Bomber Command Quotes

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Bomber Command (Zenith Military Classics) Bomber Command by Max Hastings
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Bomber Command Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4
“If you live on the brink of death yourself, it is as if those who have gone have merely caught an earlier train to the same destination, and whatever that destination is, you will be sharing it soon, since you will almost certainly be catching the next one.”
Max Hastings, Bomber Command
“At 50 Squadron, there was another verse for the intelligence officer’s long epic verse, set to the tune of Noel Coward’s “Mad Dogs and Englishmen”: When the sirens moan to awake Cologne They shiver in their shoes; In the Berlin street they’re white as sheets With a tinge of Prussian blues;”
Max Hastings, Bomber Command
“The employment of the strategic bombers in the weeks preceding D-Day, and afterwards in support of the armies in Normandy, may today seem cautious and unimaginative. But it was vital insurance, and reflected a perfectly logical view of strategic priorities by the Combined Chiefs of Staff. Overlord had to succeed. Bomber Command and the USAAF were directed to do all in their power to see that it did so, and worked to that end with courage, dedication and professionalism. If their leaders were heard with insufficient respect in the councils of war, they had only their own vast errors of judgement of the past to blame. It is an indulgence of historians and armchair critics to pretend that, in the spring of 1944, there was a better way.”
Max Hastings, Bomber Command
“A teacher by profession, [a much-decorated Bomber Command pilot] thought nothing of the war for years afterwards. Then a younger generation of his colleagues began to ask with repetitive, inquisitive distaste: ‘How could you have done it? How could you have flown over Germany night after night to bomb women and children?’ He began to brood more and more deeply about his past. He changed his job and started to teach mentally-handicapped children, which he saw as a kind of restitution. Yet still, more than thirty years after, his memories of the war haunt him.

It is wrong that it should be so. He was a brave man who achieved an outstanding record in the RAF. The aircrew of Bomber Command went out to do what they were told had to be done for the survival of Britain and for Allied victory.”
Max Hastings, Bomber Command
tags: spooky