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The U.S. in WWII Strategic Bombing Total War? Total war: one in which the whole population and all the resources of the combatants are committed to complete victory … and thus become legitimate military targets … and rules of war are disregarded. Blurs combatant/non-combatant lines Carl Spaatz Henry H. “Hap” Arnold Curtis LeMay B-17 B-29 B-24 USAAF Doctrine Pre-war: Precision strikes on industrial and transportation targets to paralyze enemy’s economy and logistical capacity. Attacks to be made at high altitude. Assumed bombers could fly unescorted to targets. During the war: Also strikes on military targets. Required daylight bombing missions. The Blitz Britain isolated but Churchill won’t negotiate Hitler actually wants to offer generous terms to avoid two front war (real goal is Russia) Hitler believes destruction of Royal Air Force (RAF) will force negotiations Initial assaults on Channel Ports then airfields Alternative views that Br. was on the edge of defeat v. Revisionists (Overy) who claim it wasn’t effective German losses rise Bomber Command bombs Berlin August 25 Hitler permits shift to night attacks on cities Traditional view is this gives RAF respite to recover Also Range to cities is very long and fighters can’t cover Ger. Bombers The Blitz Outcome German bomber and fighter losses become too high Spitfire and Hurricane fighters of RAF are effective German fighter range (Bf-109) is limited and bombers are not suited to strategic bombing (too small) British use early warning radar (This is the key to victory) Shift to terror attacks on cities gives RAF breathing space to recover British lose 832 fighters (1/4 of pilots dead/wounded) Germans 668 fighters, 600 bombers Hitler now faces 2-front war if he attacks USSR On Targeting Civilians: The British Experience Sept. 3, 1939: Hitler issued War Directive No. 2 • No bombing of French, British cities No mention of Poland, Holland Battle of Britain, August 24, 1940 (Shift to civilian targets) • German bombers accidentally attacked London • RAF bombed Berlin the next night (Churchill) • Hitler turned Luftwaffe against London, other cities (Fuehrer Directive 17) On Targeting Civilians The Nazis entered this war under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everyone else, and nobody was going to bomb them. At Rotterdam, London, Warsaw, and half a dozen other places, they put their rather naive theory into operation. Air Marshall Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris, RAF The British Experience Arthur Harris is Architect of Br. Strategic Bombing Daylight raids produced large losses of places and crews. Destroy factories and workers living nearby (Morale targets) Bomber offense is best defense Lack long range fighters to protect bombers Early bombers lack range, payload, altitude Lack navigational systems to find targets 1941 only 1/3 of bombs fall within 5 miles of the target Accuracy a problem. Shift to Morale Targets RAF Bomber Command adopted policy of bombing cities during night missions. Chief Air Marshall Portal: …new aim point…built up areas Actually believes workers will rebel v. Hitler because he can’t protect them (opposite result: intense hate of British) System is called “Area Bombing” Use new Halifax and Lancaster Bombers Enormus bomb loads (10 tons but little defense ability) Short Sterling (1939) Avro Lancaster (1941) US Eighth Air Force arrives August 1942 Different Philosophy Highly accurate Norden Bombsight Heavily armed B-17 (tradeoff is bomb load only 2 tons of bombs) Daylight precision bombing to destroy German industry B-17 B-24 Norden Bomb Sight Drop a “bomb in a pickle barrel from 20,000 feet” U.S. efforts, 1942 – early 1943 Small: planes diverted to other operations. U-boat facilities made a high priority. Most targets in France or Low countries – bomber missions had fighter cover. After June 1943 • Fighter aircraft • Ball bearings • Petroleum Prior to D-Day target transportation U.S. efforts, 1942 – early 1943 Major Dispute US wants daylight attacks against industrial “Bottlenecks” Example: Almost all German ball-bearings are made in two cities (Schweinfurt, Regensburg) Destroy them and German machinery grinds to a halt British say daylight raids won’t work They seem to be right as US loses 60 Bombers (15%) over Schweinfurt in one raid B-17 Defensive Formation Flak Enemy Fighters Casablanca Conference Allied leaders commit themselves to pursuing strategic bombing, authorize the Combined Bomber Offensive Operation POINTBLANK British will pursue night missions, area bombing U.S., day missions and precision bombing. Summer 1943 Strategic bombing effort ramps up. USAAF forces in Europe get enough planes to launch large raids into Germany. Facilities engaged in producing aircraft or related components made a priority. Included ball-bearing plants. Bomber Tactics Element Formation Element Formation Fockewulf 190 D Messerscmidt 109 Improved Bomber Armament Added defense against head-on attacks Deep raids result in prohibitive losses Bombers unescorted by fighters for all or part of journey. Stiff resistance put up by Luftwaffe and anti-aircraft batteries. Radar-assisted air defenses German pilots discovered successful tactics to attack bomber formations. Example: Schweinfurt August 17, 1943: 60 of 315 bombers lost. October 14, 1943: 60 of 230 bombers lost. Heavy Losses Damage Targets often hit. But German industrial infrastructure more resilient than anticipated. Simply disperse industry so raids can’t destroy whole production systems Ex: make wings, engines, fusilage of planes in several different locations (very difficult to target) In some arms categories, production increases through 1944. British Area Bombing 1943 Mar.