The REAL Masters of the Air - Big Week, Day 1 - The USAAF and RAF Hit Leipzig - Animated

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  • Опубліковано 24 вер 2024
  • Play War Thunder now with my link, and get a massive, free bonus pack including vehicles, boosters and more: playwt.link/th...
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    In February 1944, Operation Argument, also known as "Big Week" begins. The combined might of RAF Bomber Command the USAAF 8th Air Force will hit aircraft production targets while drawing out the Luftwaffe into a massive air battle, where it will be destroyed by overwhelming long ranged Allied fighters. If the Luftwaffe can be destroyed here, Operation Overlord, the upcoming Allied invasion of France, will stand a far better chance of succeeding.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 959

  • @TheOperationsRoom
    @TheOperationsRoom  Рік тому +106

    Play War Thunder now with my link, and get a massive, free bonus pack including vehicles, boosters and more: playwt.link/theoperationsroom2023

    • @Crazy-pl1lo
      @Crazy-pl1lo Рік тому +5

      When you upload on both channels, is there a order in which you recommend watching them in?

    • @gattlinggun9881
      @gattlinggun9881 Рік тому +5

      REQUEST AB0UT K0REA WAR PLEASE...🙏🙏🙏

    • @sharkk127
      @sharkk127 Рік тому +11

      You know, after getting review bombed im really starting to wonder just how desperate gaijin is

    • @miroslan007
      @miroslan007 Рік тому

      It actually isn't that bad anymore

    • @Aztek_scrambler
      @Aztek_scrambler Рік тому

      It already has my soul o7

  • @genesisguadalupe7425
    @genesisguadalupe7425 Рік тому +2523

    The number of aircraft being deployed back in WW2 is just unimaginable in modern war. And your visualization on the video does the amount justice to how it would look much like a literal swarm

    • @Skorpychan
      @Skorpychan Рік тому +171

      Yeah, but the B-52 can carry an entire B-17 squadron's worth of bombs, and has only a few crewmen and no defensive guns.

    • @trentk268
      @trentk268 Рік тому +31

      How many girls would join this throw down? I'll bet it's a number close to zero.

    • @failtolawl
      @failtolawl Рік тому +38

      @@Skorpychan ok.

    • @danielgiusti6649
      @danielgiusti6649 Рік тому +13

      New Operations Room and Intel Report?! Well, I know what I’m doing tonight!

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Рік тому +101

      planes were cheaper, technology simpler, and a single fighter jet can carry 2x as many bombs as a single B-17.

  • @0xdeadbeef444
    @0xdeadbeef444 Рік тому +1091

    The sheer scale of these raids is crazy.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Рік тому +37

      until you realize the US dropped more bomb tonnage in Vietnam than all the bombs in WW2...

    • @justinblin
      @justinblin Рік тому +88

      I think he means the number of planes, not the bomb tonnage

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Рік тому +15

      @@justinblin I know, but when you look at the bomb tonnage, the sheer scale of the air war in Vietnam is stunning as well.

    • @reecedignan8365
      @reecedignan8365 Рік тому +30

      @@SoloRenegadeyup it’s surprising, until you note that the jets used could usually load up a pretty decent payload and that their return trips were much reduced to those conducted in WW2.
      I.e. in WW2 a bomber would usually do 1 raid a day.
      In Vietnam a fighter could do upwards of 100 sorties a day dropping bombs.
      You start to notice that said fighters quickly catch up with most WW2 bombers due to this.

    • @obvious-troll
      @obvious-troll Рік тому +18

      @@SoloRenegade52s and jets can carry a lot more bombs and it lasted longer

  • @crashburn3292
    @crashburn3292 Рік тому +436

    Imagine trying to fly a damaged B-17 over the English Channel at night, on your last running engine, with only one arm, knowing you'll have to belly land the plane still fully loaded with bombs. What a well-deserved Medal of Honor.

    • @vash42165
      @vash42165 Рік тому +23

      its a day raid

    • @crashburn3292
      @crashburn3292 Рік тому +52

      @@vash42165 Pardon my egregious mistake.

    • @afoster1621
      @afoster1621 Рік тому +15

      These stories deserves the honour of a featured film if there isn't one already - with care and attention to the precise facts during filming rather than embellished incorrectly. Perhaps filmed by Nolan or someone equally capable. Got to be better than IndiJ dialtone of dumbness or whatever putrid nonsense they are throwing out of Hollywood nowadays.

    • @alexsis1778
      @alexsis1778 Рік тому +11

      @@crashburn3292 I doubt he knew the landing gear would fail until the last minute. At that point between the injuries and the focus required i doubt he was thinking of anything but putting her on the ground in one piece.

    • @lubpost4014
      @lubpost4014 Рік тому +6

      definition of being a chad

  • @hdjono3351
    @hdjono3351 Рік тому +1330

    Ops room is one of the most consistently quality UA-camrs I’ve found.

    • @DanielloDD86
      @DanielloDD86 Рік тому +3

      Kurzegast also has really good consistent quality

    • @kingjulian420
      @kingjulian420 Рік тому +13

      @@DanielloDD86 Its a bot

    • @axel04_
      @axel04_ Рік тому +1

      ​@@kingjulian420nah a bot would copy the whole username and not say ops room

    • @kingjulian420
      @kingjulian420 Рік тому +1

      @@axel04_ The bots are getting good...

    • @snowbie.
      @snowbie. Рік тому +1

      @@kingjulian420 meds

  • @JamesThomas-gg6il
    @JamesThomas-gg6il Рік тому +487

    I had not heard of the "cabin in the sky III" and I am glad you put it out there. He could have easily just shoved everybody out and took their chances. But to fly wounded, in and out of consciousness, no maps, no help, full load of bombs and no landing gear...no sweat... Biggest pair of balls in the air that day.

    • @blaise1016
      @blaise1016 Рік тому +63

      While getting slapped back to consciousness by one of your crew members 😂

    • @JamesThomas-gg6il
      @JamesThomas-gg6il Рік тому +16

      @@blaise1016 yeah that's dedication

    • @NLTops
      @NLTops Рік тому +24

      @@blaise1016 To be fair, not a lot of time to gently wake someone up when you're flying around in a shared metal coffin. But I doubt there are many people as grateful to be slapped as him. I get where the OP is coming from when he says "no help", but it isn't entirely true. They were slaps that helped save everyone on board.

