ACarey wrote:
It was really Project Anvil
Maybe this is a "no, duh" moment for most of you, but "Aphrodite" was the original Army Air Corps project. I assume that "Anvil" was the US Navy follow-up attempt to knock out the V-1 rocket sites near Peenemünde. (Apparently "Anvil" was also the original project name for Operation Dragoon, the invasion of southern France.)
It's been a very long time since I read Roger Freeman's "The Mighty Eighth" but I believe that was where I read about "Aphrodite". Of course, his emphasis was on the Air Corps' side of things, but I believe that because of Joe Jr's involvement with the Navy project, Freeman did touch on it briefly.
If I remember correctly, Freeman credited some "lowly" (no disrespect intended - just in relationship to all the "brass" involved in the projects) Army sergeant with predicting that the Navy's radio control system, supposedly developed at labs in the Philadelphia Navy Yard, was overly complicated and flawed - and that it would lead to disaster.
Freeman's book came out long before the 1995 eyewitness account posted above and he made it sound like the explosion was so great that there was nothing left of the airplane that was even identifiable. What was it, something like 20,000 lbs of Torpex?
He also made the case that the "accident" was not very thoroughly investigated at the time because Joe Sr. was (or had been) our ambassador to England and nobody wanted to admit or point out, especially to him (Joe Sr.), that negligence or incompetence was the cause - as would have been the case if that Army sergeant was correct in the first place.