-Jul. Battle of the Ruhr Attack Ruhr Cities at night July 30,000 die in firestorm in Hamburg Overall 45,000 more die in other cities Berlin Raids 1943-Mar. 1944 16 Raids Give up when losses rise too high German use night fighters and radar controlled AAA Chaff or strips of aluminum dropped to confuse radar fails Germans improve radar and mount it in planes as well Br. Area Bombing close to defeat Spring 1944 1944: Help for the Bombing Campaign New fighters: P-51 More planes. Attacks from the Mediterranean. Attrition of German pilots. Switch in priorities Oil Transportation These targets can not be dispersed February 1944 “Big Week” Raids of up to 1000 B-17s supported by long-range P-51 Fighters Focus on aircraft production and oil Use P-47 and P-38 Escorts with drop tanks to increase range Real key is P-51 it can go as far as the bombers but has the performance as good as any fighter in the world Considered the best fighter of WWII Germans have to defend the oil and their fighter force is shattered with over 400 shot down in a week Breaks the back of the Luftwaffe Mid 1944-1945 US diverts bombers to Normandy after Big Week to prepare for D-Day Invasion Resume Strategic Bombing March 1944 Combined British and US Attacks Oil production down from 316,000 tons to 17,000 by late 1944 Railroad cars decline from 900,000 to 214,000 Around the clock attacks on cities With destruction of Luftwaffe losses fall to 1% per raid Accomplishments of the Strategic Bombing Campaign Broke the Luftwaffe German logistical system crippled late in the war. Allies had air superiority over Normandy Could not get arms to front. Vehicles lacked oil to move. How much of the Allied victory was due to the air campaign? The Costs 29,000 U.S. airmen, 8,200 bombers lost. About 600,000(?) civilian casualties. 87,000 Dead in Ruhr, 50,000 each in Hamburg and Berlin, 2% are children Firestorms: Hamburg: July, 1943 Dresden: Feb., 1945 How much of the victory is owed to the bombers??? Never break German morale Transportation in cites never really breaks down (freight transportation does!!!!) Industrial production collapses only very late if at all USAAF Strategic Bombing: Japan Regular raids from Marianas begin in November 1944. Problems: Japan disperses factories like Germans Japanese cities and housing are less vulnerable to high explosive due to light construction to resist earthquakes Home islands extreme range for B-29’s Clouds Strong winds Curtis LeMay provides the solutions US reluctantly abandons high level daylight precision attacks LeMay arrives Feb. 1945 Conduct raids at lower altitudes. Night missions. Pursue area bombing. Incendiaries (fire bombs not explosives) Tokyo Fire Raid Mar. 9, 1945 Burn out 16 square miles of Tokyo with 325 bombers By June Nagoya, Kobe, Osaka, Yokohama, Kawasaki all burned out B-29 used in Japan (larger and much longer range and bigger bomb load than B-17 89,000 dead, 180,000 injured in 1 night Bomber losses 2% 260,000 dead, 2 million buildings destroyed, 9-13 million homeless By July 60% of the 60 largest cities burned out Debut of new tactics: The Tokyo Raid, March 9-10, 1945 Remainder of war: Japan’s cities systematically destroyed Impact of the Bombing Japanese government attitude is largely unchanged, fight on Food rationed to 1500 calories a day (certain starvation) Economy People eat pine roots Chemical industry collapses Less than 1 million tons of shipping left (subs and aircraft attacks) down from 7 million Japan rejects offer by Secretary of State Dulles in May to Negotiate Hiroshima: August 6, 1945 Nagasaki: August 9, 1945 Moral Considerations… Attacks on non-combatants. Intent: The role of non-combatants in war (are they legitimate targets as they build weapons?) Moral vs. immediate concerns. Reduces British and then US to same level as the Germans and Japanese Causation: Use Blitz of London as an excuse? Is it the only option available? Critics Can’t justify civilian attacks: The fact that factories are located in cities doesn’t change fact that night attacks are really aimed at civilians Bombing really didn’t have much of an impact anyway Moral Considerations… In General Germany was able to maintain transportation in cities and disperse industry Even Hamburg maintained 80% of pre-war production into 1945 However…. The attacks on fuel were a major success Problem here is oil attacks are far the most effective and they do not require civilian attacks Oil production did collapse Also the Axis had divert enormous resources to repel air attacks