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Strategy for Defeat:  The Luftwaffe 1933-1945 Strategy for Defeat: The Luftwaffe 1933-1945 by Williamson Murray
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Strategy for Defeat Quotes Showing 1-4 of 4
“intermixed with an exceedingly high level of competence on the tactical and operational side was a complete inability to see a relationship between means and ends on the level of grand strategy.”
Williamson Murray, Strategy for Defeat: the Luftwaffe 1933 - 1945
“In the east in the summer of 1942, the Germans embarked on a strategy to break the back of the Soviet Union by conquering the Caucasus and large portions of southern Russia. The resources available for such wide-ranging aims were completely inadequate.”
Williamson Murray, Strategy for Defeat: the Luftwaffe 1933 - 1945
“There were no decisive moments or clear-cut victories. Rather, the American pressure put the German fighters in a meat grinder battle of attrition both in terms of pilots and of matériel. It was the cumulative effect of that intense pressure that in the final analysis enabled the Western Powers to gain air superiority over Europe; that achievement must be counted among the decisive victories of World War II.”
Williamson Murray, Strategy for Defeat: the Luftwaffe 1933 - 1945
“For the German fighter pilot, there was no magic number of sorties or hours, the completion of which guaranteed a return home. He was already home, and in the skies over the Reich he faced an opponent who enjoyed overwhelming superiority. If he survived the first missions and his skills reached those of his opponents, he would fly until fatigue and strain led to a mistake that was more often than not fatal.”
Williamson Murray, Strategy for Defeat: the Luftwaffe 1933 - 1945