Not seeing the forest for the trees Crumpp.
No Guppy,
I certainly am seeing the forest and the trees. Study the IJNAF. When forced into a pitched battle with overwhelming numbers and superior aircraft, they were destroyed. They simply were not a factor after the Great Marianas Turkey Shoot.
While the Luftwaffe offered battle almost every day, that never happenend to them. As the numerical disparity rose ever against them they took increasing casualties. but they were never destroyed in a decisive battle by the allies.
Fighting only a portion of the force as well. The VVS was occupying the rest.
Even from January 1944 it took the allies almost a year to destroy the Luftwaffe. A full year of hard fighting with the allies having enormous numerical superiority.
During Operation Argument, the allies won air superiority because allied raids had grow so large that they could no longer effectively engage them.
"Ich bin ein Floh" is the expression they used.
So they started attempting to mass their forces and attack were they could. Navigation though, especially in the european weather is difficult at best and almost impossible with poor training. Rarely could they mass more than 200 fighters
in the same area to go against the sometimes thousands of escort fighters. Now these are not 200 planes flying in formation, that is 200 planes coming from different bases all over Europe which you hope will end up in the same vicinity at roughly the same time. Very rarely did it happen.
Bodenplatte, more than any other operation destroyed the Luftwaffe as they took very poorly trained pilots to begin with and asked them to do a mission for which they had no training at all. Operational accidents and friendly fire pushed their casualties over the edge.
Numbers was the issue and even when the allies got the range it was a hard fight. Not one decisive engagement but a war of attrition with the allies having decisive numerical advantage.
It was not "even numbers in the air" by any stretch of the imagination. Only to the man in the USAAF fighter cockpit in the heat of battle did it seem that way.
Germany never really solved the range problems while the Allies did.
Sure if your refering to the BoB or Russia in the early war. The Luftwaffe was never a strategic air force. However during the same period the allies were working on a solution for the long range problem, the Luftwaffe was too. It soon became a waste of resources though as they increasing had to turn to defense.
That overspecialization of doctrine cost them heavily.
More than anything, strategic blundering on the part of the Nazi regime both caused the war and Germany eventual defeat. Goering was a complete idiot and IMHO, if the German Armed forces were not hypersensative because of the events of 1918, they would have sacked him.
In 289 offensive operations, he saw the LW 4 times and never got close enough to engage. These were fighter sweeps, escorting medium bombers, rhubarbs etc. And this was between December 9, 1941 and August 16, 1944.
You should probably cross reference the log with the German OOB. You will see exactly what I am talking about.
All the best,
Crumpp