Big B
Posts: 4870
Joined: 6/1/2005 From: Old Los Angeles pre-1960 Status: offline
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For all their plans, let us not forget that the only bobmbing of the mainland USA that Japan ever actually carried out was with ballons drifting in the jet stream. It looks self evident that Japan lacked the capability to create and operate their own version of the "8th Air Force"...otherwise they simply would have done so. quote:
ORIGINAL: el cid again quote:
WHAT were they going to bomb? They could never get in land-based range of Los Angeles, let alone Detroit. Also, they sufferred from a materials shortage, which made a long-ranged twin engined bomber a much better economic proposition. For widely available English discussion of this, see Rene Francillion's Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War. The Japanese would not agree with the above. They felt range was paramount, and concluded after difinitive studies that to increase it, four engines were the solution (except for one case, where they went to six). What they wanted to bomb mainly was bases, before they were in range of enemy bombers. For an example of what they had in mind, consider the (long secret) raids on the B-29 airfields by the Ki-67s - amazing raids. Handfulls of bombers (by Allied standards) would (consistently) hit the massed, armed, fueled B-29s just before launch. [We did not understand until after the war how they knew what day that would be? They watched the weather planes, and we only sent them a fixed time before a raid!] They had to stage through Iwo - which is why we took the place - and they had to fly two days (nights actually) each way! But the raids were fantastically productive. Another target considered was Boeing Renton - the biggest building in the World. For this, bases in Alaska were contemplated. [It is not well understood by people who look at Mercatur projections that the distances in the North are LESS, rather than MORE on a globe]. For atomic and other wmd (specifically including bw and cw weapons) the favorite targets were San Francisco and LA - and at one point New York City and Washington were in the loop (hence the range of the I-400 - able to make the round trip). We captured some 250 kg (551 pound) radiological bombs, and plans of a Japanese atom bomb were captured en route to a Soviet general in 1946. Since then, an academic has published a different copy. A Korea scholar also reports a Japanese "thorium bomb" - something just now beginning to make sense - with the discovery of an ALLIED "thorium bomb" - apparently tested in Australia (by UK - which seems not to have entirely trusted all its options to the US Manhattan Project). The problem is, this weapon turned out to be "too hot to handle" - and presumably the Japanese had the same problems. Nevertheless, the viability of some sort of atomic weapon was assurred enough that bombers to deliver it were designed, although the Japanese always believed atomic weapons were for "the next war." They got a lot farther with BW weapons - and had a variety of programs - including one to deliver baloon bombs from submarine aircraft carriers - and another to use high altitude winds trans Pacific (this being tested with incendiary bombs - to the tune of about 12,000 launched and over 3,000 falling as far East as Michigan - the tracked of these being Burt Webber, University of Oregon Press: Silent Seige - a horrible book which nevertheless has unique disclosures by Japanese in it). There were both army and navy CW programs, but Gen Sugiama (for IJA) and the Imperial General Staff (for IJN) ordered these destroyed in the summer of 1945 to PREVENT their use on invasion forces! I have to agree more with these two: quote:
ORIGINAL: Sardaukar quote:
ORIGINAL: TulliusDetritus First of all we have to understand that "heavy bombers" = strategic bombing. The only country which truly assumed this military concept on WW2: the USA. Concept taken from the italian Dohuet, the father of the thing/creature. Other countries just could not "predict" this new kind of war (to some extent, this is true for the USSR). Others just couldn't afford it: "materials shortage", "fuel", etc.: Japan. Well, UK was very much into Strategic bombing too. Just that their bad experiences about daylight bombing in 40-41 made them prefer night attacks. Air Marshal Harris and his Bomber Command were very active in the war.
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