L. Thompson wrote:
My Dad's B-17 was heavily damaged by the rogue Lightning and they ended up belly landing in the desert about ten miles from their base in North Africa as a result. All crew walked away. Their pilot Silvestri Silvestri (same name first & last, no middle initial) was highly criticized by the upper Group officers for not getting their ship all the way home. He was transfered out of the Group immediately after and my dad's crew became a bit of an orphan crew for the rest of some 43 missions. Interestingly the record of this Aug 11 mission was stricken from the crew's records and no one got credit for it in their 50 missions lists. My dad would see other interesting cover-ups like this in a 20-yr Air Force aircrew career.
I always welcome any new surfacing data on this event.
Lowell Thompson
Kellogg, Idaho
Reeeeeeaaaallly...
One of the reasons I love studying WWII history so much is stories like this... the USAAC was not this well-oiled, all-conquering machine as so much postwar propaganda would have us believe. It was a massive bureaucracy like any other government organization, with high points and low points, with brilliant commanders and paper-pushing REMFs who did all they could to make life miserable for the guys up at the sharp end. Sounds like this is a classic example of the latter- I mean, what kind of idiot commander would berate and transfer a pilot for being unable to coax his heavily damaged aircraft back to base?
Thanks for the input!
Lynn