08-16-2012, 08:16 AM,
(This post was last modified: 08-16-2012, 08:24 AM by Shad.)
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larry marak
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RE: Literary corner...The Command of the Air
Quote:Tactical bombing was very effective on the battlefield, strategic not so much...
Indeed Germany mastered the art of tactical bombing, their air/ground coordination was probably not surpassed during the second world war. However they did not develop the strategic bombing arm. The British and Americans did, and after many bloody years of poorly using it, they had turned it into an overwhelming success by war's end. Bombing never succeeded in causeing a morale collapse, but it did utterly destroy the industrial base, both in Germany and in Japan.
Wags have said that the U.K. would have been far better off in terms of productive competitiveness if its industrial structure had had to be rebuilt in 1945.
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08-16-2012, 08:58 AM,
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JoeBuckeye
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RE: Literary corner...The Command of the Air
Don't forget the Germans diverted massive resources into building up their air defenses to try to stop the allied bombers. This included pulling air units from the eastern front to defend the Reich.
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08-16-2012, 10:42 AM,
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Shad
General of the Army
      
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RE: Literary corner...The Command of the Air
You guys reminded me of this little story I ran across on Wikipedia a few weeks back:
Quote:Work of the American Operation Alsos teams, in November 1944, uncovered leads which took them to a company in Paris that handled rare earths and had been taken over by the Auergesellschaft. This, combined with information gathered in the same month through an Alsos team in Strasbourg, confirmed that the Oranienburg plant was involved in the production of uranium and thorium metals. Since the plant was to be in the future Soviet zone of occupation and the Russian troops would get there before the Allies, General Leslie Groves, commander of the Manhattan Project, recommended to General George Marshall that the plant be destroyed by aerial bombardment, in order to deny its uranium production equipment to the Russians. On 15 March 1945, 612 B-17 Flying Fortress bombers of the Eighth Air Force dropped 1,506 tons of high-explosive and 178 tons of incendiary bombs on the plant. Riehl visited the site with the Russians and said that the facility was mostly destroyed. Riehl also recalled long after the war that the Russians knew precisely why the Americans had bombed the facility — the attack had been directed at them rather than the Germans.
Emphasis mine.
Honestly, I find it impossible to visualize what such an attack must have looked like. That number of planes simply boggles the mind.
...came for the cardboard, stayed for the camaraderie...
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