THE WORLD WAR TWO GROUP discussion
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2016 - April - Theme Read on any Air Battle or Campaign of WW2

"A 190 got on our tail. Bill was taking the most violent evasive action to shake off the fighter, frequently seeing streams of bullets churning up the sea but not hitting the aircraft, when I noticed the port wing was about to dip into the sea. I shrieked into the intercom and he corrected just in time. Heading well out to sea the Focke Wulf flew off. I contacted the Warwick [ASR support] by radio telephone being safely 20 Mike's out from enemy fighters, and fired off all the Very pistol cartridges I could find - red, green, yellow, any colour you name. Eventually the Warwick located us and escorted us back to base. I remember Bill thinking it was a huge joke when he asked the pilot of the Warwick if we were flying too fat for him. I can't recall the reply but I don't think it was particularly polite."(F/O Ginger Webster)
You can be appreciated, but don't expect any respect!

The RAF grew out if the RN (in part), a shared history that the Luftwaffe and KM didn't have.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...
I think there are some books on the Malta air contribution to isolating North Af..."
The trade off by Speer in keeping production up was in improvements - in that there weren't any once a type was settled on for mass production. So per month in 1945 fighter production was astoundingly high - but those types were so last year. Very many of Wilmot's footnotes in The Struggle for Europe come from the strategic bombing survey and the PLO campaign.


The FW-200s used a standard attack tactic against m..."
On the British TV programme Coast, on the Eire / NI episode, they mentioned that Eire allowed Coastal Command cats from Lough Erne to fly over Eire airspace rather tgan going around the block. I found that a little surprising - the allowed part.

There was also a very strong pre war belief - conjecture might be a better word - that strategic bombing was the war winner in itself rather than part of a bigger puzzle. Harris was a devotee of the doctrine. Still, it's only a war crime if you lose.

" ... On his first flight in a Sentinel, McLellan's load was a fairly senior captured Japanese officer, who had been badly wounded, and was to be returned to base for interrogation. During the flight, McLellan suddenly felt two hands choking him. The Japanese officer had escaped his bonds and seemed determined to take McLellan with him to the grave. McLellan carried a heavy stick with him in case he crashed in the jungle, and used it to silence his recalcitrant passenger. On arrival at base, waiting British officers were unimpressed that McLellan had killed his captive. One of them threatened disciplinary action, until McLellan defiantly stated that if punished he would take it up with the Australian liaison officer in India and his own Member of Parliament."
The Stinson Sentinel:
http://www.warbirdalley.com/l5.htm

"So complete was Allied air domination in the region that the day before the Noemfoor landing, aircraft flew over the invasion area to spray DDT: flying insects were more troublesome here than flying Japanese."
I wonder what the Japanese defenders on the ground thought was happening when they got sprayed :)

Hope you can join in with your book Jamie.

"During this raid the horrified troopers saw Jack Fowler's Beaufort disintegrate in a ball of fire when its bombs detonated prematurely on release. Some aircrew had gone on patrol with the commandos several weeks earlier, to witness air-ground communication methods, and the troops had come to see this RAAF squadron as 'true brothers in arms'.
Among Fowler's crew was Geoff Waite, who had been Mentioned in Despatches for 'distinguished services' in North-Western Area. The former policeman had left England 11 years earlier with his wife. The widow's badge she received as acknowledgement of her loss is now in the Australian War Memorial. So are a few of the loving letters that Jack Shipman, of the same crew, wrote about five times a week to his mother. He had made his 100th operational sortie just days earlier, and with the rest of the crew was close to finishing his tour."
https://www.awm.gov.au/encyclopedia/b...

According to Schellenberg, the bureaucratic in-fighting among various arms of the German government was so vicious, he had machine guns installed in the pedestals of his desk at the SD, arranged to sweep the front of his office at the press of a lever. Lack of cooperation seems the rule within the Third Reich.


According to Schellenberg, the bureaucratic in-fighting among various arms of the Ge..."
In my many interviews with Germans from the war (see my books), that was not unusual.

The targets were often airstrips, dangerous objectives as they were likely to be defended by flak. Jock Scott remarks pointedly:
All we did was to make the Japs use their endless supply of anti-aircraft ammo and improve their shooting. They were isolated, unsupplied, ineffectual and without an effective role to play in the war. - Except to shoot at stupid buggers in Kittyhawks.

