Author Topic: British Night bombing  (Read 4206 times)

Offline Nashwan

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British Night bombing
« Reply #60 on: June 17, 2005, 11:02:55 AM »
Quote
"We started to bomb targets on German soil before the Germans began bombing British soil. That is a historical fact."

-J. M. Spaight English expert of international law, Secretary of State, British Air Ministry, in 1944


It could have harmed us morally only if it were equivalent to an admission that we were the first to bomb towns. It was nothing of the sort. The German airmen were the first to do that in the present war.

-J. M. Spaight English expert of international law, Secretary of State, British Air Ministry, in 1944


It was they [the Germans], not the British airmen, who created a precedent for 'war against the civilian population'.

-J. M. Spaight English expert of international law, Secretary of State, British Air Ministry, in 1944


Meanwhile, all the arts of German propaganda are employed to misrepresent what is really happening in the battles of the towns. The British raids are described as random attacks on the civilian population, as 'terror raids', as having no other object than the slaughter of women, children and other non-combatants.

-J. M. Spaight English expert of international law, Secretary of State, British Air Ministry, in 1944


As it was he [Hitler] chose to set a precedent for the bombing of centres of population in this war at its very outset and thereby prejudiced his position as
the advocate of the mutual abandonment by the belligerents of the practice of strategic bombing. In short, it was he who really began the battles of the towns. He is probably very sorry now that he ever did so.

-J. M. Spaight English expert of international law, Secretary of State, British Air Ministry, in 1944


Even if Warsaw is left out of account on the ground - vide German propaganda - that the city was invested and had refused to surrender, it is still undeniable that the Germans bombed undefended towns in Norway before we ever dropped a bomb in Germany.
'Kristiansund, an open and absolutely defenceless town where there have never been any military establishments whatever, was bombed for three days; only one house remained. . 15,000 inhabitants were left without shelter. In the same way Molde was bombed, and
Reknes, the great sanatorium for tuberculosis, was bombed and set on fire.'  'Where Elverum had been but a few hours before, only the church and the Red Cross hospital were left standing. . . . Hardly a house but had been razed to within four feet of the
ground.'

That the Germans, having so set the pace in Norway, should protest in the name of humanity when we, having caught them up, stiffened the going for them in the Ruhr, is an indication of the amazing obtuseness of the Teutonic mentality. Have they then forgotten what happened in April, 1940? Those raids in Norway could not be explained
away as reprisals. And why, given those raids, was it such a shock to the righteous Germans when we bombed the Ruhr? Why was it a 'Churchill crime'? Why should Essen or Duisburg or Dortmund be inviolate when Elverum and Kristiansund and Reknes were
not?

-J. M. Spaight English expert of international law, Secretary of State, British Air Ministry, in 1944

Offline Scherf

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British Night bombing
« Reply #61 on: June 17, 2005, 11:30:15 AM »
Hoisted with his own petard.
... missions were to be met by the commitment of alerted swarms of fighters, composed of Me 109's and Fw 190's, that were strategically based to protect industrial installations. The inferior capabilities of these fighters against the Mosquitoes made this a hopeless and uneconomical effort. 1.JD KTB

Offline Angus

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« Reply #62 on: June 21, 2005, 09:15:49 AM »
Hehe, this got me thinking, - oh, from Kurfurst:
"Don`t forget the part where the RAF is dropping flowers over Germany. "

They started with high amounts of toilet paper, - i.e. propoganda leaflets actually.

I think the Germans actually area bombed London systematically with great amounts of aircraft well before the English repeated that on German cities. German target accuracy through X-gerat and such gadgets was still much better, so it makes you wonder why they did it.
Well, burn their capital, and knock them millions of Londoners to insanity, - the country might revolt?
It actually was close to happening.

Would you like a quote of Hitler's comment on it?

It worked in other cases, - not to incite a revolt, but to subdue resistance.

The first terror bombings of WW2 was on Polish towns and then Cities which had practically no air defence. Warshaw? Does that ring a bell?

I am for that sake not surprized at all that late war the Brits bombed the core out of entire German cities. Payback in double. The only thing that actually baffles me is why they didn't start it earlier!
A city is easyer to find than a factory in the darkness, and the impact is quite some.