    • @davidbuckley2435
      @davidbuckley2435 Рік тому +28

      The crazy thing is that this wasn't the only time this happened. A Scottish pilot, William Reid, had an almost identical experience on November 3rd 1943. His Lancaster's cockpit got shot up by a night fighter and he was seriously wounded in the legs and hands. The oxygen system stopped working and he was buffeted by sub-zero winds through the shattered windscreen. However rather than turn back and run the risk of flying through the following bomber stream, he continued to the target, dropped his bombs and flew home. His decision extended their flight time by an hour and a half while blood kept dripping into his eyes from a head wound that he also received. Reid was awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions (the British equivalent of the Medal of Honor). He was interviewed as part of the "World at War" documentary series in 1973 where he talks about this event.
      The craziness doesn't end there though. After recovering in hospital, Reid was transferred to 617 Squadron (the "Dambusters") who were an elite bomber squadron that were entrusted with the most important bombing missions (V-1/V-2 rocket sites, the Tirpitz raids, etc) and usually used "Tallboy" and "Grand Slam" deep penetration bombs. In July 1944, while bombing a V-weapon storage facility near Reims, his plane was hit by a Tallboy that had been dropped by the Lancasters flying in the section 9000 feet above his section. The bomb tore through the fuselage, severing the control cables and causing the plane to pitch nose down. Reid made sure that his crew was all out before he jumped, and not a moment too soon. He broke his arm on landing and he was captured by a German patrol an hour later.
      After the war, he returned to university and worked as an agricultural adviser until his retirement in 1981. He died in 2001 in Crieff (central Scotland) at the age of 79.

    • @JamesThomas-gg6il
      @JamesThomas-gg6il Рік тому +5

      @@davidbuckley2435 absolutely the best story of a pilot so far that ive heard. Thank you for sharing that.

  • @goodshipkaraboudjan
    @goodshipkaraboudjan Рік тому +259

    As a pilot I cant fathom how insane it must have been for the bomber stream at night. Essentially VFR, unescorted and blind to each other. Not to mention with such a heaviy bomb load. The navigators did incredible work.

    • @sbfcapnj
      @sbfcapnj Рік тому +12

      Yeah no sane pilot would ever agree to this sort of mission these days and for good reason.

    • @teaser6089
      @teaser6089 Рік тому +23

      @@sbfcapnj That's cause these days we have fancy tech that makes shit save, back than they didn't know any better and the job had to be done.
      If we would be in the same situation now a days, facing the same challenges and the same tasks with the same tech, people would still line up.
      It's just that it's hard to imagine such a scenario, cause the world has been in relative peace compared to before WW2.

    • @AwakenedAvocado
      @AwakenedAvocado Рік тому

      Would've been awesome

    • @masterchief-vd1xs
      @masterchief-vd1xs Рік тому +5

      My city got bombed two times because they couldn't find their actual target and thought oh a small city, that's convenient... I mean yes it is impressive how they navigated most of the time, but there where so many mistakes don, too

    • @teaser6089
      @teaser6089 Рік тому +2

      @@masterchief-vd1xs Yeah Rotterdam got bombed by the allies as well cause they thought they already reached Germany ffs

  • @terraincognita2221
    @terraincognita2221 Рік тому +172

    I live in Leipzig and do a lot of research on the air war and flak defenses over our area. Suprised to see that animation, well done! Of the USAAF force, four B-17s and one P-51 went down in our area. RAF losses were plenty. Pieces of Lancaster LL719 (whole crew of F/O Richter was killed) that went down in that raid can be found in our museum B134a-Luftschutzbunker Krumpa. By the way, there was no Messerschmitt factory in leipzig. The name was Erla Maschinenwerk, but they built Bf 109 fighter planes. More aircraft industry nearby including Junkers, ATG and Mitteldeutsche Motorenwerke.

    • @eze8970
      @eze8970 Рік тому +7

      Thank you for the information, looked it up on Google maps, very interesting.

    • @nolianpazac8440
      @nolianpazac8440 Рік тому +3

      Great info !

    • @stefanebert7171
      @stefanebert7171 Рік тому +1

      Nicht schlecht! Hut ab und BG aus HH

    • @charlesdarwin6224
      @charlesdarwin6224 10 місяців тому +2

      If the factory produced messerschmitts, wouldn't it still be considered a messerschmitt factory?

    • @lurker-mq4fp
      @lurker-mq4fp 9 місяців тому +1

      Greetings from England! I want to go to Leipzig one day and see the museum, and drink good beer afterwards!

  • @jonny-b4954
    @jonny-b4954 Рік тому +264

    It would truly be terrifying (at least the first time) seeing hundreds and hundreds of bombers dropping bombs on your home city. The sound alone must be insane. I mean, sometimes they'd take an hour to overfly the city.

    • @NovemberSky3
      @NovemberSky3 Рік тому +42

      It would be terrifying every single time. No one on the receiving end gets used to shock and awe.

    • @CH-lc3yf
      @CH-lc3yf Рік тому +9

      People who experienced that as children were still terrified fifty years later.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Рік тому +34

      imagine how Vietnam felt.... the US dropped more tons of bombs on Vietnam than were dropped in all of WW2. Imagine all the bombs in the Battle of Britain, US strategic bombing of Europe (France, Germany, Italy, etc.), the US bombing campaign against Japan, the Naval bombs dropped on warships, the German and Russia bombs dropped in the Eastern front, and RAF bomber command, and more........all dropped on Vietnam.

    • @jonny-b4954
      @jonny-b4954 Рік тому +9

      @@NovemberSky3 Well, I know for a fact in videos seen from people going to air raid shelters that is does eventually become totally normal and part of life. You grow numb to it like anything. I doubt it would truly be terrifying after the 10th time. You'd be worried for your kids, home and stuff, for sure, but eventually I really do think the fear would wear off quite a bit. You'd replace it with anger

    • @NovemberSky3
      @NovemberSky3 Рік тому +27

      @@jonny-b4954 you’re seeing video, portraying events 80 years ago. People back then would be doing the same thing people do today. Put on a brave face, do what you gotta do and pray that one of those bombs doesn’t land on you. No one wants to be the first person to break down and set off a chain reaction. I can promise you that if you’re hearing hell raining down on Earth and not knowing if it’s your last day you’d be terrified, even if you’re not showing it. Just like the people in WW2.
      If the fear really wore off, then shell shock wouldn’t be a thing. Soldiers in foxholes experiencing hours of artillery barrages for days on end would not have said the worst thing was artillery. It’s why Stuka bombers had sirens, Katyusha rockets had Germans fleeing in terror. The psychological toll is immense and anyone who says they weren’t scared is lying.

  • @alexanderleach3365
    @alexanderleach3365 Рік тому +106

    During the Normandy Landings, the Luftwaffe launched a single raid by two Fw 190s that came in and strafed Gold and Juno Beaches.

    • @28pbtkh23
      @28pbtkh23 Рік тому +20

      There was also an FW190 which tried to bomb Pegasus Bridge.

