While going through State Department records in connection with something else, I noticed a very strange comment that I thought I'd put out here. On December 19, 1940, the Secretary of State commented on a request by Greece for 30 current-model P-40s: "In as much as all of the P–40 planes now being produced are earmarked for Great Britain..." - really? All of them? I thought maybe they meant all of the ones cleared for export, but from later content it's certainly not just that. The message went on to say that the Brits offered Greece an equivalent number of Defiants if the Greeks would agree to cancel their request for P-40s. The Greeks at first apparently said yes, then wised up and insisted on the original agreement, which led to the oddest comment of all: "...while the American Government has no intention of withdrawing the offer made to Greece, the informed authorities of this Government consider that Greece would be well-advised to accept the British offer for several reasons: (1) the time of delivery and shipment to Greece of the P–40's is uncertain; (2) the P–40 plane is said to be particularly difficult to handle, and partly for this reason our Army is not accepting any further planes of this type..."
I don't recall ever hearing that the P-40 was unusually hard to control, and I certainly never encountered anything saying that the Army quit accepting them for service at that time. Does anyone know anything more about this?
I don't recall ever hearing that the P-40 was unusually hard to control, and I certainly never encountered anything saying that the Army quit accepting them for service at that time. Does anyone know anything more about this?