LEST WE FORGET
I was taught that, in time of war, the first 40,000 would be sacrificed to buy time for a country to try and arm itself well enough to survive the first onslaught of an aggressor nation. This book underlines the lesson of being unprepared, in graphic detail. We must also remember that the Great Depression prevented many things from happening - there was no money. The armed forces were bare-bones in size and equipment. America and Australia were in that desperate situation when Japan attacked. I have to say that Tom Burkhalter had me tightly strapped into a B17 or P-40, flying and fighting every inch of the way as we wearily withdrew from place to place; the hairy, heart in the mouth takeoffs and landings from unsuitable soggy airstrips; the aircraft engines being well past their essential servicing hours and therefore likely to fail at a critical moment. Pilots and engineers know this only too well; the lack of spare parts; inadequate flying hours in aircraft type; the little known fact that authors nearly always miss - that an aircraft, when landing, must always have the correct landing checklist and technique carried out - even when badly damaged. It is all there, and I sweated throughout the encounters with the Zeros. We had nothing good enough to match them - not even the legendary Spitfire. Much later, the technique for our aircraft was to dive, fire at the Zero - and keep diving. To mix it was fatal. Tom brings this point out. When I was flying the Australian outback in the 1980s, some aviation maps had the words 'Designated Remote Area' in bold print. This meant 'If you MUST fly in this area, follow the road or the railway line - if one exists - otherwise KEEP OUT.' Unless experienced in bush flying, the country was featureless. In the 1940s hardly anyone knew how to navigate the area. Many aircraft became lost and were never found until years later. Mr Burkhalter put a lot of apprehension in me when I was reading this segment. I knew exactly how our pilot's felt. One thing, though, us Australians do not like WARM BEER - only the Brits lap that stuff up. Terrific story, Tom. Thank you. A well earned 5 stars.