    • @alexanderleach3365
      @alexanderleach3365 Рік тому

      @@28pbtkh23 I didn't know that. 😮

    • @28pbtkh23
      @28pbtkh23 Рік тому +15

      @@alexanderleach3365 - yeah. I saw it on one of the many good documentaries about D-Day. According to one of the eye-witnesses, the FW’s bomb actually hit the bridge’s paved roadway and skimmed off, landing in the canal. I kid you not. Perhaps he went on to strafe one of the beaches?

    • @alexanderleach3365
      @alexanderleach3365 Рік тому +1

      @@28pbtkh23 He may have done that.

    • @davidbuckley2435
      @davidbuckley2435 Рік тому +14

      @@alexanderleach3365 There were a lot of Luftwaffe sorties during the Normandy invasion, but they were mostly hit-and-run raids. They weren't able to do anything more than harass the ground troops, but I doubt that was much consolation to the men on the receiving end. My mum's great-uncle was wounded on D-Day +3 and was being transported to the casualty station on Sword Beach when the jeep he was in was strafed by a German fighter. The driver dove for cover, but the three men on stretchers at the rear of the jeep were all killed. He always objected to the popular narrative that the Luftwaffe weren't around during Normandy.

  • @corrinarobinson7078
    @corrinarobinson7078 Рік тому +71

    7:34 if the germans called the flairs 'christmas trees' would that make them... tannenbombs?...

    • @CH-lc3yf
      @CH-lc3yf Рік тому +7

      1st, it's "flares"
      2nd, it's "Christbäume"

    • @__hjg__2123
      @__hjg__2123 Рік тому +1

      under-rated. +3 points

  • @tdawg5742
    @tdawg5742 Рік тому +24

    For those who didn't know. Back in the the day, each bomber had a navigator with them. The navigator was in charge of where the planes would fly, when to drop the bombs and how to get back home in the dark. He had nothing but a map, a compass and a watch. These guys where capable of knowing how to get from Britain, to Paris, to Berlin and then back to Britain in the damn DARK. These guys were some of the smartest people in the armed service and truly amazing. These guys were able to find a super carrier in the middle of the ocean in the middle of the night because the USA and Japan were the only 2 nations who could conduct carrier strike runs in the middle of the night during WW2. Men were different back in the days.
    Edit - Navigators were taught how to use a technique called Celestial Navigation to use the stars to navigate in the night sky.

    • @jude6963
      @jude6963 Рік тому

      Built different

    • @primmakinsofis614
      @primmakinsofis614 Рік тому +6

      RAF aircraft also used H2S radar to help in navigation, although its usefulness as a navigation tool was limited. There were also electronic navigation aids: Gee, Oboe, and G-H. These were effective in getting aircraft to the correct place, but their range was limited to about 300 miles.
      Late in the war the U.S. developed LORAN, a long-range electronic navigation aid, but it arrived too late for use in Europe but did see use in the Pacific.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 6 місяців тому +2

      *_”Men were different back in the days.”_*
      No they weren’t. It wasn’t the men, it was the time.

    • @jackbaker747
      @jackbaker747 3 місяці тому

      Actually the first to conduct night time carrier missions was the Royal Navy

  • @Chrischi3TutorialLPs
    @Chrischi3TutorialLPs Рік тому +80

    Just as a sidenote: While the old city of Kiel is located on the western bank of the Firth of Kiel, the bombing raid's target, the naval yards, are located on the eastern bank (I know, i am being VERY nitpicky here, just thought i'd mention it)

    • @neilwilson5785
      @neilwilson5785 Рік тому +10

      I enjoy comments with interesting facts in them.

    • @thecheezybleezy7036
      @thecheezybleezy7036 Рік тому

      The bombing raid target was the airforce assembly, not the naval yards. At least at first

    • @Chrischi3TutorialLPs
      @Chrischi3TutorialLPs Рік тому +5

      @@thecheezybleezy7036 He said "the port of Kiel", so i'd assumed he was talking about the naval yards (since Kiel doesn't have much of a cargo port, not then and not now, when it comes to cargo facilities, Lübeck is the more important city)

    • @thecheezybleezy7036
      @thecheezybleezy7036 Рік тому

      @@Chrischi3TutorialLPs I can understand the confusion. I'm not entirely sure myself

    • @MrNicoJac
      @MrNicoJac Рік тому +1

      @@Chrischi3TutorialLPs
      I enjoyed the little detail, so thanks for nitpicking :)

  • @aziouss2863
    @aziouss2863 Рік тому +104

    What a sight this must have been looking up to all those planes.

    • @CH-lc3yf
      @CH-lc3yf Рік тому +10

      Terrifying sight indeed. Or so I was told.

    • @SMJ495
      @SMJ495 Рік тому +20

      There’s a great book by a German soldier called “the forgotten solder” and in it he recalls being on leave in Berlin and watching from a hilltop with his girlfriend as a massive daylight b-17 raid hit the city.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Рік тому +6

      The most surprising thing I have ever seen was on a YT video about Remote Control (RC) model planes, were a group of Germans who flew B-17 bombers and other Allied planes. No German planes though.
      I guess to some Germans during WW2, the sight of ever more Allied bombers appearing in the skies was the sign that the days of the Third Reich were numbered and these Germans welcomed it. The German hobbyists in the video must have been small kids or they must have inherited their passion from their fathers and grandfathers.
      Just to repeat and make clear: however devastating and bloody the Allied strategic bombing raids over Germany during WW2 were, a few Germans actually (but silently) cheered them on.
      If you'd like to see those RC B-17s made and flown by Germans, look up 'RC B-17 Aluminum Overcast'

    • @SgtMjr
      @SgtMjr Рік тому +8

      My old shop foreman was a kid in N Germany in '44-'45 and he said that they used to watch the RAF bombers flying home in the early morning and then watch the US bombers coming in shortly after. The kids' big adventure was to get to a crashed bomber before the police to scrounge one of the inflatable dinghies.

    • @MM22966
      @MM22966 Рік тому +6

      I always think of that one brief scene in the movie Fury now, where they are going the down and Brad Pitt points at the distant (massive) contrails of a bomber stream and a massive plume of black smoke on the horizon.
      "See that? That's a whole city on fire."

  • @hagalhagal9989
    @hagalhagal9989 Рік тому +132

    My favourite military history channel :)

  • @markrtoffeeman
    @markrtoffeeman Рік тому +40

    Doolittles tactics coupled with improved technology (P47 & P51 with drop tanks) really changed the dynamics of the air campaign of the US

    • @markrtoffeeman
      @markrtoffeeman Рік тому +3

      Question is. Do the US further adapt to any adaptations of the Luftwaffe

    • @navyseal1689
      @navyseal1689 Рік тому

      They adapt from 1943, so i guess they will adapt for new and better tactics

  • @alantoon5708
    @alantoon5708 Рік тому +21

    The P-47 provided most of the fighter cover; Big Week started with three P-51 groups. The 4th FG did not fly its' first P-51 mission until the last day of Big Week.
    That is also a story of legends...

