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John - nothing to disagree with but here is a question:
If the best airforce in 1943 boiled down to one aircraft each instead of the necessay tens of thousands (plus crews and logistics)
wouldn't the luftwaffe with
Me 262, Ta 152, Ar 234, He 277, FW 190F-8, Ju 88 (plus all the necessary variants) and Ju 52 (plus throw in whatever you wish)
be the 'best'?
3) The Lancaster was the most versatile heavy bomber of WW2
US industrial strength GB ingenuity.
clearly, technology is not the only determinant of "best". Your questiuon DG puts the issue more succinctly than any amount of debate ever could.
Technological achievement is not a measure of "best". But then, neither is quantity. In the same line of reasoning that it cannot be argued the Luftwafe was the best by reason of its technology, neither can it be argued that the VVS was the best by reason of its quantity. Both have a role to play in determining "best".
But even if you combine technology and quantity, do you still have the full ingredients to determine the best air force? My opinion is that you dont. How an air force uses its technology and its numbers is also a factor. "How" in my opinion covers doctrine and pilot training, perhaps even serviceability issues.
Each one of these factors are what are called force multipliers. If you have numbers, then in combat you have the ability to gang up on enemy fighters in the air, sustain operations for longer, put a heavier tonnage of bombs over the target. If you have the qualitative edge you have the ability to absorb a greater proportion of enemy resources to bring your force under control....and theoretically, if your force is sufficiently advanced in technology, the enemy simply will not be able to contain you. If you have the technique, you may be able to maintain a high serviciability rate, or have pilots that can fly rings around your opponent, or hit targets on the ground with deadly accuracy.
The question is, which one of these elements are needed to achieve "best"? I think you need elements of all of them. Who had the best balance of these ingredients. I think the USAAF had the best mix, but not by as much as I believed when this thread was started....,
..... I think the USAAF had the best mix, but not by as much .....
If we look at April 1944 and onwards, the AAF had the right mix of everything and as the months went by, it just got stronger and stronger relative to the RAF.
If we jump to the spring of 1945, the gulf between the RAF and AAF in every category, (except night fighters and aircrew training) was staggering.
If we take Parsifal's well-reasoned case as being valid for 1943 and accept that the USAAF was superior in 1945, we are left with 1944 as the year of transition. During that year, aside from changes to their relative sizes, what were the major capability enhancements implemented by both forces? I can start the list but I'm happy for others to add items:
USAAF
1. Availability of long-range escort(the P-38 started combat operations in 1942 and was the principal USAAF long range fighter in ETO/MTO in Dec 1943. It was complimented by F4U in PTO both of which had far more range capability than any RAF fighter for its day bomber force, which was primarily centred (at least in ETO) on the Mustang.
2. Introduction of the B-29 during the second half of the year At the time of Ops from China in June 1944 there were 21 B-29 and B-32 Bomb Groups either in combat or transitioning to Pacific and 74 more B-24 and B-17 BG in operations globally. A year earlier the USAAF 76 Heavy Bomb Groups - 34 in Europe and Afrika.
RAF
1. Formation of 2 TAF which provided outstanding close air support during the advance through Europe.To compliment 9th and 12th AF Tac Air in ops (along with RAF Desert AF and MTO ops prior to 1944) - as well as every USN/USMC and USAAF FG in PTO providing CAS as part of their day to day responsibilities. Your point?
2. Introduction of the Meteor during the second half of the year. Nice V-1 killer. and??
Overall, the increase in USAAF combat experience, coupled with the 2 main force capability enhancements introduced in 1944 means that, certainly, by the middle of the year USAAF superiority can be argued but, as Parsifal points out, much of this is subjective.