Well, of course, Nazi Germany had their Todt organization to compensate for the hampered and houseless civilians.....
It was very interesting to carry out the flight trials at Rechlin with the Spitfire and the Hurricane. Both types are very simple to fly compared to our aircraft, and childishly easy to take-off and land. (Werner Mölders)

Offline Rino

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British Night bombing
« Reply #63 on: June 21, 2005, 02:56:09 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Schaden
It's just a average whine because everyone is not spending every waking minute telling the Americans how wonderful they are and how we all owe them...well just about everything.

America entered and fought WW2 for it's own interests and to further those interests, as did every other combatant in just about every other war.


     Yeah Shaden, you sure have me pegged.  It's not like the Brits
ever whine about the war.  I guess getting your tails kicked for
2 years before the US entered the war makes you special.

     The latest fad in Euroland is to minimize the contribution made
by the US not only before we entered the festivities, but after as
well.  

     Go ahead and quote the part where I denigrated the UK in my
first post.  I'll be fascinated to see it.
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Offline thrila

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British Night bombing
« Reply #64 on: June 21, 2005, 03:05:44 PM »
Rino i'm clueless to what you meant by your post and what made you post it.
"Willy's gone and made another,
Something like it's elder brother-
Wing tips rounded, spinner's bigger.
Unbraced tailplane ends it's figure.
One-O-nine F is it's name-
F is for futile, not for fame."

Offline Furball

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British Night bombing
« Reply #65 on: June 21, 2005, 03:57:44 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Rino
It's not like the Brits ever whine about the war.  I guess getting your tails kicked for 2 years before the US entered the war makes you special.

     The latest fad in Euroland is to minimize the contribution made
by the US not only before we entered the festivities, but after as
well.  


Minimise the contribution? we merely try to make you understand that our country fought, just as hard as you did.  We did not get our tails kicked for two years, we entered the war completely unprepared, outnumbered, outgunned and facing the strongest military in the world while you sat back and watched us struggle.  True allies would have fought alongside us in that time, your ambassador to london even fled saying we were going to be invaded. Not only did we save ourselves but we started to go on the offensive, learning lessons that we passed on to our allies and contributed massively to ultimate victory.

Yes you gave us support through lend lease and we appreciate that...   but its often made out that we cowered and prayed for help, which was by far from the case.  The British alway have been, always will be good fighters no matter the odds.

so f-u.
« Last Edit: June 21, 2005, 04:01:57 PM by Furball »
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Offline thrila

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British Night bombing
« Reply #66 on: June 21, 2005, 05:34:44 PM »
Dude i was trying the softly, softly approach.  

You went in like a mushroom-cloud-layin' motherf...:D
"Willy's gone and made another,
Something like it's elder brother-
Wing tips rounded, spinner's bigger.
Unbraced tailplane ends it's figure.
One-O-nine F is it's name-
F is for futile, not for fame."

Offline MOIL

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British Night bombing
« Reply #67 on: June 21, 2005, 08:02:37 PM »
War is a terrible, terrible thing. Period!

Weather it  US, Brit, Scott, Frenchman, German or any soldier or human to loose their life in such atrocities is heartbreaking.


Offline Karnak

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British Night bombing
« Reply #68 on: June 21, 2005, 09:11:47 PM »
Ignore Rino gents.  He is just an over-sensitive American who can't tolerate the idea that it was a joint effort and not a John Wayne movie.
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Offline Toad

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« Reply #69 on: June 22, 2005, 12:08:08 AM »
Time for a bit of perspective:

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Thus, though the United States was at peace in the spring of 1940, the horror of war lay heavy on the world. And what military capabilities did the nation possess in this hour of crisis? The War Department might have called for combat-ready units in its training directive, but reality spoke otherwise. Just a few years earlier, the Army Chief of Staff announced that the U.S. Army ranked 17th in the world - right behind Rumania. Of nine Regular Army infantry divisions which existed on paper, only one was in any sense a complete unit. There was no full-time corps or army headquarters. The National Guard, with its eighteen infantry divisions, officially stood at "maintenance strength."

The situation was still grim in the spring of 1940, but it was improving. The outbreak of war in Europe allowed for modest increases in funding and manpower, enabling the Army to initiate some longoverdue modernization measures. For instance, the Regular Army adopted a new division organization, called the "triangular division," in the autumn of 1939. The triangular division was designed for mobility and maneuver, as opposed to the attrition warfare which dominated doctrine since 1918.