I've pondered from time to time the need to go into Borneo (for instance) so late in the piece. I guess those who planned it didn't know / didn't put much stock in the ultimate siege weapon.


"One estimate says that Catalinas rescued 540 allied pilots during the war. A senior Japanese commander later noted that Japanese pilots respected the Catalina crews bravery, and regretted that Japan had not provided such help for its own personnel."

"Much as their crews liked the 'dear old Lib', which once airborne 'flew like a bird', the B-24 had a terrible record when ditching in the sea. It tended to flood in seconds, for when belly-landed of heavily ditched, Liberators often fell apart at the forward bomb-bay bulkhead, and the insubstantial bomb-bay doors regularly collapsed. The crew in the rear of the fuselage rarely escaped alive. An RAF study of 16 ditched Liberators showed that only eight of 131 crewmen survived, and only one of them was in the rear. Australian Liberators spent most of their time over water, but the RAAF did not follow an RAF modification, which reinforced the fuselage. If a Liberator had to ditch, baling out was advisable."
Consolidated B-24 Liberator:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consoli...


By getting troops on the ground in these territories, it offered better negotiation conditions.

Adelaide took part in the Borneo landings and not a great fan. Interestingly he was in infantry training at Cowra when the Japanese prison breakout occurred and took part in search for escapees. Quite an experience for an 18/19 year old.

It also means that critics of his thesis are, by not being top brass, unqualified to comment or critique. I'm being a bit harsh here - but I get the impression that civilian control of the military doesn't sit well with him, unless it's by Eisenhower (which I get) or by Churchill (which I take to mean that Lemay never had a war-time cuppa with Brookie.)
The chapter on how to win the war in Vietnam (I skipped ahead after the preliminary chapters) is very interesting - and he makes what I am assured are valid points (I'm a civilian, which means I out to educate myself on understanding military stuff - but also means I'm unqualified to question or doubt). Aircraft are fast, so the time delay between finding/fixing/fighting is very short. Also, by adopting a total approach, the North Vietnamese can be brought to brook and settlement very quickly. All that's needed is the will to do so. And if you've got the will then going nuclear is simply using a means at your disposal and is not to be fared. Certainly the risk of nuclear escalation is overstated (by intellectuals I assume).
He's a tad short on details as to how best to use nuclear weapons to win in Vietnam. There's no real mention of target types, or effectiveness. And his faith in escalation not being something to be fared is not very well developed or explored. And his examples of successful use of conventional air bombing in Vietnam aren't developed into how by doing more such strikes will lead inexorably to victory - save that it will lead to victory. Saying it appears to make it so.
He is writing of a future that for us is long past - and it's easy to be unfair. But at the risk of making it clear how unqualified I am to judge or comment I have to say that he's not been particularly rigorous (intellectually) in some (many) of the assumptions he's made. I keep thinking of Tuchman's line about dead generals and their dead grip.
How does this connect to WWII? - possibly not at all. Save that C E L was involved in the strategic bombing of Japan. So we have the wisdom of that operational experience coming through in his book, perhaps. I don't know much about Carl Spaatz, save that after VE day he headed to the Pacific. And that Spaatz organised the strategic bombing survey with respect to post-war Europe. I get the impression that Spaatz had the intellectual touch of the two.


I suspect you're right. That was certainly true of the ETO, where Russian expansionism trumped many other concerns.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/5..."
Great review 4ZZZ, I'm glad you enjoyed the book as much as I did, and thanks for sharing your views with the group.



A Separate Little War: The Banff Coastal Command Strike Wing Versus the Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe in Norway September 1944 to May 1945


Cheers Rick. I have marked TBR. If I see this around I will definitely grab a copy. My dad was stationed in Hamburg during his national service with the Brit army in the 50's.

A Separate Little War: The Banff Coastal Command Strike Wing Versus the Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe in Norway September 1944 to May 1945"
After reading your review and the discussion in this thread I have been having a look at what is available as general historical coverage for the RAF Coastal Command during WW2. The wiki is seemingly rather good compared to some I have read. I am finding it's Bibliography interesting but showing little in the terms of an overall history. Unless I have missed something and there are other books available there seems to me an opening for a general book on the subject.

