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- #41
Readie
Chief Master Sergeant
The Germans would have needed to deliver a lot more than they did. An awful lot more.
I don't want to get into a debate about national courage or fortitude but the German civilians certainly stood up to much worse than the British received as a whole as did the Japanese. A few large Russian cities stood up long sieges/bombardments lasting over months. Individual blocks or city sections may have been equally hard it all those countries but Germany and japan had more sq mileage and more civilians killed by far.
The pre-war theories of mass panic in the streets caused by a few hundred bombers were shown to be bunk. People lost homes, businesses, family members and even their own lives, civilians in many nations paid a terrible price due to bombing raids but only in Japan did bombing alone (or nearly alone)bring a nation to surrender. and that took hundreds of bombers of double the capacity of the bombers used in Europe against a defense of less effectiveness than used in Europe plus the submarine campaign plus atomic bombs.
In addition to fear there was a lot of revenge being motivated. People stood up to bombing better if they thought the bombers were being hurt. Shot down by AA fire or interceptors. Or that the bombers bases and homeland were being bombed, or at least could be bombed in the not too distant future.
while individuals may have broken (and everyone has a different breaking point) the populations as a whole did not break. At least not until the infrastructure was such a wreck that it didn't matter. If the morale doesn't really crack until the power to the run the factories is no longer there and the road/rail transportation system no longer can get raw materials to the factory or finished goods away from the factory does it really matter if the morale cracked or not?
The Japanese had exactly ZERO chance of mounting a bomber campaign against the United States that would accomplish anything.
Unless they could base out of Mexico or Canada. Give them 1000 B-29s and Hawaii and all they could do would be to tick off the west coast.
Well said Shortround,
The general effect of the German Blitz was to stiffen British resolve.
The bomber campaign had its seeds in the British desire to 'hit back at Germany' however suicidal the mission proved to be.
Cheers
John