Doolittle Raiders

   / Doolittle Raiders #41  
Interesting facts HS but you are looking at it in an America-centric way, WW2 involved more than America Germany and Japan, it was indeed a world war. Now look at it from a british perspective, or russian, chinese, canadian, australian or dozens of other countries and run some numbers again.
I'm responding to other peoples claim that Americas WWII generation was Americas greatest. I think not! This notion that everyone rushed down after Pearl to join is just not true. Much of those accomplishments have been greatly exceeded by today's military. If you know any multi-tour trigger pullers they will tell you there is an effort and has been a continued effort to down play battle field accomplishments in both Iraq and Afghanistan so as not to diminish WWII battles. In a nut there has been dozens of Audie Murphy's with out recognition at all!, over the last ten years, in an effort to keep WWII history at top so to say. Big Army doesn't want WWII military history rewritten. HS
 
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   / Doolittle Raiders
  • Thread Starter
#42  
I never intended this post to be *ing match. We can armchair who did what to death. Different times, different technologies, different everything. Anyone who has ever been in the military knows that life is not always fair. Or, should we state that more often as not, life is not always fair?

As a vietnam era (not vietnam vet) US Army vet, just this past VA day, I attended my very first function. In all of that time I stayed low key because of the way vets of that era were intially treated. In my mind, vets need to be treated fairly. True, some need more help than others. Some have done more than others. I would expect though that those who have done the impossible and survived another day would just as soon shed the limelight and want the focus to be on those that were not so lucky.
 
   / Doolittle Raiders #43  
While the Doolittle Raid was gutsy, it was not militarily significant. Today such a raid would be deemed wasteful and stupid. Putting good men a risk for no military gain. Funny how things change. HS
 
   / Doolittle Raiders #44  
No military gain!?!? I guess if you count the fact that the Japanese recalled fighter units to defend the home islands, fighter planes that could have been used in defense of their outer territories, then there was no military gain. I will link an Air Force Times story for this quote "the attack on their homeland caused Japan to pull its fleet from the Indian Ocean to defend their home islands. The raid contributed to Adm. Isoroku Yamamoto's decision to attack the Midway Islands in the Central Pacific, which turned into a decisive victory for the Navy."
If that isn't military gain, I'll kiss your grits!

What airmen should know about the Doolittle Raiders | Air Force Times | airforcetimes.com
 
   / Doolittle Raiders #45  
These 3 landed at our local airport yesterday afternoon. They will be here 2 more days. Being a bit of a WW2 buff, I had to go see them. We were allowed to crawl through the 2 B's. Pretty cool and that P-51 is just pure sex. :)http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/...61d1383642327t-doolittle-raiders-dsc01376.jpg
That is a B model P-51. Also called a Razorback. The British mounted rear view mirrors above the windshield taken from Spitfires. The later bubble canopy Mustangs started with the D model and ended with the H model
hugs, Brandi
 
   / Doolittle Raiders #46  
Some military facts;

In WWII 85% were drafted, forced if you will, to serve, only 15% volunteered.
In Vietnam it was reversed, with 85% volunteering and only 15% were drafted.
Today all 100% are volunteered.

In WWII the overall average for time in combat was 14 days. Remember also the ground campaign in Europe was 10 months. D-day to VE day.

Pilots in WWII only flew 25 missions then rotated home. My son, an Apache pilot flew 6-8hrs everyday 6 days a week with one day to switch from nights to days or back, for 15 months straight, then home for a few months and back to do it again for 12 months second tour.

In Vietnam if you went at all, you were only required to do one year, all other second tours were voluntary.

In Iraq, you served 15 months continuous in combat. Most but not all got one 15 days leave during that 15 months. Some served as many as seven 15 or 12 month tours.

Many Navy vessels operate one whole year at sea without pulling in anywhere, today. Those people normal work day is 6hrs on 6hrs off, for that whole year, no breaks.

I know who the greatest military generation is, and its today's.

HS

Then my Dad and his hunting buddies were in that 15%. They were out bird hunting the afternoon of December 7,1941. The next day they enlisted. Dad wanted a P-51. but they put the better at piloting in the bombers. He was a B-17 and B-24 pilot in WWII. He liked the Boeing best. That plane is what got me into aviation.

To me.............they WERE the greatest generation. Everybody, even those back home sacrificed. It affected the whole world.
hugs, Brandi
 
   / Doolittle Raiders #47  
I never intended this post to be *ing match. We can armchair who did what to death. Different times, different technologies, different everything. Anyone who has ever been in the military knows that life is not always fair. Or, should we state that more often as not, life is not always fair?

As a vietnam era (not vietnam vet) US Army vet, just this past VA day, I attended my very first function. In all of that time I stayed low key because of the way vets of that era were intially treated. In my mind, vets need to be treated fairly. True, some need more help than others. Some have done more than others. I would expect though that those who have done the impossible and survived another day would just as soon shed the limelight and want the focus to be on those that were not so lucky.

I think the response has been somewhat greater than the stimulus. No one is denigrating the contributions of our service men and women in any conflict; I for one am eternally grateful to those who have served. The title "Greatest Generation" doesn't come with a Nobel Peace Prize and a million dollars; it's a title bestowed on a generation of Americans by Tom Brokaw and is the title of his book. It was not bestowed by a committee or a national election, nor are there national standards secreted away in some damp vault in the basement of some government building in Washington D.C. It is a literary device that intuitively seems to have its basis in fact.

IMHO the title conveys an image to describe a generation of Americans that were, for the most part born in and of the great depression. It represents not just the armed forces and the conflict involved, but society itself and the struggles and accomplishments that made them great. It is, after all, just a device; a title that has no more legal significance that the foam finger that pops up at football games.
 
   / Doolittle Raiders #48  
I think the response has been somewhat greater than the stimulus. No one is denigrating the contributions of our service men and women in any conflict; I for one am eternally grateful to those who have served. The title "Greatest Generation" doesn't come with a Nobel Peace Prize and a million dollars; it's a title bestowed on a generation of Americans by Tom Brokaw and is the title of his book. It was not bestowed by a committee or a national election, nor are there national standards secreted away in some damp vault in the basement of some government building in Washington D.C. It is a literary device that intuitively seems to have its basis in fact. IMHO the title conveys an image to describe a generation of Americans that were, for the most part born in and of the great depression. It represents not just the armed forces and the conflict involved, but society itself and the struggles and accomplishments that made them great. It is, after all, just a device; a title that has no more legal significance that the foam finger that pops up at football games.
great, I wish people people would drop it, and quit repeating it, it simply isn't true. HS
 
   / Doolittle Raiders #49  
great, I wish people people would drop it, and quit repeating it, it simply isn't true. HS

Naw. This is an issue of national importance. I propose that we start a petition to get Congress to pass a joint resolution officially recognizing the "Greatest Generation" and making it a felony to ever question it again.
 
   / Doolittle Raiders #50  
It is pretty amazing they got airborne and on their way. Heavy seas, first time bombers like this tried to take off on aircraft carrier, on original narrow straight deck carrier.

Those guys were amazing.

USS Hornet (CV-8) Revealed As Doolittle Raid Carrier (1945) - YouTube
Doolittle Raid Launch Footage (1942) - YouTube

Each time I drive I5 through Willows, CA I think about this event. Doolittle's crews brought their planes to the West Coast before the Hornet was ready to sail. To keep up their proficiency, the crews practiced the short takeoff at the little airfield at Willows. The owner of that field was one of Doolittle's buddies from the barnstorming days. You can see photos on the wall at Nancy's Café located on the airfield showing these activities. The field is now used mostly for ag planes that service the nearby rice fields.
 

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