Hugh Spencer
Airman 1st Class
- 120
- Jan 11, 2008
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"Are we beasts? Are we taking this too far?" Casey answered: "We didn't start it. And it was them or us."
"To achieve any decisive success against American formations of between 100 and 200 four-engined bombers, the fighter forces must out-number the enemy by 4 to 1. Successful defense against such formations, therefore, requires the commitment of 600 to 800 fighters on each occasion....The morale of the pilots is excellent; their performance, considering their numerical weakness, cannot be stressed too much and the leaders are well up to their task. Provided they receive new reinforcements, the prospects of the day-fighter can be viewed with complete assurance."
"A funny thing happened on our way out. We were to bomb our target after the 310th---a difference of some 45 minutes in target times. We were just off the Tunisian coast when the 310th, coming back, flew under us. An ME -109 was trailing them — probably to spot their field if he could. The poor guy didn't see us coming and the first thing he knew he was headed for the big middle of a whole flock of B-25s and P-38s! You could almost hear his tires squealing as he threw on his brakes and made a quick turn around. Last we saw of him, he was leading a big whirlpool of P-38s out to catch him. I never found out if they got him, but his chances were pretty slim!"
During the combat, Fw. Martin Lacha destroyed one of the P-47s, piloted by Col. Arman Peterson, the C/O of the US 78th FG, who had led the group since its formation in the US in May 1942. The American group claimed four Fw 190s, probably got another and damaged five others for the loss of one man."The days passed with defensive patrols, sea recon and repeatedly alarms without contact with the enemy. But on 1 July there was something new in the sky; in the vicinity of Hoek von Holland we met up for the first time with Thunderbolts. From a distance they looked disconcertingly similar to the Fw 190. What they were able to fire from their 8 squirters I frequently came to feel later on."
James A. Shields, T/Sgt."For our Fourth of July celebration we were assigned to bomb the Gerbini A/D in Sicily. We had some trouble finding the target and the Germans and Italians sent up plenty of flak. We dropped our bombs and started away from the target, lagging because our plane had been shot up. 10-12 enemy fighters came in to finish us off, but instead of our being finished we got two of them. A 20 mm shell exploded in the pilot's compartment and injured Lt. Axson, our pilot, who fell forward putting the plane into a steep dive. Everybody and everything that wasn't tied down fell in a heap on the floor. The co-pilot, Lt. Coffey, straightened the plane out and brought it to an emergency field on Cape Bon. When we got there we had practically no gas left and we then found out that Lt. Coffey had also been hit and injured, but he had said nothing about it. All in all it was an exciting Fourth."
At the same time, because of Rudel's success, Panzerstaffeln (Tank Destroyer Squadrons) were formed. As evening approached, a final combat was fought between the Fw 190s of Luftflotte 6 and a Soviet bomber force. The German fighters claimed 45 victories. The III./JG 54 was the first to engage and Fw. Hubert Strassl claimed a pair of the big Il-4 bombers. He then downed 2 more from low altitude. Returning to base at Orel, Strassl had claimed a remarkable 15 victories in a single day. The Germans claimed 432 Soviet aircraft destroyed for only 26 of their own."We are all seized with a kind of passion for the chase from the glorious feeling of having saved much German bloodshed with every tank destroyed."
"The boys had a very tough mission, raiding the Gerbini Airfields. Some big shot somewhere had his head up and locked and "ordered" that they follow the course he prescribed. It was a honey. They were to approach the target area from the south, going west of it so that, when they got well north of it, a turn to the right would bring them southwest to the target. They were to make a 270° turn to the left after dropping their bombs, fly west a way, then go back off the island to the south the same way they had come in. And it was a long way from the target to the coast! It would be just begging for trouble. And they got it. Shapiro was shot down and crashed on the island---DeMoss, who followed him down to give him what protection he could, said Shap crashed and burned—not a chance to live through it. Bradley, of the 446th, was shot down abut 8 or 10 miles off the coast of Sicily, and several others were shot up pretty bad. Cohagen and his crew took a beating---as did his passenger, Capt. R.W. Manly, who got various and sundry pieces of flak here and there and nearly had the top of one of his fingers torn off. Cohagen landed at Tunis and left him in the hospital there. He is not back yet, but should be in a few days. Apparently there was nothing really serious."
"On the way - and just shortly after we left Malta - we could see the largest collection of boats of all sizes I have ever imagined! It's size is almost unbelievable…Boats lined up and scattered around for as far as the eye could see. A lot of power, there, and I have a feeling someone is going to get a taste of that power somewhere and soon! Just before we got to the Tunisian coast we passed right between two more convoys - big ones - in fact I don't think I've every seen a herd of cows with as many cows in it as that convoy had boats! I look for the invasion sometime between the 10th and 12th of July. We shall see!"