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old iron wrote:Every time I read the P.38 story I am reminded of American torpedoes in the same war.
The submariners were saying - well into 1943 - that the torpedoes did not work. The higher-ups (in this case at the Bureau of Ordinance) dismissed these claims with "those idiot submariners are not using the torpedoes properly" and refused to test or better develop their technology. It turned out that the torpedoes had three major design flaws - in the depth, magnetic exploder and contact exploder devices. Many important targets were attacked but not damaged because of these flaws. In actuality, all three of these flaws were determined and corrected in the field, not those responsible for designing, building and testing the torpedoes.
More or less the same for the P.38. Tactical assets and flaws were well appreciated by those in the field, but not acted upon by those at home. The P.38 was well appreciated in the Pacific theater early on - used again Yamamoto in early 1943. Meanwhile in Europe, the P.38 might have been able to do long range protectin of our bomber streams well before the arrival of P-47s and P.51s, but were not.
Were higher-ups making the same mistake with P.38s in Europe as the Bureau of Ordinance was doing with torpedoes in the Pacific?
Kevin
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