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Old March 11th 04, 02:33 AM
Ragnar
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"ArtKramr" wrote in message
...
I think back to the war and the RAF heavies on their night missions.

Missions
flown in the winter usually were in atrocioius weather where there was no

view
of the gound and the sky above was overcast. There was no way to shoot at

star
fix or take a dirft reading from the ground. Working dead reckoning from
England deep into Germany and any change in wind dorection or velocity

that
went undetected made dead reckoning navigation a hit and miss

proposition.
Often it was not just miss, it was gross miss. Knowing all this how could

the
RAF ever hope to pull off these winter night missions successfully? What

was
the logic that made them keep flying under these hopeless navigation
conditions? Anyone know?


The "logic" was simple. The Brits strategy was to drop bombs at night
regardless of whether or not the intended target was in sight Some targets
were missed entirely, but the bombs could cause terror instead, which was in
itself an objective.