The Infantry Branch began to acquire machine-guns and mortars for its battalions and companies, revolutionizing infantry warfare and making the foot-soldier a combined arms force in his own right. The artillery adopted an experimental system of forward observers and fire direction centers that made American gunners the best in the world. Deliveries began on a new 105mm howitzer that the artillery branch asked for twenty years earlier. Armor did not yet have a branch, being divided between Infantry and Cavalry. Even so, for the first time, tank advocates such as Adna R. Chaffee were encouraged to explore the decisive potential of massed armor formations.

Although modernizing, the Army was still miniscule. Numbering 190,000 in mid- 1939, the Regular Army surpassed the 300,000 mark in 1940. The National Guard, however, was largely unaffected by either the expansion or modernization enjoyed by the Regulars.

These modest improvements to the Regular component allowed the Army to field division-size forces for maneuvers and testing for the first time in two decades. There was an acute need to test new doctrine and force structures, particularly as they applied to the transition from horse to motor transport. At Fort Benning, the War Department created the IV Corps, consisting of the 6th Cavalry Regiment and the newly triangularized 1st, 5th and 6th infantry Divisions. Commanded by Maj. Gen. Walter C. Short, IV Corps conducted a variety of tactical exercises through the early spring of 1940.

In order to test IV Corps against a formation of comparable size, the War Department ordered Short to take his command to Louisiana for exercises against a provisional corps. The movement from Georgia to Louisiana was itself unprecedented, being the longest motor march ever undertaken by such a large U.S. Army unit. The IV Corps' 41,000 men moved 600 miles in six days, closing on Camp Beauregard for the first corps versus corps maneuvers in Army history. For the next four years, Central Louisiana would remain the Army's busiest maneuver grounds.



Now why did we have such a tiny unprepared army in 1939 and why didn't we send it over right away?

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The Neutrality Acts were a series of acts created by the United States Congress that were geared toward keeping the United States out of another war. The acts passed between 1935 contained provisions limiting arms sales to nations that were not at war, gave the United States the power to keep citizens from traveling on belligerent ships or to belligerent nations, prohibited loans to belligerent nations and nations that were not repaying previous debts, and forbade American shipping to carry arms to belligerents. It was believed that if American ships were carrying weapons to a nation at war, they would be a logical target for an enemy nation and the U.S. could be drawn into another war. These acts released the United States from responsibility for actions that could provoke such a situation, and thus released the United States from the obligation of war in certain scenarios.


We didn't send troops because it was against the law. We had no treatys with you like you had with Poland.

The entire point of the Neutrality Acts was to keep the US OUT of another European war.

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The four Neutrality Acts of the late 1930s represented an effort to keep the United States out of "foreign" wars, an effort resulting in part from widespread questioning of the reasons for and results of America's participation in World War I. These laws, unlike U.S. policy in 1916-1917, limited the exercise of neutral rights as a way of protecting that neutrality. A characteristic of the acts was that they made no distinction between aggressor and victim; both sides were simply characterized as "belligerents."



Note that FOUR Neutrality Acts passed.

Now as much as you get tired of hearing that "the US won the war" please understand that some of us, me for instance, get tired of hearing.

Why did you sit around and wait.

It's pretty obvious. One, by LAW our goverment was prohibited from helping at all. The Congress repeatedly passed Neutrality Acts for that exact reason.

Two, if there had been no Neutrality Acts, we had no mutual defense treaty with you folks AND we essentially had no military. We were behind Rumania.

When the war began, Germany had more than 4,000 combat aircraft. The British had about 2,000. The United States had only 800.

So now you know why we didn't come.
If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animated contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen!

Offline Tony Williams

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British Night bombing
« Reply #70 on: June 22, 2005, 01:52:15 AM »
Gentlemen please - let's not descend into a pointless nationalistic argument. The contributions of the USA, UK and USSR were all, in their different ways, essential to the defeat of Nazi Germany. Remove any one of the three from the equation and it is hard to see how victory would have been possible.

