That's good, because strafing at night will be lucky to hit anything but the ground. Not sure how much this will contribute to grinding down the LW, but I can be relatively sure it won't prevent the LW from making the defensive response I posted above.
HiNight strafing calls for electronics from the 1960s to actually hit much of anything.
To actual see an air field at night, during a high speed low level flight and target it is extremely difficult. Strafing the runways doesn't count. You have to hit parked aircraft and ground vehicles and structures.
The RAF started Night Intruder operations with Hurricanes in December 1940, flying over the Channel to catch the German bombers as they returned to their bases catching them when the flare path was lit. This type of operation continued throughout the war using aircraft such as the Blenheim, Havoc and Mosquito. The latter undertaking Night Intruder and Night Ranger operations. The former mission was generally against a particular target the latter was the Mosquito flying over an area and attacking anything see be it enemy aircraft, airfields, trains, road transport, searchlights and AA Batteries etc. (The Luftwaffe did undertake some Intruder operations against Britain, but compared with the RAF they were very small scale).
It should also be noted the the RFC/RAF carried out similar operations over German lines during WW1 (See 'The Annals of 100 Squadron' for detailed information of that squadron's work during 1917/18). FE.2bs usually dropping bombs from 2000 ft down to 50 ft., attacking airfields, trains, railway infrastructure, transport, ammo dumps and artillery batteries that were firing at night, also searchlights and AA. No. 151 Squadron flying Camels undertook 'intruder' operations against German airfields during 1918 again against returning German bombers.
So all sorts of targets could be found and attacked successfully by night, depending on the weather of course, from WW1 through WW2, this is all well documented.
Mike