Character-based study of why the German air force was defeatedRecounts
the Luftwaffe in combat from the blitzkrieg of 1939-40 and the Battle of
Britain to the Eastern Front and the Normandy campaignFrom its secret
post--World War I beginnings to its virtual destruction by the Allied
air forces, the story of the German air force is best told by examining
its leaders--brilliant, ambitious, ruthless, and deceitful men like
Hermann Goering, the drug-addicted Luftwaffe commander; Erhard Milch,
the half-Jewish head of aircraft production; and Adolf Galland, the
general of fighters who often clashed with Goering. Mitcham profiles
them and others while describing the Luftwaffe's battles--both in the
skies and behind the scenes--and explaining why it was so decisively
defeated.