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I'm sure it massively emboldened the Japanese, politically. Without it, I doubt they would have had the guts to try Pearl Harbor.I agree , and in an earlier post also said that the political ramification of the zero were huge. It was a carrier based fighter with performance superior to its land based counterparts. The only aircraft that even came close to that was the Wildcat, and even then, the Wildcat lacked the range to be as decisive as the Zero.
Being a Carrier Fighter of superior performance was one part of the shock the zero generated. The other part was that it came from an Asian nation , long regarded as backward and inferior in its aircraft development. This really upset the apple cart for a lot of people
I just looked up some detail award lists for Tex Hill, Neale, Older, etc. There were were awards for both Type '0' and Zeros for the aces listed in Olynyk's Stars and Bars in the March 42 timeframe until the the AVG became the 23rd FG in July 1942. I.e. - Tex was awarded 3, Older 2.5, RT Smith had 3 Type '0' plus two Probables and 2 Damaged.. Having said that the Type 97 was by far the dominant fighter type.
There is no entry for A6M but I am not aware that USN/USMC/USAAF/AVG made a distinction until Zeke appeared in terminology.
All but 30 A6M's where withdrawn from combat in the middle of '41' in preparation for the Pearl Harbor attack...its possible that the AVG had limited contact with the Zero. The majority of the A6M's where resigned to the carrier fleet through the Java campaign...
The 'Zero' awards to the AVG were Army Type 1 Fighters, later known to the Allies as 'Oscar', (development designation Ki-43 but that was used by neither Japanese fighter units nor the Allies at the time), mainly of the 64th Sentai based in northern Thailand. I counted from the information in Ford's "Flying Tigers" 11 Type 1's shot down by the AVG (many more credited of course) for only 3 losses, huge outlier compared to the Type 1's record v other Allied units in that theater at the time, which for example v Hurricanes was 20 to 4 in the other direction. The AVG shot down around 35 Type 97's at a similar ratio of around 3, other Allied units at the time didn't even achieve parity v the Type 97, and also shot down 3 Type 2 2-seat Fighters ('Nick') for one loss, among fighter types. The AVG almost certainly never met Zeroes, nor did 10th AF fighter units in Burma thereafter and 14th AF fighter units in China only met them a few times from 1944.
The Zero's operations in China 1940-41 were a basically separate chapter from Pacific War (AVG project aimed to help China before the US entered the war but didn't actually enter combat till after Pearl Harbor). That earlier chapter featured total supremacy by Zeroes over Chinese fighters, beyond what Zeroes achieved in the Pacific War, compared to what was sometimes a real contest for the Type 96 against Chinese fighters.
Joe
the two aircraft were similar in appearance.....I would suspect it is simply a case of mis-identification
Well, I-16 served as a pattern for the WW2 fighters as we know them, trumping the contemporary designs in every aspect by a large margin. It took Bf-109 to reach E version to beat it, previous versions being only as good (if even that good) as contemporary Ishaks.
Too bad it's not in the poll.
You make a very good point. I just think the 109 deserves recognition for the fact that, at least early in the war, so many fighters were measured against it.
Doesn't really answer your questionAn observation re the Poles. During the battle for Poland the Poles considered the 110 to be better than the 109. I am looking into it to see if I can work out why, but if anyone has any ideas I would welcome any suggestions.
I agree that it made quite an impact (all across Poland)...but seriously, again, the fighter was a milestone in performance and production, but they had to make sacrifices in the ground handling department and that accounted for a huge number of aeroplane losses...I'm guessing (as I don't have my books right here) but didn't landing take offs (and other ground handling issues) account for almost 1/3 of all ME109 losses?