A rigorous new analysis of America's legendary "Big Week" air campaign
which enabled the Allies to gain air superiority before D-Day.
In the years before the outbreak of World War II, there was a general
consensus among military strategists that strategic bombing had the
ability to win wars. However, no-one could foresee the devastation that
German radar-directed interceptors would inflict on large bomber
formations.
With the increasingly urgent need to eliminate these German
fighter-aircraft prior to D-Day, a concerted two-phase effort,
code-named "Operation Argument," was launched by USSAF. Targeting
aircraft factories with hundreds of heavy bombers escorted by the new
long-range P-51 Mustang, the operation, now known as the "Big Week"
campaign, was designed to destroy aircraft production on the ground and
force the Luftwaffe into combat to defend these vital facilities,
allowing the new escort fighters to take their toll on the German
interceptors. Packed with specially commissioned artwork and maps, this
title is a detailed and fascinating analysis of "Big Week"--history's
first ever successful offensive counterair (OCA) campaign.