    • @ramonzzzz
      @ramonzzzz Рік тому +2

      The 4th FG didn't fly its first escort mission in P-51s until the 29th of February, which was several days after Big Week concluded. The 354th and the 357th FGs were there at the start of Big Week and the 363rd joined them on the 24th.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 6 місяців тому

      The P-47s could only go so far. All the long range work was done by Mustangs. At the end of February there were only about three P-51 fighter groups, compared to eight P-47 fighter groups.
      Once the Eighth Air Force could go anywhere in Germany - and they could only do that with Mustangs - the whole dynamic changed. By April, P-51 groups were out scoring P-47 groups at a rate of four to one and that in half the number of missions.
      The P-51 changed everything.

  • @B17FlyingFortress
    @B17FlyingFortress Рік тому +18

    B-17 'Cabin in the Sky's serial number was 42-38109. I was assigned to the 305th Bomb Group on February 10th, 1944. Only ten days before Leipzig Mission. Thank you for the video. I love the animation :)

  • @thedaniel4999
    @thedaniel4999 Рік тому +128

    I’m sure this will be a perfectly normal comment section with no unnecessary controversy at all

    • @ThisOldHelmet
      @ThisOldHelmet Рік тому +26

      Strap-on spelled backwards is no-parts

    • @neilwilson5785
      @neilwilson5785 Рік тому +14

      The comments are normally respectful for this channel. Are trolls incoming?

    • @kiel_3222
      @kiel_3222 Рік тому +43

      ​@@neilwilson5785He means the Dresdoids, the ones who go "Hurr durr Dresden war crime hurr durr"

    • @q-tuber7034
      @q-tuber7034 Рік тому +10

      There was a kerfuffle over the Kashmir map that O.R. used in a recent India-Pakistan video

    • @georgea.567
      @georgea.567 Рік тому +9

      @@kiel_3222 It was a war crime no matter what you think of the war. You can support the allies and admit that the allied fire bombing raids were war crimes.

  • @terrybrown6057
    @terrybrown6057 Рік тому +44

    I have a relative who was killed on this mission, we think on the way home (20th - as they left at 11pm maybe)
    TJ Pullman was a rear gunner on a Lancaster, 626SQ. The plane went down in the sea just off the Dutch Freisen islands. 3 bodies washed up, his was never found. It was his first mission. It is presumed a German night fighter shot it down.
    Thank you for the video, it's added a lot of context to the mission we didn't know. 👍

    • @couchwarrior2449
      @couchwarrior2449 Рік тому

      The fish ate well that night.

    • @mynamejef7963
      @mynamejef7963 Рік тому +7

      ⁠@@couchwarrior2449 username fits

    • @alanjones6359
      @alanjones6359 Рік тому +2

      My father was on this OP said it was the scariest one he did out of the 29 completed until shot down over France, he was luckier than your relative he survived the war even being captured lived to the grand old age of 96

    • @alanjones6359
      @alanjones6359 Рік тому

      ​@@couchwarrior2449 troll off

    • @vito7428
      @vito7428 Рік тому

      ​@@couchwarrior2449Must be a sad existence to come online everyday to go'Hurr durr he deserved it'to everyone recounting their a relative's death at least 80 years ago by now. Yeah i'm sure the ghost of Hitler's gonna pin a knight's cross on you any day now for your valiant efforts

  • @trentk268
    @trentk268 Рік тому +228

    My uncle was shot down in one of these raids after SIXTY MISSIONS. The farmers who caught him tried to string him up. The Wehrmacht rescued him in the nick of time.

    • @jp__878
      @jp__878 Рік тому +166

      @@KrokLPModern German nationalist are funny 😂

    • @jp__878
      @jp__878 Рік тому +102

      @@KrokLPlet’s be real. If they tried the airman we’d have shot every SS soldier, all the way down to the logistics nerds and the cooks.

    • @owez7113
      @owez7113 Рік тому

      @@KrokLP ew go home

    • @Mr_Stitch
      @Mr_Stitch Рік тому +71

      ​@@KrokLPbro, it was thousands of bomber crews being ordered too by superiors.
      Just like your SS guards.
      It's war but 2 wrongs don't make a right
      Ps.
      Germany's civilian death count is literally still a world record.
      So shut it.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Рік тому +15

      @@jp__878 Talk about insanity. Of the famous Doolittle Raid, a few crewmembers were captured by the Japanese, 3 were executed.
      I didn't see the US execute all Japanese they captured after that.

  • @Alpha_Arc
    @Alpha_Arc Рік тому +12

    Slight inaccuracy on your Leipzig city map: nearly all of the big lakes shown around the city wouldn't have been there since they were pit mines for coal or gravel at the time and were turned into lakes only at the turn of the millenium.
    Greetings from Leipzig!

    • @PORRRIDGE_GUN
      @PORRRIDGE_GUN 7 місяців тому

      For texture, the animator used Google Earth satelite view

  • @emmgeevideo
    @emmgeevideo 10 місяців тому +6

    The pictured P-51s were not the B variant. The P-51B had the greenhouse canopy. The first P-51 with the bubble canopy was the P-51D. The D variant arrived soon after Big Week, not before.

    • @PORRRIDGE_GUN
      @PORRRIDGE_GUN 7 місяців тому +2

      The B and C model had the Malcolm hood which was bubble-ish and looked like the spitfire's canopy

  • @untruelie2640
    @untruelie2640 Рік тому +4

    There were several attacks on Leipzig during the war, but the most destructive ones were the one in December of 1943 and this one in February of 1944.
    My grandfather witnessed the previous attack on Leipzig (on the 4th of December 1943), which was exclusively a british night-time operation, from about ten kilometers away. He said that the firestorm was so intense that the whole sky glowed orange and he could see little burned pieces of paper raining down around him. They were the remnants of the "graphic neighbourhood", an entire city district consisting of printing factories and book publishers. This night marked the end of the "world capital of the book". Other important historic and cultural buildings as well as many residential areas were destroyed too and many of the scars can still be seen today.

  • @billy5179
    @billy5179 Рік тому +14

    Greetings from Leipzig. 😅 fan of the channel for a while now and this video will be special to me. Thanks OR. 😊

  • @VRichardsn
    @VRichardsn Рік тому +6

    Man, that sudden sight of the huge bomber stream at 6:20 is one hell of a sight.

  • @CH-lc3yf
    @CH-lc3yf Рік тому +12

    Thanks Operations Room for covering... my home town.

