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Allied and Soviet Air Forces Please use this forum to discuss the Air Forces of the Western Allies and the Soviet Union. |
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In 1941, RAF fighter pilots inflated shootdowns by almost 10:1. That habit was hard to break. On August 23rd 1944, 'Johnnie' Johnson's 127 Wing engaged JG 26 and JG 11 -- the RAF pilots claimed twelve fighters shot down, but my source states the Germans did not lose a single aircraft in those combats. This Spitfire Wing was not an inexperienced outfit, so there was no excuse for their nonsense. In general, one has to question the veracity of RAF evaluation methods for pilot claims -- and those of the Wing Leader, Mr. 40-Victory-Ace. Quote:
"...In February 1941, deliveries of the Spitfire Mk V had begun[...]In Britain nobody had yet been able to analyse the effect of cannon fire when aircraft strafed ground forces. A demonstration was therefore arranged. Salisbury Plain was the obvious place. It being hardly practical to experiment on troops, a convoy of lorries was to be the target. The high-ranking RAF and Army officers and some civilians who, because of their technical or political interest, were invited, were corralled in an enclosure at a safe distance from what, in battle, would be termed 'the killing ground'. Six Spitfires came swooping into view with the sweet sound of Merlin engines, music to an airman's ears, to which a few seconds later was added the sound of gunfire and explosions of shells. Five aeroplanes flailed the lorries, ripped the canvas tilts to ribbons, tore great holes in their bodywork and blasted the engines to fragments. The sixth directed all its destructive power at the spectators. As the din of aero engines and gunfire diminished, the cries of injured and dying men arose. Two generals and three other senior officers were killed, some twenty others wounded. The photographs taken by a War Office Photographer were confiscated, secrecy was enjoined on all who had witnessed the lunatic act. The perpetrator was variously rumoured to be a Pole who went berserk or simply aimed badly; a traitor working for Germany; or an ordinary British squadron pilot who was already crazed by too much operational flying and driven completely mad at the moment by the noise and flames and general reminders of combat..." Quote:
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William Chorley did Bomber Command Losses and Ross McNeill did Coastal Command Losses which I haven't read. I do have Fighter Command Losses; a handy desk reference, but not a reliable source for total losses -- for the Battle of Britain months, about 250 aircraft losses are missing. It appears that Franks may have omitted thousands of aircraft losses from his three volume set. When I was looking at losses from motor trouble, I checked the No. 247 Squadron history and the author listed 20 Typhoon airframes lost to engine failures -- but only six were recorded by Franks. Anyway I've found several hundred friendly fire incidents caused by the RAF and other British military units (sometimes they did hit the target). Far too many cases to paste in here, but someday I will post all findings and sources on a Web site. The most enlightening data came from Allied flyers, soldiers, and sailors -- in reference to the number of times they were attacked by the RAF or British anti-aircraft batteries. Quote:
07 Jul 40 Hurricane P2756 Shot down by RAF Spitfire. 08 Jul 40 Hurricane P3461 Shot down by RAF Spitfire. 10 Jul 40 Hurricane P3676 Damaged by gunfire from RAF Spitfire. 01 Aug 40 Battle L5568 Shot down by RAF night-fighter. 11 Aug 40 Hurricane N2667 Shot down by RAF Spitfire. 11 Aug 40 Hurricane s/n ? Damaged by gunfire from RAF fighter. 15 Aug 40 Blenheim L6610 Shot down by RAF Spitfire. 24 Aug 40 Blenheim T1804 Shot down by RAF Hurricane. 24 Aug 40 Blenheim Z5736 Damaged by gunfire from RAF Hurricane. 24 Aug 40 Blenheim N3531 Damaged by gunfire from RAF Hurricane. 28 Aug 40 Spitfire R6832 Shot down by RAF Spitfire. 28 Aug 40 Hurricane R4198 Shot down by RAF Spitfire. 31 Aug 40 Spitfire X4054 Shot down by RAF Hurricane. 03 Sep 40 Blenheim L1512 Shot down by RAF Hurricane. 03 Sep 40 Blenheim L8650 Damaged by gunfire from RAF Hurricane. 03 Sep 40 Blenheim L1409 Damaged by gunfire from RAF Hurricane. 14 Sep 40 Hurricane P3209 Shot down by RAF Spitfire. 14 Sep 40 Hurricane L1981 Damaged by gunfire from RAF Spitfire. 17 Sep 40 Hurricane s/n ? Shot down by RAF Hurricane. 18 Sep 40 Spitfire R6772 Shot down by RAF Spitfire. 18 Sep 40 Hurricane s/n ? Damaged by gunfire from RAF Spitfire. 29 Sep 40 Hurricane V6621 Shot down by RAF Hurricane. 13 Oct 40 Blenheim L6637 Shot down by RAF Hurricane. 13 Oct 40 Blenheim K7135 Damaged by gunfire from RAF Hurricane. British AA units destroyed and damaged a similar number of RAF planes. Sources: FIGHTER COMMAND LOSSES, Norman Franks. THE BATTLE of BRITAIN: THEN & NOW, Winston Ramsey, ed. THE HAWKER HURRICANE, Francis Mason. SPITFIRE ACE (documentary; interview with pilot of Spitfire R6772) Quote:
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I know a measure the RAF should have taken, but didn't. Tell us how many planes with a natural metal finish were shot down by aimed fire from Allied pilots. Quote:
![]() In 2003, there was at least two friendly fire accidents involving British Challenger tanks in Southern Iraq. One Challenger II was destroyed and according to a BBC news report, the turret was torn off the hull when hit by gunfire from another British tank. During the 1991 Gulf War there were no less than three similar cases. In one, a Challenger I destroyed a British APC and damaged another. The MoD covered up every fratricide incident in the Falklands (ten British soldiers were killed) until they were pressured by a British newspaper in 1986. High speed commo will stop many of these lash-ups; it is now possible for a soldier to leak anonymous tips to anyone worldwide, within seconds. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Friendly fire WWII | Brian | Allied and Soviet Air Forces | 803 | 8th July 2023 15:47 |
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