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Offline Angus

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British Night bombing
« Reply #71 on: June 22, 2005, 03:47:28 AM »
Nice summary Tony :aok
It was very interesting to carry out the flight trials at Rechlin with the Spitfire and the Hurricane. Both types are very simple to fly compared to our aircraft, and childishly easy to take-off and land. (Werner Mölders)

Offline Furball

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British Night bombing
« Reply #72 on: June 22, 2005, 02:48:42 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by thrila
Dude i was trying the softly, softly approach.  

You went in like a mushroom-cloud-layin' motherf...:D


did i make my point? :D

or do i need a few :mad: :mad: :mad: 's?
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Offline thrila

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British Night bombing
« Reply #73 on: June 22, 2005, 03:37:34 PM »
You were superfly TNT, furby.
« Last Edit: June 22, 2005, 03:40:06 PM by thrila »
"Willy's gone and made another,
Something like it's elder brother-
Wing tips rounded, spinner's bigger.
Unbraced tailplane ends it's figure.
One-O-nine F is it's name-
F is for futile, not for fame."

Offline Wotan

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British Night bombing
« Reply #74 on: June 26, 2005, 01:18:34 PM »
Quote
Wotan, I pointed out last time that that wasn't a genuine quote from a government paper, yet you continue to use it. First time could be a mistake, second time and it looks deliberate.


Feb 14, '42 the 'Area Bombing' directive (Air Ministry Directive No. 22) was issued to Bomber Command saying:

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It has been decided that the primary objective of your operations should be focused on the morale of the enemy civil population and in particular the industrial workers.


The directive was drafted by Air Marshal Bottomley and the minutes were kept by Chief of the Air Staff, Lord Portal.

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I suppose it is clear that the Aiming Points are to be the built up areas and not the dockyards or aircraft factories.


In that Directive Bottomley also states:

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You are accordingly authorized to employ your forces without restriction.


The quote I provided:

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"the bombers... must in future be used to kill German civilians" - directive No.22 to BC


It maybe paraphrased but it's a valid one. It's not just Keegan's opinion either, that opinion is shared by British historian John Terraine:

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Morale, in a bombing directive, means either the threat or the reality of blowing men, women and children to bits.


He goes on to state that the Air Ministry's estimates on the effects of area bombing on the German populace were:

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a prescription for massacre, nothing more nor less.


Add to that the words of Mr. Churchill himself a few months after Directive No. 22:

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Churchill’s letter to Lord Beaverbrook, on 5th July 1940.

"Nothing else will get the Germans to their minds, and on their knees, than an absolutely devastating extermination campaign against their homeland with heavy bombers."

See: John Colville : Fringes of Power. Downing Street Diaries 1939-1955. London 1985, pg. 186.


So yes my use of that quote was quite deliberate.

Quote
That's hardly the point. I never claimed the "Germans made them do it". I pointed out that every major airforce eventually ended up using area bombing of cities, and the British did so after being on the recieving end of both types.

It must have seemed to them that area bombing was the better option, otherwise they wouldn't all have taken it.

Of course, what's the combined experience and judgement of the Luftwaffe, RAF and USAAF compared to Wotan's?


You are in fact claiming the Nazi's made BC and Harris do it. All other nations in war inevitably hit targets in cities and / or embedded with in the civilian population. The only bomber force in WW2 that practically built their entire strategy on the indiscriminate bombing of civilians was BC whether it be to de-moralize, de-house' or to outright kill civilians.

It would be one thing if that strategy lived up its justification or even came close to what it was sold to do.

Did BC succeed in breaking German Morale?

Did it succeed in significantly disrupting the Nazi war machine?

Captain Carnahan of the U.S. Air Force Academy argues that:

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the military advantage accruing from area-bombing proved to be either minimal or nonexistent... Civilian populations under bombardment on both sides in World War II commonly reacted with anger and resentment towards the enemy. Although the bombings terrorized people, these tactics had little ultimate effect on national war-making ability. Thus, beyond the question of its legitimacy, `terror bombing' has not proven its worth even to the attacker in terms of lost airmen and aircraft.


This conclusion can be quantified in the 10-volume report, The United States Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS) released in 1947 and can be found on the web.

The British did their own survey British Bombing Survey Unit (BBSU). It was lead by Solly Zuckerman who in is biography stated that bombing had little effect on German morale. He goes far as to critisize BC for continuing on their de-housing strategy  beyond what was necessary to overcome their operational limitations of inaccuracy in navigation and bombing.