  • @gleggett3817
    @gleggett3817 Рік тому +3

    by the way, in case no one else has mentioned it . Spaatz is "Spots" not "Spats"

  • @RaymondCore
    @RaymondCore Рік тому +3

    Great story and I love the animation. My Uncle was a copilot of a B-17 in the 8th AAF. Shot down and bailed out over the English Channel and bailed out after a collision in the clouds on a delivery mission, he survived the war.

  • @28pbtkh23
    @28pbtkh23 Рік тому +23

    Those escort fighters really did make all the difference.

  • @christo0187
    @christo0187 Рік тому +6

    I knew a woman who was in a slave labor camp inside of leipzig during this Raid and she wrote a book about it. She wrote how they were placed under the least safe place in the basement but when the bombs came they landed near where all the german people were and buried them alive. They listened to the monsters scream until there lungs couldnt hold air

  • @DoktrDub
    @DoktrDub Рік тому +4

    We will never have thousands of tanks on a battlefield again, nor hundreds of bombers, and that’s probably a good thing, but wow it would have been an incredible sight to behold.

    • @jdlamb4212
      @jdlamb4212 Рік тому

      Probably? I think it's pretty good...

    • @philgiglio7922
      @philgiglio7922 7 місяців тому

      We might not be putting 1000 bombers and 300 fighters in the air on a single mission...but hundreds of aircraft participated in the opening night of Desert Storm.

  • @GoodForYou4504
    @GoodForYou4504 Рік тому +6

    I had the privilege of having an elderly B17 Navigator as a neighbor who is long gone now. One time he spoke, in a very relaxed manner, about how after some mission how difficult it was to move on the "catwalk" with so much frozen blood. The man got nothing but respect from me after that.

  • @tconnor07
    @tconnor07 Рік тому +9

    My grandfather’s older brother was an 8th Air Force pilot who went down with his bomber over southern Germany. I appreciate the bomber content because it helps me understand what he was going through

  • @maryambintghassani2341
    @maryambintghassani2341 Рік тому +2

    Note, it wasn't only the Mustang and the fighter sweep tactics, but also Doolittle's realisation that the P-38 was almost useless as an escort but excellent at attacking German airfields. This put several hundred previously useless aircraft into the fight during that decisive winter, and broke up the Luftwaffe assembly areas (P47s helped too, obviously).

  • @falcons1931
    @falcons1931 Рік тому +35

    My great grandfather served in the 69th infantry division, the same divison that captured Leipzig and met the soviets on the Elbe river. He never spoke about the war due to the many horrors he witnessed. He spoke about the destruction the city endured over big week. The damage achieved was sustained until the liberation of Leipzig. He also has these German nazi metals he took off of dead soldiers, he was a Jewish man fighting for the survival of humanity and his religon.

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 Рік тому +1

      Why did we let Leipzig go to the Soviets despite us being there first?

    • @falcons1931
      @falcons1931 Рік тому +2

      @@livethefuture2492 all the Allie’s agreed they would not let territory disputes interrupt the final days of the war. It wasn’t until the Potsdam agreement was signed that Leipzig would be in east Germany. Berlin, Prague, and Vienna could be taken by any of the Allies. The land would later be split off during negotiations between the west and the soviets

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 Рік тому +5

      I knew they had already agreed to the occupation zones of germany in Yalta in February 1945.
      But i didn't know they had any arrangements for the other places like Prague, Vienna and other places in eastern europe.
      I know after the war the west would be often criticized for 'selling out' eastern europe to the Soviets. That we let them take too much and so on.
      Though realistically i don't really think the Allies could have done anything about it. The Soviets were going to occupy most of eastern Europe anyway. Short of starting a war with russia to push her out of eastern Europe, i don't see how they could have avoided that.

    • @falcons1931
      @falcons1931 Рік тому +2

      @@livethefuture2492 it was a chaotic time a regime was collapsing and both powers wanted nothing more than to end the war. Stalins hardline stance on the iron curtain was extremely difficult to negotiate against. Nobody wanted another war to be started from territorial disputes. Therefore our leaders at the time decided they couldn’t do much about stalins demands. You can’t really argue with another country when they suffered 8.6 million losses. The soviets did indeed do majority of the fighting in Europe.

  • @fastmadcow
    @fastmadcow Рік тому +2

    At Airventure we got to see 120 ww2 aircraft flying around. So I would imagine this many bombers and fighters would be even more staggering to witness. I’ll never forget the sound!

  • @TheOperationsRoom
    @TheOperationsRoom  Рік тому +8

    Slight audio issue on the corresponding Intel Report - standby for reupload

  • @RonaldAndrew
    @RonaldAndrew Рік тому +1

    Pardon me if I've done this before.
    Your detail is extrodinary.
    Your method of expression and determination is second to none. "Thank you so very much".
    I'm quite sure that if i zoomed in on any one of those planes down there I would'nt only see faces but
    I would see the right faces in the right planes. Of course I would.
    Thats how you guys go!
    Thanks for that.

  • @Jimorian
    @Jimorian Рік тому +19

    I haven't been able to find the reference again, but I read that Eisenhower had to order the 8th Air Force to NOT run tricks to disguise where the bombers were going during the run-up to D-Day because the point was to get the Luftwaffe to engage with everything they had so that the US fighters could shoot them down. Hopefully somebody else here knows if this is true or not.

    • @lucasselvidge-fd9ik
      @lucasselvidge-fd9ik Рік тому +3

      Yes, the 8th air force also didn't use drop tanks, though they were available and the British even made some local ones, to draw our more fighters to engage bombers.
      The bomber crews were not given escorts for the sole purpose of driving the Luftwaffe out of the area so overlord could happen without air opposition

    • @primmakinsofis614
      @primmakinsofis614 Рік тому +1

      @@lucasselvidge-fd9ik _Yes, the 8th air force also didn't use drop tanks_
      Drop tanks for both the P-47 and P-51 were available by Feb. 1944.
      _The bomber crews were not given escorts for the sole purpose of driving the Luftwaffe out of the area_
      That makes no sense. You defeat the Luftwaffe by shooting down its fighters. You need fighter escorts to do that.

