnight. The British called them Beaverettes—the troops called them "Beaver tins" and "armoured dustbins."
These improvised vehicles couldn't have survived a real fight. But from 4,000 feet up, they looked exactly like what German doctrine taught pilots to fear. Britain had perhaps 180 converted vehicles—Germany estimated over 1,000.
Sometimes the best weapon isn't the one that works best in combat. It's the one your enemy thinks you have.
#WW2 #History #BritishHistory #HomeGuard #MilitaryHistory #SecondWorldWar #OperationSeaLion #Beaverette #ImprovisedWeapons #WarHistory
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