| Tyrone Slothrop |
04-19-2005 03:06 PM |
strategic bombing
Quote:
Originally posted by Hank Chinaski
Factories being down for 6 weeks provided no value? And the Germans were bombing cities- they came up with the theory. Do you think the British would have stopped bombing factories because they might be near cities given the Blitz? What world do you live in?
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Like a good conservative, you have done a fine job of ignoring the costs of waging war. I helped you along by declining to type the paragraph before the two above. It explains:
- At Bomber Command headquarters, I was responsible for collecting and analyzing information about bomber losses. Our losses were tremendous, more than 40,000 highly trained airmen killed. Until the last few months of the war, a crewman had only one chance in four of surviving to the end of his tour of thirty operations. Many of the survivors signed on for a second tour, in which their chances of survival were not much better. The total economic cost of Bomber Command, including the production of airplanes and fuel and bombs, the training of crews, and the conduct of operations, was about one quarter of the entire British war effort. It was my judgment at the time, and remains so today, that the cost of Bomber Command in men and resources was far greater than its military effectiveness. From a military standpoint, we were hurting ourselves more than we were hurting the Germans. It cost us far more to attack German cities than it cost the Germans to defend them. The German night-fighter force, which was the most effective part of the defense and caused most of our losses, was miniscule compared with Bomber Command.
If you ever find yourself in an argument with Freeman Dyson, I suggest that you don't assume he's stupid. If you're not understanding what he's saying, it probably reflects poorly on you, not him.
My point, previously, was not that strategic bombing had no effect, but that it was ineffective relative to the claims made by its proponents.
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