    • @lucasselvidge-fd9ik
      @lucasselvidge-fd9ik Рік тому

      @@primmakinsofis614 drop tanks were available for the p 47 from the day they were shipped to England, British p47 were using drop tanks immediately when they arrived
      And not it makes sense, we were willing to exchange a 4 engine bomber for a single engine fighter because we could withstand the attrition, and that was the plan
      The p47 was fully capable of escorting the bombers to and from the sweinfort raids, but the doctrine of the USAAF was no drop tanks, see also why even though the p-39 and p40 had noted poor range, no drop tanks were provided which would have eliminated over half the complaints against these planes, turbo charging or a better super charger system would have fixed the high altitude performance issue, but we just made them regardless and gave them to the Russians for the cheap

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 6 місяців тому

      @@lucasselvidge-fd9ik No, that is incorrect. At the time of the Schweinfurt raids, the P-47 could only be fitted with a centreline tank and that was not sufficient to get them to Schweinfurt and back. By the time of ‘Big Week’, only about 20% of P-47s had been re-plumbed to carry under wing drop tanks, a long, slow process that had to be carried out in the field and involved cutting metal.
      As a result, few P-47s could get beyond the Dutch border and none could get as far as Magdeburg. Adding more drop tanks could not solve the basic problem of the P-47. The only thing that could was increasing internal fuel, which was the case with the D-25 variant and that did not see combat until May, 1944.

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 Рік тому +20

    Field Marshall Gerd von Runstedt : "Lets get to the point. Air power?"
    Major General Gunther Blumentritt : "Air power, Field Marshal... Air power is minimal...what do you think we should do sir?"
    Field Marshall Gerd von Runstedt : "Ammunition? Tanks, troops, replacements?"
    Major General Gunther Blumentritt : "Also minimal..."
    Field Marshall Gerd von Runstedt: "End the War, you fools..."
    -A Bridge Too Far

  • @MrNomanTV
    @MrNomanTV Рік тому +20

    The air raid ones are always so good

  • @st3phan321
    @st3phan321 Рік тому +18

    can we just agree on the facrt that animating so many plains is a blessing. good job!

  • @djsi38t
    @djsi38t Рік тому +4

    They got to sleep in clean sheets...drink in the bar at night....eat good food and go on dates with women....BUT when they went out on a mission they were trapped in a flying casket at 10 thousand feet.Must have been so terrifying for those brave young men.

  • @woodrax
    @woodrax Рік тому +1

    This presentation is so good, I felt actual joy when the description of the bomber crews feeling such happiness with their Mustang and Thunderbolt escorts was read.

  • @berenhamilton3321
    @berenhamilton3321 Рік тому +56

    "The Nazis entered this war under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everyone else, and nobody was going to bomb them..."- Arthur Travers Harris

    • @gabriellegomez2005
      @gabriellegomez2005 Рік тому +1

      I read about Harris in the book Lancaster. Such an interesting character, sometimes annoying. He loved the Lancaster so much that he refused orders to relocate Lancaster units on other combat roles.
      Also, he's a believer of en masse strategic bombing. A war of attrition in the air if you will.

    • @untruelie2640
      @untruelie2640 Рік тому +3

      ​@@gabriellegomez2005I always wonder why the British thought mass terror bombing of civilian targets would work against Germany when it hadn't worked at all against Britain. In the end it was more or less useless, except some industry targets (but they could've been destroyed without devastating all major german cities). All this death and suffering for nothing. This still makes me angry, especialy because I know how many cultural treasures and historical buildings were destroyed, not to mentioned the peoole who died.

    • @primmakinsofis614
      @primmakinsofis614 Рік тому +3

      @@untruelie2640 I would point out the idea that all Bomber Command did was incendiary raids on German cities is a myth. It in fact hit plenty of military targets, and the peak year for incendiary usage was 1943.
      Area raids did general economic damage rather than specific economic damage when the raid went after a specific military target. That general damage did have negative effects on the German war economy, though obviously it was less efficient than going after specific economic nodes.

    • @mikemurphy5898
      @mikemurphy5898 Рік тому

      CoughcoughPutincoughcough

    • @couchwarrior2449
      @couchwarrior2449 Рік тому

      Well, if it's a war crime for them to bomb civilians, then it's a war crime for the Allies too. Otherwise you are the worst of hypocrites.

  • @drnazgul580
    @drnazgul580 7 місяців тому +1

    Wow another completely historically accurate documentary with no bias whatsoever (newsflash, its not)

  • @asc.445
    @asc.445 Рік тому +7

    My mum was in Leipzig during the war. She told me it was horrendous.
    Her worst memory were the bodies and the huge rats feeding on them. It haunted her all of her life.
    We went back to Leipzig in 1988. She pointed out not much had changed since she left in 45 to escape the Russians.

  • @chooyongming110
    @chooyongming110 7 місяців тому +1

    19:20 wonder how red his face is after getting slapped again and again to regain consciousness

  • @JBRAI22
    @JBRAI22 Рік тому +3

    YES! I’ve been wanting this for AGES now! Thank you so much!

  • @emmanuelzozobrado5981
    @emmanuelzozobrado5981 4 місяці тому +2

    The allied air power is a true wonder to behold

  • @samuelbarreto6752
    @samuelbarreto6752 11 місяців тому +3

    Waiting anxiously for the next parts of the Big Week 😅

  • @mkien2005
    @mkien2005 Рік тому +1

    You don't have to go to hell to find fire.

  • @PancakeBoi
    @PancakeBoi Рік тому +5

    I used to think America was given the disadvantage by flying during the day, today I realized just how much of an OP advantage it was, you get fighter escort and clearer vision of the target objective (depending on the weather).

    • @obvious-troll
      @obvious-troll Рік тому +6

      They were definitely at a disadvantage in 1943. They got mauled so bad they had to terminate daylight bombing operations over Germany for 6 months until the P51d could be introduced in early 1944.

    • @primmakinsofis614
      @primmakinsofis614 Рік тому +2

      @@obvious-troll At one point the British tried to convince the Americans to switch over to nighttime bombing. The U.S. countered that such a change would require a massive change to the training programs as well as having to refit the bombers with the appropriate nighttime operating equipment, all of which would cause delays to the U.S. bombing efforts.
      As it happened, a couple of USAAF bomb squadrons did participate in nighttime raids with the British as an experiment.
      In 1944, the British started flying some of its heavy bomber missions in the daytime. By war's end roughly one-third of sorties had been flown during daylight.

  • @DeltaDemon1
    @DeltaDemon1 Рік тому +2

    "and 7 mosquitoes"...Reminds me of a scene in, I think, Harlem Nights when everyone is shooting Thompson submachines guns all over the store front and the one guy shoots one shot with his revolver after they stop. Yes, I know that the mosquitoes were acting as pathfinders and without them, the big bombers wouldn't have hit the broad side of a continent but the scene makes me laugh.

  • @Will_M600
    @Will_M600 Рік тому +4

    Doing the rounds with the 4000lbs

    • @obvious-troll
      @obvious-troll Рік тому +3

      Arthur “Brit RAF, lit AF” Harris

    • @Will_M600
      @Will_M600 Рік тому +3

      ​@@obvious-trollgreat british bake off champion 1944

  • @gleggett3817
    @gleggett3817 Рік тому +1

    You say "P-51B" Mustang but image is of bubble canopy P-51Ds which don't reach Europe until later in 1945

  • @the_taxi_guy2086
    @the_taxi_guy2086 Рік тому +7

    Always a great day when operation room posts a new video. Very high quality and great narration. Great video!

