Hello Lumpy, and nice to meet you.
I didn't read the whole thread, but thank you for getting me into the focus.
I want to comment on this text of yours:
"My position is that the USAAF bombing campaign started too late in the war, and did too little damage to the German war effort to have a significant impact on the war beyond perhaps shortening the war by a few months, at best. I also contend that the USAAF's choice to create a strategic bomber force in Europe was conceptually misguided and that it would have been more useful to create a tactical air force with emphasis on fighters, fighter-bombers and attack planes like the Mosquito to counter the Luftwaffe by daylight."
Now....loking backwards, I'd say you are mostly right. But when you go on to the Strategic force as a misguided thing, well, back then could yopu have known at all? The Douhet theory was still running, and everybody followed it. It had worked, - sometimes, and it did work...later in the war. Sometimes the horrible shock of bombing will buckle a (already bent perhaps) nation into surrender.
Now the daylight bombing campaign did one big thing. It forced the LW to come up in daylight and fight.
The campaign came with bumps though, - well we know, - the bombers needed escorts, - their defensive armament was not enough alone. BUT, with bombers in daylight as well as escorts, the USAAF could bomb anything they could see (and daylight makes a bit), so the Germans HAD to counter them.
Now, none of those decisions or conclusions happened in a day. It is much easier for us to look backwards and try to judge. And production lines don't start in a day, - there is a long way between a theory+plan+material+production+execution etc. We must understand that. A long line.
And BTW, when you refer to RAF terror bombing, they started somewhat late, - the whole opening of their bombing was completely strategic, but with little accuracy. (Although they hit Gbbels garden already in 1940, - at night).
The openers and promoters of the whole deal were the LW, which started to execute this well before WW2 (if Guernica counts) as well as absolutely from the beginning days of the Polish campaign.
The theories were there, they sometimes worked, and entire long-lasting plans were built from them.