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#71
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"Howard Berkowitz" wrote
I have some mental pictures involved, of an ammunition ship, carrying bombs to the ETO from an American factory, catching a torpedo. Yea, but what about the ones that made it? |
#72
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In article b%cXc.14367$ni.12227@okepread01, "Bob Coe"
wrote: "Howard Berkowitz" wrote I have some mental pictures involved, of an ammunition ship, carrying bombs to the ETO from an American factory, catching a torpedo. Yea, but what about the ones that made it? Those survivors accounted for the bombs that were loaded aboard Art's plane. Again, I'll ask about the overall wartime contribution of someone clearly not on the pointy end, Constance Babington-Smith. If her name is unfamiliar, that should be corrected. Or on the very very pointy end, Noor Inayat Khan or Virgina Hall or Sydney Cotton. Or back at the ranch, Kelly Johnsom and Barnes Wallis. |
#73
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"ArtKramr" wrote in message
... Subject: Fly tight for tight bomb patterns on the ground. From: Howard Berkowitz Date: 8/25/2004 6:28 PM Pacific Standard Time I think you are missing my point. Did your _flight_ crews select the target and the munitions to be used? I think not. There were targeting organizations that had to call on specialized skills, ranging from vulnerability analysis to detailed photointerpretation to statistical analysis of weapons effects. Yes, you were at the pointy end, but the spear also has a staff. How does any of that limit or make my combat observations less valid? In the end the guys you are talking about did the easy work in an office. We did the hard work as you put it on the pointy end of the spear. And none of those guys you are refering to ever went down in flames or were buried in foreign graves. Screw 'em all with their easy comfortable sheltered lives and total safety. While they were enjoying Martinis in London we were catching hell over Germany and many of us never came back. Screw 'em all. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer None of what has been posted makes your personal observations any less valid. However, you were just one small cog in a huge machine. Your evidence is one piece of the jigsaw puzzle but it's not the only piece and it's certainly not the most important piece. I respect the opinion of someone who has studied the subject in depth over many years every bit as much, if not more, than that of someone who took part at a very low level. I wouldn't admire him as a warrior but he probably has more to offer than the average warrior. There's only so many times I can read 'and then we were hit by 30 Fockewulfs and went down in flames...'. |
#74
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ArtKramr wrote:
Robert Briggs wrote: Mike Dargan wrote: If you're trying to wreck fresh bomb craters, the tighter the better. Nicely put, Mike. Is that that the result of the many missions you flew and your experience with formation variations and the effect on bomb patterns? BTW, how many missions did you fly? Could you give us details? See Message-ID: |
#75
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ArtKramr wrote:
Mike wrote: Art, have you never heard of research? Your individual experience is limited.... one man's view of what happened. And you both have it all wrong. I did my research at 10,000 feet over the Ruhr valley. Let's see, now. I've read a book by a man who did his research at sixty (60) feet over the Ruhr valley and wrote about it within a year or so. Do I believe him? Or some old codger on Usenet whose view of things was more than two orders of magnitude worse and who is writing about it six decades later? Then, of course, there is a book by a man who was probably the Royal Air Force's top man in weapon delivery ... |
#76
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Howard Berkowitz wrote:
Those survivors accounted for the bombs that were loaded aboard Art's plane. Again, I'll ask about the overall wartime contribution of someone clearly not on the pointy end, Constance Babington-Smith. If her name is unfamiliar, that should be corrected. Or on the very very pointy end, Noor Inayat Khan or Virgina Hall or Sydney Cotton. Or back at the ranch, Kelly Johnsom and Barnes Wallis. And I *do* wonder how much chance Art would have stood without, for example, the erks who maintained those noisy fan thingies hanging from Willie's wings ... |
#78
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Subject: Fly tight for tight bomb patterns on the ground.
From: Robert Briggs Trebor.Briggs@BITphysic Then, of course, there is a book by a man who was probably the Royal Air Force's top man in weapon delivery ... Probably???? could you please be a bit more vague in your totally vague message. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#79
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ArtKramr wrote:
Robert Briggs wrote: Then, of course, there is a book by a man who was probably the Royal Air Force's top man in weapon delivery ... Probably???? could you please be a bit more vague in your totally vague message. If anyone in the RAF knew more about the topic than the late AVM Don Bennett there's a fair chance he worked rather closely with Bennett. |
#80
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Subject: Fly tight for tight bomb patterns on the ground.
From: Robert Briggs UCKET Date: 8/26/2004 11:30 AM Pacific Standard Time Message-id: ArtKramr wrote: Robert Briggs wrote: Then, of course, there is a book by a man who was probably the Royal Air Force's top man in weapon delivery ... Probably???? could you please be a bit more vague in your totally vague message. If anyone in the RAF knew more about the topic than the late AVM Don Bennett there's a fair chance he worked rather closely with Bennett. "A fair chance".? You are a master of uncertainty Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
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