  • @PeterBrennanfisic
    @PeterBrennanfisic Рік тому +2

    Looking forward to seeing 'Big week, Day two'.

  • @JackStewart316
    @JackStewart316 Рік тому +15

    I can honestly say this is the most consistently high quality and interesting channel I've ever come across.

  • @gabriellegomez2005
    @gabriellegomez2005 Рік тому +1

    I suggest you read the book "Lancaster" if you're interested in reading about the british strategic bombing raids.
    The book covers all the raids the Lancaster took part in. The guy who designed it, the man who commanded bomber command. And also the accounts of the guys who flew them.

  • @dingusdean1905
    @dingusdean1905 Рік тому +78

    “The Nazis entered this war under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everyone else, and nobody was going to bomb them. At Rotterdam, London, Warsaw, and half a hundred other places, they put their rather naive theory into operation…”
    Reaping the whirlwind indeed.

    • @obvious-troll
      @obvious-troll Рік тому +12

      Hello Bomber Harris, there is a phone call for you.
      It’s from the Based department

    • @TheTestyDuck
      @TheTestyDuck Рік тому +6

      Do it again bomber Harris!

    • @28pbtkh23
      @28pbtkh23 Рік тому +5

      That’s why we should feel no guilt. Only a wuss would feel guilty.

    • @Siddingsby
      @Siddingsby Рік тому +11

      Start shit, get hit 💥

    • @dudududu1926
      @dudududu1926 Рік тому +14

      Nazi in 1940: "Haha, our bombers are gonna erase London from the map 😈"
      Nazi in 1944: "No you can't bomb our city. That's a war crime 😡"

  • @dougmasters4579
    @dougmasters4579 Рік тому +1

    That was awesome man, what a video. 2 missions in one, so much detail and suspense. Well done.

  • @kbearl
    @kbearl Рік тому +3

    Always have had mad respect for Doolittle since reading his biography, glad to see him getting recognition in this video.

  • @Kenneth_James
    @Kenneth_James Рік тому +2

    Try to imagine 1000 bombers. 2 B-52s is an incredible sight. 1 B-2 is awesome. But 1000 bombers. Wow.

  • @KomarBrolan
    @KomarBrolan Рік тому +3

    Nice work!

  • @idocanals
    @idocanals Рік тому

    My Grandfather flew the Bristol Beaufighter for most of the war, including air support on D-Day. He would never speak of any actions he played a part in other than to say he lost a lot of friends.
    We studied many of his pilot logs after he passed away. One that stands out was that he was shot down on D-Day and managed to get almost all the way back to England. He ditched in the sea just a few hundred yards from shore and remarked 'there was so many boats, I was pick up in minutes'. He was back in the air in 48 hours.

  • @ZMikluscak
    @ZMikluscak Рік тому +3

    Great stuff right here. Not much out there on the British bomber effort in WWI like the USAAF. I would like to see more on Bomber Command. I bet they had a hard time over Europe as well.

    • @obvious-troll
      @obvious-troll Рік тому +6

      It was extremely dangerous to be Bomber Command. They had the highest casualty rate out of any allied unit in WW2. Out of 120,000 who served in Bomber Command in WW2, over 55,540 were killed in action. That was a 44% fatality rate, which was only matched by the U Boat crews.

  • @MadilynnBrock-f5w
    @MadilynnBrock-f5w Рік тому +2

    My favourite military history channel :). The sheer scale of these raids are crazy..

  • @jakstat9880
    @jakstat9880 Рік тому +3

    babe wake up new op room!!

  • @736693
    @736693 Рік тому +1

    In 1943 the Luftwaffe converted their Fw 190’s to bomber destroyers or heavy fighters by adding more cannons or machine guns. While such additional armaments made the Fw 190’s more effective against the B-17’s, the extra weight with those armaments made the Fw 190’s more vulnerable & less maneuverable against the P-51’s & P-47’s.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 6 місяців тому

      This had an interesting flow on effect. In April 1944, there was a serious spike in bomber losses. This was in spite of the fact that there were simply fewer interceptions but those interceptions which did happen wee more successful. The reason was the switch from the usual MG151 20mm canon to the 30mm Mk108 cannon. It took about 25 hits from a 20mm to take down a heavy bomber but only about 5 hits from a 30mm.
      There is a channel called US WWII Bombers, or something, which did a video on it.
      Once the escorts shot down enough German fighters - around July - Flak actually became more dangerous to American bombers. That also coincided with the strangulation of fuel supplies.

  • @usmcdevildog3497
    @usmcdevildog3497 Рік тому +7

    Tossing in a vote for some MACV-SOG

  • @WtSonar
    @WtSonar Рік тому +1

    Great video as always, was also great to meet you at tankfest 👍

  • @afriyam3228
    @afriyam3228 Рік тому +3

    Bro I just read a whole book on the bomber war and it’s so cool to see everything mentioned there mentioned here.

  • @novat9731
    @novat9731 Рік тому +1

    Videos such as these add perspective to reality most have only read about. It makes me understand how the Germans saw the 'Komet' interceptor rocket airplane as a viable alternative, to flying relatively slow piston engines through a 800 fighter screen in order to hit a 1000 bomber formation.

  • @aldosigmann419
    @aldosigmann419 Рік тому +1

    Excellent breakdown with accompanying graphics to boot. I never miss an episode!

  • @zealman79
    @zealman79 Рік тому +3

    i watched the first 10 secs and i liked it - i'll watch the rest later when i have time because i know it'll be excellent

  • @saiajin82
    @saiajin82 Рік тому +1

    This series is going to be HOT FIRE on both channels!! Thanks, I really enjoyed that video.

  • @chaosXP3RT
    @chaosXP3RT Рік тому +6

    "The Allies contributed nothing in WWII. The USSR won WWII."

    • @MintyLime703
      @MintyLime703 Рік тому +2

      It's no surprise that most people who fully believe that nonsense are marxists. Hitler never intended for war with the Allies over Poland and yet they still came dangerously close to winning the eastern front and the desperately needed agriculture and oil that would come with it. It's a testament to their determination that the Soviets pulled it together, but they never would've gotten the chance without the other fronts and the shit ton of lend lease. They even got solo'd by Finland and barely scraped together a "victory"; the idea that they could've taken the Axis completely alone is just laughable considering how badly the war went for them early war as it was.

