That is my point. There are camo standards, styles, themes, etc, that are applied to an entire squadron, wing, or even entire theater of operations...
Then there's 2 field-painted planes that proved unsuited for the task and were restored to previous markings.
How long did it take before they were proven "unsuited"? How many sorties at night did they fly? Where did they fly, was it even into hostile territory, or were they flown in tests first? Did they ever even run into any foes to shoot at?
They are basically day fighters being flown at night with no radar. Only ground radar and radio directions were used to point them at targets, and even in the densest of areas (over London during the night bombing) this was a futile effort.
Now put them in the pacific with 100's of square miles to patrol, no local radar, no local reports, just lone planes patrolling at night looking for something to kill....
Yeah. I'm really skeptical as to their "trial by fire" (combat). So unless there's a lot more info to back up the story on these birds, they're probably no more valid than state-side training units, or test schemes, or experimental prototype schemes.