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"Ed Rasimus" wrote in message ... On Mon, 2 Feb 2004 21:08:04 -0000, "Jim Doyle" wrote: Couldn't they find a better/safer way to take out bridges? Loss rates like that must've been very hard to sustain. Did they soften-up the AA with fighter strafes, or would that give the game away too easily? Jim D Bridges are among the most difficult targets for manual bombing. They are narrow, usually in a constricted area, always heavily defended. Art's experience in WW II is typical of the very same things we experienced in Vietnam. The Bac Giang and Bac Ninh bridges on the NE railroad out of Hanoi claimed a lot of airplanes and the Dragon Jaw bridge at Thanh Hoa is the stuff of legends. 617 Squadron took some of their heaviest losses attacking bridges in Germany, it wasnt until they got the Tallboy and GrandSlam weapons that they got weapons that could reliably knock down a bridge as they could do it with a near miss Keith |
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