Even Albert Speer who readily admits that the bombing campaign tied up resources and equipment states that area bombing:

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spurred us to do our utmost. Neither did the bombings and the hardships that resulted from them weaken the morale of the populace. On the contrary, from my visits to armaments plants and my contacts with the man on the street, I carried away the impression of growing toughness. It may well be that the estimated loss of 9 percent of our production capacity was amply balanced by increased effort.


Speer wrote in Inside the Third Reich:

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I had early recognized [that] the war could largely have been decided in 1943 if, instead of vast but pointless area bombing, the planes had concentrated on the centers of armaments production.


Even Harris in his autobiography states:

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The idea that the main object of bombing German industrial cities was to break the enemy's morale proved to be wholly unsound; when we had destroyed almost all the larger industrial cities in Germany the civil population remained apathetic, while the Gestapo saw to it that they were docile, and, insofar as there was work left for them to do, industrious. But it seemed quite a natural opinion in 1941


How natural was that opinion early on?

In 1917 Churchill himself states:

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It is improbable that any terrorization of the civil population which could be achieved by air attack would compel the Government of a great nation to surrender... In our own case, we have seen the combative spirit of the people roused, and not quelled, by the German air raids. Nothing that we have learned of the capacity of the German population to endure suffering justifies us in assuming that they could be cowed into submission by such methods, or indeed, that they would not be rendered more desperately resolved by them.


By '42 the British had experience with the effects of this type of bombing campaign (although limited in comparison) and knew that morale was not broken but emboldened.

The Nazi's didn't make Harris do it, it was ineffective, at least on some level the leadership in Britain knew that it had little hope of achieving its goals.

Do you not agree that the bombing campaign did not break the morale of the German people or produce a “speedy” victory?

Do you not agree that as new technology, and with the increased concentrations of bombers, and with the control of the air that came later in the war that BC was perfectly capable of re-evaluating and adjusting its strategy of area bombing cities? Why in 1945 did Harris continue the area bombing of cities with little relevance to the German war effort? Especially considering that BC could hit more precise targets with a more immediate impact on Germany’s capacity to wage war.

Harris pushed to stay the course even at the expense of his crews.

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No, that's a comparison you made.

You claimed the aim was to kill Germans. Clearly the German's aim was to kill Jews, but they didn't do so with bombers, they used far more efficient ways instead. If the British aim had been to kill Germans, they would have done so as well.


You are making the comparisons not me.

I can judge individual acts by themselves. The context in which my judgments and points are presented in this thread aren't wrapped around what the Nazi's, or American's, or Soviet's, or Japanese did. Those are other topics for other threads.

You are making the moral comparisons. I state the deliberate strategy of targeting civilians by BC during WW2 was wrong. A valid rebuttal is not 'well the Nazi's killed Jews and others...'

You are making a case that BC and Britain had no other method, tactic or strategy available to them other then 'de-housing'.

There were British folks during the war who were appalled at the methods of BC. After Dresden even Churchill tried to get some space between him and Harris. In previous posts and threads of mine I quoted such folks. In this thread I posted Churchill's memorandum. If need be I can re-post them.

My point is that comparing immoral acts is in no way a useful tool in making your point.

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Uh, no. I said the Luftwaffe led the way, as they did with the Blitz on London and other British cities.


On 24 Aug '40, German planes bombed central London due to a  navigational error. This is for the most part is in agreement with a good portion of Historians. During the next 2 nights the Brits launched raids on Berlin.

From their everything escalated.

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Fighter bombers didn't have the range to reach targets in Germany until after the invasion of France.


To prepare for invasion they didn't need to go Berlin or into Germany. They just needed to established control over western Europe. In fact leading up to and in support of D-day Bombers were pulled back from Germany to hit targets in the area I just described.

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And how does this show that the Luftwaffe didn't try to bomb their way to victory?


I already told you. The LW wasn't tasked with 'victory'. Their roll was to force Britain into a deal. The Wehrmacht won its 'victories' on the ground with the LW supporting the ground forces. They didn't win it, nor was it their overall war objective to win the war by demoralizing, de-housing and / or killing civilians.

Hitler had no real plan to win a military victory over Britain by invasion and the best he could hope for was to destroy the RAF and get a deal.

From their I already answered your claim about the LW shift in strategy to hitting British cities.

continued in next post due to length restrictions: