Mark Nakayama

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“By being able to go across no matter what the weather was and bomb with a radar sight, the H2X . . . forced the German fighter up in the air,” Carl Spaatz noted after the war. “And I am certain under those conditions that they had as many operational losses, crashes on landing after going up, as they did in the air fighting itself.” He was right.
Masters of the Air: America's Bomber Boys Who Fought the Air War Against Nazi Germany
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