A Separate Little War: The Banff Coastal Command Strike Wing Versus the Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe in Norway September 1944 to May 1945Deep Sea Hunters: RAF Coastal Command and the War Against the U-Boats and the German Navy 1939-1945
Just had a mooch on the Kindle Store, which turned up

and

both of which may be worth a look. Coastal Command does seem a little overlooked, especially by me. My grandad, who served as a Marine AA gunner, always said he felt safest when he could see a Liberator or a Cat


I interviewed a few of the German night fighter pilots (Wolf Falck, Hans-Joachim Jabs, Peter Spoden, Hajo Herrmann,, etc) and RAF Bomber Command guys (such as Bill Reid, VC) about this particular mission, very interesting stories. This was also the start of Hajo Herrmann's creation of the "Wilde Sau" (Wild Boar) night fighter unit, using Me-109 and Fw-190 day fighters with search lights, working as sight hunters alongside the radar guided night fighters.


I'd suggest this book on the Battle of Hamburg as well. I'm working my way through it now, not going as fast as I wanted because I got sick for awhile. But it's really good and definitely worth picking up.


I..."
It's hard to beat Martin Middlebrook, he has published some excellent books on WW2.

it's a solid 4 star read. Some things I learned
(view spoiler)
I'll post some quotes later.


Glad I could help Alex :)




Much has been written about the Catapult Aircraft..."
The Germans had their own equivalent of the Parachute and Cable Projector, known to the RN as PAC Rocket Projector. A rocket fired from a simple angle-iron launcher rose to about 600 ft then disintegrated, deploying a parachute with a 300 ft wire dangling from it. The blockade-runner Alsterufer is said to have fired about 20 of them during her last fight.


Much has been written about the C..."
Interesting, Derek. Thanks. It all seems so primitive now.


Never too late to join in A.L. I hope you enjoy your book, keep us posted.


"The anti-shipping strike offensive had resulted in a reduction from 8,500,000 tons of cargo in and out of Norwegian ports in 1944, to less than 500,000 tons per annum by the end of February 1945."
All this while faced with heavy flak, fighters and the worst that the North Sea could throw (which is pretty horrendous). There are many strikes cancelled due to bad weather, airstrikes at mast height in the teeth of snowstorms, and the perennial problem of salt spray on windscreens as a result of low level transits. This was definitely a story that deserved to be told. I will have to stick to my guns and read further on Coastal Command.


it contains hundred of excellent photos accompanied by explanatory text.


Air Marshall Harris' reaction when he first got the proposal for the raid. He wrote on the memo
"This is tripe of the wildest description. There are so many ifs and buts that there is not the smallest chance of it working"
On training and low level flying
"before they reached the actual bridge itself, a set of power cables crossed over the canal. Just for fun, McCarthy (one of the 617th's pilots) would take the Lancaster even lower and fly under the cables, then pull up over the bridge...
On one occasion...flying at not much under 100 ft, when Johnson, sitting in the nose of the Lancaster, had the shock of his life. Suddenly, a Lancaster thundered past, - underneath. "


The first chapter covered the beginnings of the Polish Air Force, and I thought this was interesting:
On 14 July 1919 two American pilots, Major Cedric E. Fauntleroy and Captain Merian C. Cooper, were moved at the sight of Polish units that had fought with the Allies on the Western Front parading up the Champs-Elysees. Hearing that Poland was threatened by invasion from Russia, they assembled another fifteen American pilots and set off for Warsaw. They were seconded to the 3rd Fighter Squadron, which was renamed the Kościuszko Squadron (in memory of the Polish patriot who took part in the American War of Independence), and they fought with distinction in the Polish-Bolshevik war of 1919-21.
I had heard about the Lafayette Escadrille, but not the Kościuszko Squadron. I love learning new things!
Books mentioned in this topic
Dam Busters: The True Story of the Legendary Raid on the Ruhr (other topics)Dam Busters: The True Story of the Legendary Raid on the Ruhr (other topics)
The Forgotten Few: The Polish Air Force in the Second World War (other topics)
Firestorm Hamburg: The Facts Surrounding the Destruction of a German City, 1943 (other topics)
The Conquering Tide: War in the Pacific Islands, 1942–1944 (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Adam Zamoyski (other topics)Keith Lowe (other topics)
Mark D. Johnston (other topics)
Frederick Taylor (other topics)
Mark D. Johnston (other topics)
More...
Picky-picky. ;)