of most of these to my own earlier experience at Wildenrath during
my second flight in a
Sabre, and about which I had said nothing for fear of ridicule,
was quite remarkable. I told
Alan of what I had seen, and it was entered, with the
appropriate date, in the book. He said that this almost universal fear of ridicule
among aircrew about such sightings was a major deterrent to reporting such
incidents. He explained that he was deterred, officially, from actively and overtly
seeking such information and was therefore reliant on pilots coming to see him, in
confidence, to make such reports. In all other respects I had little to do while he was
away, other than open his mail, some of it classified, and file it securely until his
return. There was nothing that needed my positive action on his behalf during his
absence.

Shortly after
Alan came back, he came to see me and asked for my assistance. He had been briefed by the
Station Commander to carry out a night time audit with
regard to the after hours security of Classified files and information. The
CO had
authorised him to contact me, under strict security, to assist in this task. If anything
went wrong during our audit, (ie: if we were caught red-handed carrying it out) he
himself was at once to be informed.
Alan chose a dark, moonless night for our task.
After dinner,
Alan phoned the
CO to confirm that the audit was 'on' and then
contacted me. It was our duty, before midnight, to enter any facility with unsecured
windows or doors in which we, with justification, considered there could be a
security lapse. That, in truth, gave us the right to enter any administrative, technical,
or HQ building on the camp. We knew where dog patrols operated and had to
evade them as well as avoid being seen acting suspiciously. Wearing denims, we
commenced our task. We soon found that many unmanned (normal at that hour)
buildings were not as secure as they should have been. We climbed in through back
windows, went through offices - anybody's offices, regardless of rank or position -
looked in desk drawers, and found many Classified files which should have been
properly secured at the end of work. We had to label each file with where it was
found. In fact, in one area, we found so many that we had to hide them under pine
needles in the forest and come back for them later when we had completed our
rounds. Laden, we arrived at the
CO's married quarter and knocked on the door. He
was amazed, and furious, but not with us. He signed a receipt for the list of
documents. Our task was completed.

Next morning, according to
Les Knell, his Adjutant, who later came personally
to see us both in
Alan's office, the
CO played a waiting game, just to see if any of the
files were reported missing. Very few were. Then the flak started to fly. Each person
whose file or files the
CO now had, was summoned in turn to his office for what
Les
described as 'a severe corrective talking to' and a warning that the security breach
would be recorded on that person's personal record and would severely impair his
promotion prospects. Some were awarded loss of seniority with the resultant cut in
pay. Apart from the
CO and, later,
Les Knell, no-one knew that it was
Alan and me who had carried out the check.

Once in a while,
Nancy, my
Boss's wife, would call in to my office. If the
Boss was busy, out, or flying, and I had the time, she would stay and chat. The poor lady was lonely, the loneliness born of being a Senior Officer's wife. She was a lovely
person who doted on her husband but who had difficulty with her situation. As an
aside, there were times when my
Boss and his wife invited me to their house for a
social evening. They were a great couple and were keen to point out that not
everything I did for, or with, him necessarily involved work. As a further example of
the way we melded together, the
WingCo, as his personal extraneous duty, was Commodore of the RAF Jever Sailing Club at Wilhelmshaven.
6
______________________________________
6 The Sailing Club was also open to membership from personnel on the teaching staff of the British Forces' Prince
Rupert boarding school at Wilhelmshaven. Some of the nurses from RAF Hospital, Rostrup, near Oldenburg, were
also affiliated members. RAF Jever personnel made up the majority.
150