THE STRIKING APPEARANCE OF LUFTWAFFE'S MISTEL COMPOSITE ATTACK
AIRCRAFT MIGHT SEEM RIDICULOUS TO MODERN EYES, BUT EMPLOYED CORRECTLY,
THESE ORIGINAL 'FIRE AND FORGET' WEAPONS WERE DEVASTATINGLY EFFECTIVE,
AS ALLIED SOURCES TESTIFY.
This book draws on a wealth of first-hand reports and revealing
contemporary photographs to tell the full, strange story of the Mistel
units. They were the product of a remarkable mix of desperation and
innovation, and were actually grounded in a pre-war, non-military
practise – the mounting of one aircraft atop another was initially
conceived to extend the ranges of passenger and mail-carrying
aircraft. But as early as 1942, German planners saw the potential for
use as a guided missile, and by the end of the war, the sight of a
Ju-88 lashed to a BF 109 or FW 190 fighter bearing down on an Allied
target was not as rare as one might expect.
This is a comprehensive account of the Mistel units, from their design
and development, through the first deployments at D-Day, to the last,
desperate missions against key bridges on the Oder and the Neisse in
the final weeks of the war.
Read more
Kleist’s race for oil
Product details
ISBN
9781472808479
Published
2020
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Bloomsbury UK
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author