m10bob
Posts: 8622
Joined: 11/3/2002 From: Dismal Seepage Indiana Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: fbs quote:
ORIGINAL: xj900uk FoW on your own side was quite common in WWII. Lots of people were reported as killed in action, dead, buried and funerals held only to turn up when hostilities ceased in 1945... I had a distant great uncle who was reported killed when Singapore fell in February 1942. His wife re-married in 1944 and lo and behold guess who should walk through the family door on Christmas Eve 1945, completely immaciated and suffering from several diseases after workign for a couple of years on the Death Railway.? Incidentally, they weren't very pleased to see him and threw him out. As my great uncle had been declared legally dead he needed a court order to get this over-turned & access to the family funds/fortune/family house - he failed and ended up on the streets with nothing (before the war he'd been quite high-placed in a well-known oil company). Fortunately for all concerned his experiences working on behalf of the Emperor of Nippon had left him permanetnly weakened and he died in a hostel for the down&outs from pneumonia in 1948. On a more slightly amusing note, the Ark Royal was reported sink several times by German propaganda before a sub finally got her in 1941. More to the point on a couple of occassions the BBC reported it sunk as well... Family history over - proof of the point is that Fog of War affects both your own reported losses/deaths/sinkings as well as that of the enemy. Hahaha.. that's true soldiers get catch in friendly forces fog. But it is unrealistic that every single air combat report is inaccurate. I have this mental picture: "-- Squadron Leader Joseph, this is your boss; how are you doing?" "-- I'm not sure, Sir; my pilots told me half the squadron was shot down yesterday, but I can't trust the dirty bastards, as they are always lying" "-- You don't know how many aircrafts you lost yesterday?" "-- That's right, Sir. For example, Flight Officer Barnabe told me yesterday evening that he was killed in the afternoon. I believed his report, but an hour later I found him in the Mess messing with the nurses." "-- So the report you sent me yesterday was wrong?" "-- No, Sir, the report is right." "-- How come?" "-- I shot pilot Barnabe and dumped his aircraft on the river, so now he is actually dead." "-- Good job, Squadron Leader, keep it up!" Cheers fbs No, you are not getting it, my friend. The combat report is the one going to the highest muckity-muck.. If the squadron commander wants to know what his real losses are, he will look at his unit and see how many planes, pilots he has at end of day..
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