  • @Bob.W.
    @Bob.W. Рік тому +1

    My uncle's B-24 went down in 1943. Flak took out two engines and turned the ship into a blazing hulk. All the officers up front died, including my uncle. The gunners got out, fortunately. Flak was bad stuff. German fighters harassed the bomber until it hit the sea off Holland.

  • @0xmassive526
    @0xmassive526 Рік тому +4

    It's almost fiction to me at this point. Crazy mindblowing. Great job on the vid.

  • @shingshongshamalama
    @shingshongshamalama Рік тому +1

    Hundreds of civilian casualties and dozens of lost air crews versus poor target engagement. You'd think Bomber Command would start rethinking high altitude heavy bombing.

    • @primmakinsofis614
      @primmakinsofis614 Рік тому +1

      General economic damage may not be as hindering to the enemy as specific economic damage, but it is hindering nonetheless. Nighttime raids siphoned off plenty of multi-engine aircraft into the night-fighter role, aircraft that could have been put to use elsewhere; the pressure of bombing caused a huge distortion in the allocation of heavy artillery into the anti-air role, resulting in far less artillery shooting at Allied soldiers and tanks; hundreds of thousands of workers were channeled into the repair of bomb damage, workers who could have been engaged in the production of war materials.

    • @shingshongshamalama
      @shingshongshamalama Рік тому

      @@primmakinsofis614 I'm more focused on the fact that they could have achieved honestly better, more efficient results using other bombing methods instead of enormous flights of high altitude, extremely inaccurate saturation bombing.

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 Рік тому +5

    "Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning." This is the beginning of the end for Germany.

    • @neilwilson5785
      @neilwilson5785 Рік тому

      Stalingrad, Kursk, and El Alamein was the beginning of the end. Germany had d-day and Bagration to look forward to in the near future.

  • @imnothefather027
    @imnothefather027 Рік тому +1

    I have to say i am an avid fan of your work. The details and research that goes into your videos is impressive. Thank you and keep up the great work. NZ

  • @Sithman1776
    @Sithman1776 Рік тому +4

    It would be awesome if you did a segment on the first battle between the Colonial Marines and the aliens in the movie Aliens (1986),
    directed by James Cameron. I know it’s sci-fi, but it would be awesome to see a tactical overview. Talk about how the troops inserted, how the two teams split up, how they realized that firing bullets might blow the whole place up, and how the few survivors fought their way out. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE!

  • @herbers8791
    @herbers8791 Рік тому

    1:19
    This was for me the the realisation of how Mahan`s naval theory applies to aircraft.
    Thank you so much.

  • @shogun2215
    @shogun2215 Рік тому +4

    This isnt a comment about the video, more about the sponsor.
    Do not, under any circumstances, play War Thunder. The developers have changed the ingame economy to make the grind impossible for free to play members, and almost impossible even for those with premium accounts. They are trying to force you to spend real money in their game. Do not support them.
    .

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Рік тому +4

    This history channel is the embodiment of quality over quantity, I respect 4 years of dedication

  • @gnperdue
    @gnperdue Рік тому

    Gosh, what a video. The in-depth stories of a few of those involved really drives home that every plane, on both sides, had a story to tell, with real people behind them. Makes the sacrifice and honor of duty hit really, really hard. Yeesh. It’s easy to glorify war, but this sort of stuff makes me tear up

  • @JayDarrelMalibong
    @JayDarrelMalibong Рік тому +3

    Can you do girls und panzer battles.

  • @keithfarrell3370
    @keithfarrell3370 Рік тому +1

    You can see your hard work in every second of the presentation. Fantastic

  • @panic_2001
    @panic_2001 Рік тому +5

    11:30 minutes
    another great victory for British Bomber Command:
    achieved almost nothing
    Killed 970 women and children
    580 flight crew lost
    Without the 8th US Air Force, the RAF would have completely lost the air war over Germany by May 1944 at the latest

    • @naamadossantossilva4736
      @naamadossantossilva4736 Рік тому

      Imagining how much more effective the bomb raids would be with both airforces fills me with hatred of Arthur Harris.

    • @obvious-troll
      @obvious-troll Рік тому +1

      American tries not to take all the credit for winning WW2 challenge *impossible*

    • @ChrisCrossClash
      @ChrisCrossClash Рік тому

      Learn some history first you anti-British tw*t

    • @orwellboy1958
      @orwellboy1958 Рік тому

      @@naamadossantossilva4736oh you poor little snowflake, what do you think the Luftwaffe were doing from 1940 onwards. Stop judging yesterday's actions by today's standards.

    • @orwellboy1958
      @orwellboy1958 Рік тому

      Ah, U.S. good and British bad, even though they are doing the same job. Typical yank, where were the 8th in 1940 / 41. Get you head out of Hollywood and step into the real world.

  • @CD-SU
    @CD-SU Рік тому +1

    same old, same old Operations Room... Brilliant!!!!!!

  • @randomlyentertaining8287
    @randomlyentertaining8287 3 дні тому

    Funny, I'm listening to this while playing War Thunder in a Do 217 N-2, a Do 17 modified for anti-bomber night fighting with four 20mm cannons mounted pointing upwards in the fuselage.

  • @jonfoulkes3160
    @jonfoulkes3160 5 місяців тому

    Didn't think I was able to be shocked by ww2 facts anymore, BUT, the amount of aircraft!!!! Holy F. Anyone remember that shot from FURY "keep pounding them", gave me goosebumps. This puts it into perspective 😮
    The logistics are utterly mind boggling to me 🥴

  • @jacobrzeszewski6527
    @jacobrzeszewski6527 Рік тому +1

    Why did my mind immediately read the title as "The USAAF and RAF hit Lazerpig"?

  • @ThedwarfsizedWorkshop
    @ThedwarfsizedWorkshop Рік тому +1

    Although I absolutely see why those raids were necessary, having the destruction of my hometown explained in this great a detail is a bit eerie. Also: we do find unexploded ordnance on every bigger construction site till today. Fun for generations...

  • @gleggett3817
    @gleggett3817 Рік тому +1

    The Bomber Command operations war diary records the diversion raid against Kiel as laying mines outside the port - rather than a direct attack on the city itself.

  • @hzaagman8005
    @hzaagman8005 Рік тому +1

    0:38 A minor point of criticism: the map you're showing here is not accurate for 1944. On this map the Flevopolder in The Netherlands is shown as dry land, but this was open water in 1944. One half of this polder only became dry land in the 1950's, the other half in the 1960's.
    It may be nitpicky to criticise you for this, but I feel that in order to be as historically accurate as possible, this kind of detail shouldn't be overlooked. Especially considering that plenty of Allied bombers were shot down and crashed into the water that is now the dry land of the Flevopolder.

  • @avnut5517
    @avnut5517 Рік тому +1

    These are of better quality than any I say during my education.
    Thank you!