This is the history of how the mighty Gothic Line was defeated by
American air power, in one of the most pivotal but least-known air
campaigns of World War II. By late 1944, the Italian Campaign was
secondary to the campaigns in France, and Allied forces were not
strong enough to break the Germans' mighty Gothic Line. These
fortifications were supplied by rail through the Alps, with trains
arriving hourly and delivering 600,000 tons of supplies a month,
enough to keep the German Army going forever. But in the bitter winter
of 1944–45, the mighty Gothic Line would be defeated by American air
power in one of the most pivotal but least-known air campaigns of
World War II. It would not be a direct assault; instead Operation
Bingo would ruthlessly cut the Germans' supply lines and leave them
starved. However, it would not be easy. The rail routes were defended
by a formidable array of heavy flak, and every raid was expected.
Conditions were freezing, and even in electric flying suits, men
suffered both hypoxia and frostbite. By the end of February, the
previous eight-hour rail journey took the Germans 3-4 days on the
wrecked railroad, and soon supplies were barely enough to keep the
army alive. On April 12, the Allied ground attack began, and within
ten days the German command in Northern Italy sued for surrender, the
first German force in Europe to do so. Packed with first-hand accounts
and rare photos from the 57th Bomb Wing Archives, this book is a
fascinating history of the most successful US battlefield interdiction
campaign in history, immortalized in the writing of bombardier Joseph
Heller, in his novel Catch 22.
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The USAAF starves out the German Army
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472853394
Publisert
2022
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter