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Strategic bombing

Strategic bombing is a systematically organized and executed attack from the air which can utilize strategic bombers, long- or medium-range missiles, or nuclear-armed fighter-bomber aircraft to attack targets deemed vital to the enemy's war-making capability. It is a military strategy used in total war with the goal of defeating the enemy by destroying its morale, its economic ability to produce and transport materiel to the theatres of military operations, or both. The term terror bombing is used to describe the strategic bombing of civilian targets without military value, in the hope of damaging an enemy's morale.

Tokyo after the massive firebombing attack on the night of March 9–10, 1945, the single most destructive raid in military aviation history. The Tokyo firebombing cut the city's industrial productivity by half and killed around 100,000 civilians.

One of the strategies of war is to demoralize the enemy so that peace or surrender becomes preferable to continuing the conflict. Strategic bombing has been used to this end. The phrase "terror bombing" entered the English lexicon towards the end of World War II and many strategic bombing campaigns and individual raids have been described as terror bombing by commentators and historians. Because the term has pejorative connotations, some, including the Allies of World War II, have preferred to use euphemisms such as "will to resist" and "morale bombings".[1][2]

The theoretical distinction between tactical and strategic air warfare was developed between the two world wars. Some leading theorists of strategic air warfare during this period were the Italian Giulio Douhet, the Trenchard school in the United Kingdom, and General Billy Mitchell in the United States. These theorists were highly influential, both on the military justification for an independent air force (such as the Royal Air Force) and in influencing political thoughts on a future war as exemplified by Stanley Baldwin's 1932 comment that the bomber will always get through.

Enemy morale edit

One of the aims of war is to demoralize the enemy; facing continual death and destruction may make the prospect of peace or surrender preferable. The proponents of strategic bombing between the world wars, such as General Douhet, expected that direct attacks upon an enemy country's cities by strategic bombers would lead to a rapid collapse of civilian morale so that political pressure to sue for peace would lead to a rapid conclusion. When such attacks were tried in the 1930s—in the Spanish Civil War and the Second Sino-Japanese War—they were ineffective. Commentators observed the failures and some air forces, such as the Luftwaffe, concentrated their efforts upon direct support of the troops.[3][4]

The term "terror bombing" edit

Terror bombing is an emotive term used for aerial attacks planned to weaken or break enemy morale.[5] Use of the term to refer to aerial attacks implies the attacks are criminal according to the law of war,[6] or if within the laws of war are nevertheless a moral crime.[7] According to John Algeo in Fifty Years among the New Words: A Dictionary of Neologisms 1941–1991, the first recorded usage of "Terror bombing" in a United States publication was in a Reader's Digest article dated June 1941, a finding confirmed by the Oxford English Dictionary.[8][9]

Aerial attacks described as terror bombing are often long range strategic bombing raids, although attacks which result in the deaths of civilians may also be described as such, or if the attacks involve fighters strafing they may be labelled "terror attacks".[10]

German propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and other high-ranking officials of Nazi Germany[11] frequently described attacks by the Royal Air Force (RAF) and the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) during their strategic bombing campaigns as Terrorangriffe—terror attacks.[nb 1][nb 2] The Allied governments usually described their bombing of cities with other euphemisms such as area bombing (RAF) or precision bombing (USAAF), and for most of World War II the Allied news media did the same. However, at a SHAEF press conference on 16 February 1945, two days after the bombing of Dresden, British Air Commodore Colin McKay Grierson replied to a question by one of the journalists that the primary target of the bombing had been on communications to prevent the Germans from moving military supplies and to stop movement in all directions if possible. He then added in an offhand remark that the raid also helped destroy "what is left of German morale." Howard Cowan, an Associated Press war correspondent, filed a story about the Dresden raid. The military press censor at SHAEF made a mistake and allowed the Cowan cable to go out starting with "Allied air bosses have made the long awaited decision to adopt deliberate terror bombing of great German population centers as a ruthless expedient to hasten Hitler's doom." There were follow-up newspaper editorials on the issue and a longtime opponent of strategic bombing, Richard Stokes MP, asked questions in the House of Commons on 6 March.[12]

The controversy stirred up by the Cowan news report reached the highest levels of the British Government when on 28 March 1945 the Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, sent a memo by telegram to General Ismay for the British Chiefs of Staff and the Chief of the Air Staff in which he started with the sentence "It seems to me that the moment has come when the question of bombing of German cities simply for the sake of increasing the terror, though under other pretexts, should be reviewed...."[13][14] Under pressure from the Chiefs of Staff and in response to the views expressed by Chief of the Air Staff Sir Charles Portal, and the head of Bomber Command, Arthur "Bomber" Harris, among others, Churchill withdrew his memo and issued a new one.[14] This was completed on 1 April 1945 and started instead with the usual euphemism used when referring to strategic bombing: "It seems to me that the moment has come when the question of the so called 'area-bombing' of German cities should be reviewed from the point of view of our own interests....".[15]

Many strategic bombing campaigns and individual raids of aerial warfare have been described as "terror bombing" by commentators and historians since the end of World War II, but because the term has pejorative connotations, others have denied that such bombing campaigns and raids are examples of "terror bombing".

Defensive measures edit

Defensive measures against air raids include:[16]

  • attempting to shoot down attackers using fighter aircraft and anti-aircraft guns or surface-to-air missiles
  • the use of air raid shelters to protect the population
  • air raid sirens
  • setting up civil defence organisations with air raid wardens, firewatchers, rescue and recovery personnel, firefighting crews, and demolition and repair teams to rectify damage
  • Blackouts – extinguishing all lights at night to make bombing less accurate
  • Dispersal of war-critical factories to areas difficult for bombers to reach
  • Duplication of war-critical manufacturing to "shadow factories"
  • Building factories in tunnels or other underground locations that are protected from bombs
  • Setting up decoy targets in rural areas, mimicking an urban area with fires intended to look like the initial effects of a raid

History and origins edit

World War I edit

 
A 1918 Air Raid rehearsal, evacuating children from a hospital.

Strategic bombing was used in World War I, though it was not understood in its present form. The first aerial bombing of a city was on 6 August 1914 when the German Army Zeppelin Z VI bombed, with artillery shells, the Belgian city of Liège, killing nine civilians.[17] The second attack was on the night of 24–25 August 1914, when eight bombs were dropped from a German airship onto the Belgian city of Antwerp.[18]

The first effective strategic bombing was pioneered by the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS) in 1914.[19][20] The mission was to attack the Zeppelin production lines and their sheds at Cologne (Köln) and Düsseldorf. Led by Charles Rumney Samson, the force of four aircraft inflicted minor damage on the sheds. The raid was repeated a month later with slightly more success. Within a year or so, specialized aircraft and dedicated bomber squadrons were in service on both sides. These were generally used for tactical bombing; the aim was that of directly harming enemy troops, strongpoints, or equipment, usually within a relatively small distance of the front line. Eventually, attention turned to the possibility of causing indirect harm to the enemy by systematically attacking vital rear-area resources.

The most well known attacks were those done by Zeppelins over England through the course of the war. The first aerial bombardment of English civilians was on January 19, 1915, when two Zeppelins dropped 24 fifty-kilogram (110-pound) high-explosive bombs and ineffective three-kilogram incendiaries on the Eastern England towns of Great Yarmouth, Sheringham, King's Lynn, and the surrounding villages. In all, four people were killed and sixteen injured, and monetary damage was estimated at £7,740 (about US$36,000 at the time). German airships also bombed on other fronts, for example in January 1915 on Liepāja in Latvia.

 
German airship bombing Calais on the night of 21–22 February 1915

In 1915 there were 19 more raids, in which 37 tons of bombs were dropped, killing 181 people and injuring 455. Raids continued in 1916. London was accidentally bombed in May, and in July the Kaiser allowed directed raids against urban centers. There were 23 airship raids in 1916, in which 125 tons of ordnance were dropped, killing 293 people and injuring 691. Gradually British air defenses improved. In 1917 and 1918, there were only 11 Zeppelin raids against England, and the final raid occurred on August 5, 1918, which resulted in the death of KK Peter Strasser, commander of the German Naval Airship Department.

By the end of the war, 51 raids had been undertaken, in which 5,806 bombs were dropped, killing 557 people and injuring 1,358. These raids caused only minor hampering of wartime production, by later standards. A much greater impact was the diversion of twelve aircraft squadrons, many guns, and over 10,000 men to air defenses. The raids generated a wave of hysteria, partially caused by media. This revealed the tactic's potential as a weapon that was of use for propagandists on both sides. The late Zeppelin raids were complemented by the Gotha bomber, which was the first[21][22] heavier-than-air bomber to be used for strategic bombing.

The French army on June 15, 1915, attacked the German town of Karlsruhe, killing 29 civilians and wounding 58. Further raids followed until the Armistice in 1918. In a raid in the afternoon of June 22, 1916, the pilots used outdated maps and bombed the location of the abandoned railway station, where a circus tent was placed, killing 120 persons, most of them children.

The British also stepped up their strategic bombing campaign. In late 1915, the order was given for attacks on German industrial targets, and the 41st Wing was formed from units of the RNAS and Royal Flying Corps. The RNAS took to the strategic bombing in a bigger way than the RFC, who were focused on supporting the infantry actions of the Western Front. At first, the RNAS attacked the German submarines in their moorings and then steelworks further in targeting the origin of the submarines themselves.

In early 1918 they operated their "round the clock" bombing raid, with lighter bombers attacking the town of Trier by day and large HP O/400s attacking by night. The Independent Force, an expanded bombing group, and the first independent strategic bombing force, was created in April 1918. By the end of the war, the force had aircraft that could reach Berlin, but these were never used.

Interbellum edit

Following the war, the concept of strategic bombing developed. Calculations of the number of dead to the weight of bombs would have a profound effect on the attitudes of the British authorities and population in the interwar years. As bombers became larger, it was fully expected that deaths would dramatically increase. The fear of aerial attack on such a scale was one of the fundamental driving forces of the appeasement of Nazi Germany in the 1930s.[23]

These early developments of aerial warfare led to two distinct branches in the writings of air warfare theorists: tactical air warfare and strategic air warfare. Tactical air warfare was developed as part of a combined-arms attack which would be developed to a significant degree by Germany, and which contributed much to the success of the Wehrmacht during the first four years (1939–42) of World War II. The Luftwaffe became a major element of the German blitzkrieg.

Some leading theorists of strategic air warfare, namely strategic bombing during this period were the Italian Giulio Douhet, the Trenchard school in Great Britain, and General Billy Mitchell in the United States. These theorists thought that aerial bombardment of the enemy's homeland would be an important part of future wars. Not only would such attacks weaken the enemy by destroying important military infrastructure, they would also break the morale of the civilian population, forcing their government to capitulate. Although area bombing theorists acknowledged that measures could be taken to defend against bombers—using fighter planes and anti-aircraft artillery—the maxim of the times remained "the bomber will always get through". These theorists for strategic bombing argued that it would be necessary to develop a fleet of strategic bombers during peacetime, both to deter any potential enemy, and also in the case of a war, to be able to deliver devastating attacks on the enemy industries and cities while suffering from relatively few friendly casualties before victory was achieved.[24]

In the period between the two world wars, military thinkers from several nations advocated strategic bombing as the logical and obvious way to employ aircraft. Domestic political considerations saw to it that the British worked harder on the concept than most. The British Royal Flying Corps and Royal Naval Air Service of the Great War had been merged in 1918 to create a separate air force, which spent much of the following two decades fighting for survival in an environment of severe government spending constraints.

In Italy, the airpower prophet General Giulio Douhet asserted the basic principle of strategic bombing was the offensive, and there was no defense against carpet bombing and poison gas attacks. The seeds of Douhet's apocalyptic predictions found fertile soil in France, Germany, and the United States, where excerpts from his book The Command of the Air (1921) were published. These visions of cities laid waste by bombing also gripped the popular imagination and found expression in novels such as Douhet's The War of 19-- (1930) and H.G. Wells's The Shape of Things to Come (1933) (filmed by Alexander Korda as Things to Come (1936)).[25]

Douhet's proposals were hugely influential among air force enthusiasts, arguing as they did that the bombing air arm was the most important, powerful, and invulnerable part of any military. He envisaged future wars as lasting a matter of a few weeks. While each opposing Army and Navy fought an inglorious holding campaign, the respective Air Forces would dismantle their enemies' country, and if one side did not rapidly surrender, both would be so weak after the first few days that the war would effectively cease. Fighter aircraft would be relegated to spotting patrols but would be essentially powerless to resist the mighty bombers. In support of this theory, he argued for targeting of the civilian population as much as any military target, since a nation's morale was as important a resource as its weapons. Paradoxically, he suggested that this would actually reduce total casualties, since "The time would soon come when to put an end to horror and suffering, the people themselves, driven by the instinct of self-preservation, would rise up and demand an end to the war...".[26] As a result of Douhet's proposals, air forces allocated greater resources to their bomber squadrons than to their fighters, and the 'dashing young pilots' promoted in the propaganda of the time were invariably bomber pilots.

Royal Air Force leaders, in particular Air Chief Marshal Hugh Trenchard, believed the key to retaining their independence from the senior services was to lay stress on what they saw as the unique ability of a modern air force to win wars by unaided strategic bombing. As the speed and altitude of bombers increased in proportion to fighter aircraft, the prevailing strategic understanding became "the bomber will always get through". Although anti-aircraft guns and fighter aircraft had proved effective in the Great War, it was accepted there was little warring nations could do to prevent massive civilian casualties from strategic bombing. High civilian morale and retaliation in kind were seen as the only answers—a later generation would revisit this, as Mutual Assured Destruction.[27]

During the interwar period (1919–1939), the use of aerial bombing was developed as part of British foreign policy in its colonies, with Hugh Trenchard as its leading proponent, Sir Charles Portal, Sir Arthur Harris, and Sidney Bufton. The Trenchard School theories were successfully put into action in Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq) where RAF bombers used high-explosive bombs and strafing runs against Arab forces. The techniques of so-called "Air Control" also included target marking and locating, as well as formation flying. Arthur Harris, a young RAF squadron commander (later nicknamed "Bomber"), reported after a mission in 1924, "The Arab and Kurd now know what real bombing means, in casualties and damage. They know that within 45 minutes a full-sized village can be practically wiped out and a third of its inhabitants killed or injured".[28]

On an official level, RAF directives stressed:

In these attacks, endeavour should be made to spare the women and children as far as possible, and for this purpose, a warning should be given, whenever practicable. It would be wrong even at this stage to think that airpower was simply seen as a tool for rapid retribution.[29]

A statement clearly pointed out that the ability of aircraft to inflict punishment could be open to abuse:

Their power to cover great distances at high speed, their instant readiness for action, their independence (within the detachment radius) of communications, their indifference to obstacles, and the unlikelihood of casualties to air personnel combine to encourage their use offensively more often than the occasion warrants.[29]

In British strikes over Yemen in over a six-month period, sixty tons of bombs were dropped in over 1,200 cumulative flying hours. By August 1928, total losses in ground fighting and air attack, on the Yemeni side, were 65 killed or wounded (one RAF pilot was killed and one airman wounded).[30] Between the wars the RAF conducted 26 separate air operations within the Aden Protectorate. The majority were conducted in response to persistent banditry or to restore the Government's authority. Excluding operations against Yemeni forces—which had effectively ceased by 1934—a total of twelve deaths were attributed to air attacks conducted between 1919 and 1939.[31] Bombing as a military strategy proved to be an effective and efficient way for the British to police their Middle East protectorates in the 1920s. Fewer men were required as compared to ground forces.[32][page needed]

Pre-war planners, on the whole, vastly overestimated the damage bombers could do, and underestimated the resilience of civilian populations. Jingoistic national pride played a major role: for example, at a time when Germany was still disarmed and France was Britain's only European rival, Trenchard boasted, "the French in a bombing duel would probably squeal before we did".[33] At the time, the expectation was any new war would be brief and very brutal. A British Cabinet planning document in 1938 predicted that, if war with Germany broke out, 35% of British homes would be hit by bombs in the first three weeks. This type of expectation would justify the appeasement of Hitler in the late 1930s.[33]

 
Ruins of Guernica (1937)

During the Spanish Civil War, the bombing of Guernica by German aviators including the Condor Legion, under Nationalist command, resulted in its near destruction. Casualties were estimated to be between 500 and 1500. Though this figure was relatively small, aerial bombers and their weaponry were continually improving—already suggesting the devastation that was to come in the near future. Yet the theory that "the bomber will always get through" started to appear doubtful, as stated by the U.S.  Attaché in 1937, "The peacetime theory of the complete invulnerability of the modern type of bombardment airplane no longer holds. The increased speeds of both the bombardment and pursuit plane have worked in favor of the pursuit ... The flying fortress died in Spain."

Large scale bombing of the civilian population, thought to be demoralizing to the enemy, seemed to have the opposite effect. E. B. Strauss surmised, "Observers state that one of the most remarkable effects of the bombing of open towns in Government Spain had been the welding together into a formidable fighting force of groups of political factions who were previously at each other's throats...", a sentiment with which Hitler's Luftwaffe, supporting the Spanish Nationalists, generally agreed.[34]

World War II edit

The strategic bombing conducted in World War II was unlike any before. The campaigns conducted in Europe and Asia could involve aircraft dropping thousands of tons of conventional bombs or a nuclear weapon over a single city.

Area bombardment came to prominence during World War II with the use of large numbers of unguided gravity bombs, often with a high proportion of incendiary devices, to bomb the target region indiscriminately—to kill war workers, destroy materiel, and demoralize the enemy. In high enough concentration, it was capable of producing a firestorm.[35] The high explosives were often delay-action bombs intended to kill or intimidate those fighting the fires caused by incendiaries.[36]: 329 

 
Destroyed townhouses in Warsaw after the German Luftwaffe bombing of the city, September 1939

At first this required multiple aircraft, often returning to the target in waves. Nowadays, a large bomber or missile can be used to the same effect on a small area (an airfield, for example) by releasing a relatively large number of smaller bombs.

Strategic bombing campaigns were conducted in Europe and Asia. The Germans and Japanese made use of mostly twin-engined bombers with a payload generally less than 5,000 pounds (2,300 kg), and never produced larger craft to any great extent. By comparison, the British and Americans (who started the war with predominantly similarly sized bombers) developed their strategic force based upon much larger four-engined bombers for their strategic campaigns. The payload carried by these planes ranged from 4,000 lb (1,800 kg) for the B-17 Flying Fortress on long-range missions,[37] to 8,000 lb (3,600 kg) for the B-24 Liberator,[38] 14,000 lb (6,400 kg) for the Avro Lancaster,[39] and 20,000 lb (9,000 kg) B-29 Superfortress,[40] with some specialized aircraft, such as the 'Special B' Avro Lancaster carrying the 22,000 lb (10,000 kg) Grand Slam.[41]

During the first year of the war in Europe, strategic bombing was developed through trial and error. The Luftwaffe had been attacking both civilian and military targets from the very first day of the war, when Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939. A strategic-bombing campaign was launched by the Germans as a precursor to the invasion of the United Kingdom to force the RAF to engage the Luftwaffe and so be destroyed either on the ground or in the air. That tactic failed, and the RAF began bombing German cities on 11 May 1940.[42] After the Battle of Britain, the Germans launched their night time Blitz hoping to break British morale and to have the British be cowed into making peace.

At first the Luftwaffe raids took place in daylight, but changed to night bombing attacks when losses became unsustainable. The RAF, who had preferred precision bombing, also switched to night bombing, also due to excessive losses.[43][44] Before the Rotterdam Blitz on 14 May 1940 the British restricted themselves to tactical bombing west of the Rhine and naval installations. The day after the Rotterdam Blitz a new directive was issued to the RAF to attack targets in the Ruhr, including oil plants and other civilian industrial targets which aided the German war effort, such as blast furnaces that at night were self-illuminating. After the Butt Report (released in September 1941) proved the inadequacy of RAF Bomber Command training methods and equipment, the RAF adopted an area-attack strategy, by which it hoped to impede Germany's war production, her powers of resistance (by destroying resources and forcing Germany to divert resources from her front lines to defend her air space), and her morale.[45] The RAF dramatically improved its navigation so that on average its bombs hit closer to target.[46] Accuracy never exceeded a 3 mi (4.8 km) radius from point of aim in any case.[47][page needed]

 
1943 USAAF raid on ball bearing works at Schweinfurt, Germany

The United States Army Air Forces adopted a policy of daylight precision bombing for greater accuracy as, for example, during the Schweinfurt raids. That doctrine, based on the erroneous supposition that bombers could adequately defend themselves against air attack, entailed much higher American losses until long-range fighter escorts (e.g. the Mustang) became available. Conditions in the European theatre made it very difficult to achieve the accuracy achieved using the exceptional and top-secret Norden optical bombsight in the clear skies over the desert bombing ranges of Nevada and California. Raids over Europe commonly took place in conditions of very poor visibility, with targets partly or wholly obscured by thick cloud, smokescreens, or smoke from fires started by previous raids. As a result, bomb loads were regularly dropped "blind" using dead-reckoning methods little different from those used by the RAF night bombers. In addition, only the leading bomber in a formation actually utilized the Norden sight, the rest of the formation dropping their bombs only when they saw the lead aircraft's bombload falling away. Since even a very tight bomber formation could cover a vast area, the scatter of bombs was likely to be considerable. Add to these difficulties the disruptive effects of increasingly accurate anti-aircraft fire and head-on attacks by fighter aircraft and the theoretical accuracy of daylight bombing was often hard to achieve.[48][49] Accuracy, described as "pinpoint", never exceeded the best British average of about a 3 mi (4.8 km) radius from point of aim in any case.[47][page needed] Postwar German engineers considered the bombing of railways, trains, canals, and roads more harmful to production than attacks on factories themselves, Sir Roy Fedden (in his report on a postwar British scientific intelligence mission) calling it "fatal" and saying it reduced aero-engine production by two thirds (from a maximum output of 5,000 to 7,000 a month).[50]

Strategic bombing was a way of taking the war into Europe while Allied ground forces were unable to do so. Between them, Allied air forces claimed to be able to bomb "around the clock". In fact, few targets were ever hit by British and American forces the same day, the strategic isolation of Normandy on D-Day and the bombing of Dresden in February 1945 being exceptions rather than the rule. There were generally no coordinated plans for the around-the-clock bombing of any target.

In some cases, single missions have been considered to constitute strategic bombing. The bombing of Peenemünde was such an event, as was the bombing of the Ruhr dams. The Peenemünde mission delayed Nazi Germany's V-2 program enough that it did not become a major factor in the outcome of the war.[51]

Soviet Air Forces conducted strategic bombings of Helsinki, the capital of Finland, between 1939 and 1944, with Finland being subjected to a number of bombing campaigns by the USSR in that period. The largest were three raids in February 1944, which have been called The Great Raids Against Helsinki.[52] The Finnish Air Force responded to the air raids with a series of night infiltration bombings of ADD airfields near Leningrad.[53]

Strategic bombing in Europe never reached the decisive completeness the American campaign against Japan achieved, helped in part by the fragility of Japanese housing, which was particularly vulnerable to firebombing through the use of incendiary devices. The destruction of German infrastructure became apparent, but the Allied campaign against Germany only really succeeded when the Allies began targeting oil refineries and transportation in the last year of the war. At the same time, the strategic bombing of Germany was used as a morale booster for the Allies in the period before the land war resumed in Western Europe in June 1944.

 
Child amid ruins following German aerial bombing of London, 1945

In the Asiatic-Pacific Theater, the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service and the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service frequently used strategic bombing over Singaporean, Burmese, and Chinese cities such as Shanghai, Guangzhou, Nanjing, Chongqing, Singapore, and Rangoon. However, the Japanese military in most places advanced quickly enough that a strategic bombing campaign was unnecessary, and the Japanese aircraft industry was incapable of producing truly strategic bombers in any event. In those places where it was required, the smaller Japanese bombers (in comparison to British and American types) did not carry a bombload sufficient to inflict the sort of damage regularly occurring at that point in the war in Europe, or later in Japan.

The development of the B-29 gave the United States a bomber with sufficient range to reach the Japanese home islands from the safety of American bases in the Pacific or western China. The capture of the Japanese island of Iwo Jima further enhanced the capabilities that the Americans possessed in their strategic bombing campaign. High-explosive and incendiary bombs were used against Japan to devastating effect, with greater indiscriminate loss of life in the firebombing of Tokyo on March 9–10, 1945 than was caused either by the Dresden mission, or the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima or Nagasaki. Unlike the USAAF's strategic bombing campaign in Europe, with its avowed (if unachievable) objective of precision bombing of strategic targets, the bombing of Japanese cities involved the deliberate targeting of residential zones from the outset. Bomb loads included very high proportions of incendiaries, with the intention of igniting the highly combustible wooden houses common in Japanese cities and thereby generating firestorms.[54][55][56][57]

The final development of strategic bombing in World War II was the use of nuclear weapons. On August 6 and 9, 1945, the United States exploded nuclear bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing 105,000 people and inflicting a psychological shock on the Japanese nation. On August 15, Emperor Hirohito announced the surrender of Japan, stating:

Moreover, the enemy has begun to employ a new and most cruel bomb, the power of which to do damage is indeed incalculable, taking the toll of many innocent lives. Should We continue to fight, it would not only result in an ultimate collapse and obliteration of the Japanese nation but also it would lead to the total extinction of human civilization. Such being the case, how are We to save the millions of Our subjects; or to atone Ourselves before the hallowed spirits of Our Imperial Ancestors? This is the reason why We have ordered the acceptance of the provisions of the Joint Declaration of the Powers.

Cold War edit

 
A U.S. Air Force F-100C practices a nuclear bombing run.

Nuclear weapons defined strategic bombing during the Cold War. The age of the massive strategic bombing campaign had come to an end. It was replaced by more devastating attacks using improved targeting and weapons technology. Strategic bombing by the Great Powers also became politically indefensible. The political fallout resulting from the destruction being broadcast on the evening news ended more than one strategic bombing campaign.

Korean War edit

Strategic bombing during the Korean war was a huge part of the aerial warfare for the United States. It was widely used at targeting infrastructure and economic targets forcing the USSR and China to leverage more economically and materially in the supporting North Korean efforts. It was also consistently reliable for the US even amongst Chinese and USSR interference throughout the war.

While nuclear weapons were never used, at the outset of the war the US Strategic Air Command was ready with 9 B-29s from the 9th Bomb Wing acting as an atomic task force which were sent to Guam on standby duty.

The United States Air Force (USAF) at first conducted only tactical attacks against strategic targets. Because it was widely considered a limited war, the Truman Administration prohibited the USAF to bomb near the borders of China and the Soviet Union in fear of provoking the countries to enter into the war.[58] Common targets were railroad yards, bridges, and airfields, seeking to disrupt supply lines and ability to produce materials for the war. The first notable strategic bombing was a bombing consisting of nine B-29s which bombed the Rising Sun oil refinery at Wonsan on July 6, 1950, followed by a bombing of a chemical plant at Hungnam. Later that month on July 30 a Chosen nitrogen explosives factory at Hungnam was bombed destroying the largest of the Konan Industrial-Chemical Complex.

The Chinese intervention in the war in November 1950 changed the aerial bombing policy dramatically. In response to the Chinese intervention, the USAF carried out an intensive bombing campaign against North Korea to demoralize the North Koreans and inflict as much economic cost to North Korea in order to reduce their ability to wage war. The largest incendiary raid of the war had 70 B-29s drop firebombs on the town of Sinuiju and was a representation for the change in aerial bombing policy. The extensive bombing raids on North Korea continued until the armistice agreement was signed between communist and UN forces on July 27, 1953.[59][60]

Vietnam War edit

In the Vietnam War, the strategic bombing of North Vietnam in Operation Rolling Thunder could have been more extensive, but fear by the Johnson Administration of the entry of China into the war led to restrictions on the selection of targets, as well as only a gradual escalation of intensity.

The aim of the bombing campaign was to demoralize the North Vietnamese, damage their economy, and reduce their capacity to support the war in the hope that they would negotiate for peace, but it failed to have those effects. The Nixon Administration continued this sort of limited strategic bombing for most of the war but pivoted towards the ending of it. Operation Linebacker campaigns were much heavier bombing campaigns taking off many of the restrictions that were placed initially and began flying B-52 bombers. Images such as that of Kim Phuc Phan Thi (although this incident was the result of close air support rather than strategic bombing) disturbed the American public enough to demand a stop to the campaign.

Due to this, and the ineffectiveness of carpet bombing (partly because of a lack of identifiable targets), new precision weapons were developed. The new weapons allowed more effective and efficient bombing with reduced civilian casualties. High civilian casualties had always been the hallmark of strategic bombing, but later in the Cold War, this began to change.

Laos was also bombed heavily during the Vietnam War. While originally denied by the US government Laos became the most heavily bombed country per capita as the result of more than 2 million tons of ordinance dropped.[61] Laos contained heavy supply lines for communist troops and the US sought to destroy them safely before they could enter Vietnam and be used against American troops. The first of many targets within the country was the "Plain of Jars" which was known as a logistical center for military forces to gather and is the main air base in Urdon. While there were two different aerial operations held within Laos, Operation Steel Tiger is the one that focused on the Strategic Bombing of supporting civilian infrastructure that could aid in the up-and-coming communist regime and was assisting in getting rebels to aid the North Vietnamese military.

Strategic bombing was entering a new phase of high-intensity attacks, specifically targeting factories that take years to build and enormous investment capital. These new high-intensity and focused attacks made extra use of newer and modern fighter aircraft such as the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II enabling less reliance on heavier, more vulnerable bombers.

Iran-Iraq War edit

After the fall of 1981, in the context of the Iranian ground counter-offensives, the USSR lifted their arms embargo and massively rearmed Iraq, including with 40 MiG-25s, which enabled the Iraqi air force to challenge Iran's F-14s in their air space. Iraq used Tu-22 Blinder and Tu-16 Badger strategic bombers to carry out long-range high-speed raids on Iranian cities, including Tehran. Fighter-bombers such as the MiG-25 Foxbat and Su-22 Fitter were used against smaller or shorter range targets, as well as escorting the strategic bombers. Civilian and industrial targets were hit by the raids, and each successful raid inflicted economic damage from regular strategic bombing. Iran also launched several retaliatory air raids on Iraq, while primarily shelling border cities such as Basra. Iran also bought some Scud missiles from Libya and launched them against Baghdad. These too inflicted damage upon Iraq.

Post–Cold War edit

 
Smoke in Novi Sad, Serbia after NATO bombardment

Strategic bombing in the post–Cold War era is defined by American advances in and the use of smart munitions. The developments in guided munitions meant that the Coalition forces in the First Gulf War were able to use them, although the majority—93%[62]—of bombs dropped in that conflict were still conventional, unguided bombs. More frequently in the Kosovo War, and the initial phases of Operation Iraqi Freedom of 2003, strategic bombing campaigns were notable for the heavy use of precision weaponry by those countries that possessed them. Although bombing campaigns were still strategic in their aims, the widespread area bombing tactics of World War II had mostly disappeared. This led to significantly fewer civilian casualties associated with previous bombing campaigns, though it has not brought about a complete end to civilian deaths or collateral property damage.[63]

Additionally, strategic bombing via smart munitions is now possible through the use of aircraft that have been considered traditionally tactical in nature such as the F-16 Fighting Falcon or F-15E Strike Eagle, which had been used during Operation Desert Storm, Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom to destroy targets that would have required large formations of strategic bombers during World War II.[citation needed]

During the Kosovo campaign NATO forces bombed targets far from Kosovo like bridges in Novi Sad,[64] power plants around Belgrade[65] and flea market in Nis.[66][67]

During the 2008 South Ossetia war Russian aircraft attacked the shipbuilding center of Poti.[68]

Russian invasion of Ukraine edit

As part of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, several waves hit Ukraine infrastructure periodically, increasing damages, deaths, injured, and deeply affecting energy distribution across Ukraine and nearby countries. By late November 2022, nearly half of the country's energy systems had been destroyed, leaving millions of Ukrainians without power and Ukrainian energy workers rushing the restore services via various ways.[69] The methodical attacks on power stations and electrical nodes imposed large economic and practical costs on Ukraine,[70] with a severe impact for millions of civilians over the winter.[71][72] It was assumed that Russia's strategic intention was to break the will of the Ukrainian population to continue the war.[73]

Aerial bombardment and international law edit

Air warfare must comply with laws and customs of war, including international humanitarian law by protecting the victims of the conflict and refraining from attacks on protected persons.[62]

These restraints on aerial warfare are covered by the general laws of war, because unlike the war on land and at sea—which is specifically covered by rules such as the 1907 Hague Convention and Protocol I additional to the Geneva Conventions, which contain pertinent restrictions, prohibitions and guidelines—there are no treaties specific to aerial warfare.[62]

To be legal, aerial operations must comply with the principles of humanitarian law: military necessity, distinction, and proportionality:[62] An attack or action must be intended to help in the defeat of the enemy; it must be an attack on a legitimate military objective, and the harm caused to protected civilians or civilian property must be proportional and not excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated.[74][75]

Pioneers edit

See also edit

References edit

Informational notes

  1. ^ Hessel 2005, p. 107 Goebbels used several terms including

    Terrorangriffe (terror raids) or Terrorhandlungen (terrorist activities) ... Terrorflieger (terror flyers or terrorist airman). No one in Germany used such terminology in connection with German bombing raids against cities in England

  2. ^ Fritz 2004, p. 44

    ... Western Allies ... were "air pirates." "They are murderers!" screamed the headlines of an article emanating from Berlin on February 22. Not only did the writer denounce the allied "terror bombing", but he also stressed the "special joy" that the "Anglo-American air gangsters" took in the murder of innocent German civilians...

Citations

  1. ^ Longmate 1983, pp. 122, 123 quoting the Singleton Report
  2. ^ Barrett Tillman (2014). Forgotten Fifteenth: The Daring Airmen Who Crippled Hitler's War Machine. Simon and Schuster. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-62157-235-0.
  3. ^ "The National Review", The National Review, 111: 51, 1938
  4. ^ "The Round Table", The Round Table: 515, 1937
  5. ^ Overy 2005, p. 119.
  6. ^ Myrdal 1977, p. 252.
  7. ^ Axinn 2008, p. 73.
  8. ^ Algeo 1993, p. 111 "Terror Bombing. Bombing designed to hasten the end of the war by terrorising the enemy population – 1941 Read. Dig. June p. 58/2 ..."
  9. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, terror,n, "terror-bombing, intensive and indiscriminate bombing designed to frighten a country into surrender; terror raid, a bombing raid of this nature".
  10. ^ Brower 1998, p. 108 (mentions that Historian Ronald Shaffer described Operation Clarion, an operation that involved both bombing and strafing, as a terror attack).
  11. ^ Kochavi 2005, p. 172.
  12. ^ Taylor 2005, pp. 413, 414.
  13. ^ Siebert, Detlef. "British Bombing Strategy in World War Two", 1 August 2001, BBC
  14. ^ a b Taylor 2005, p. 430.
  15. ^ Taylor 2005, p. 434.
  16. ^ Overy 2013.
  17. ^ Boyne, Walter J. (2003). The Influence of Air Power on History. Gretna, LA: Pelican. p. 99. ISBN 9-781-589800-342. Zeppelin.
  18. ^ Flight staff 1914, p. 906.
  19. ^ Spencer Tucker; Laura Matysek Wood; Justin D. Murphy, eds. (1999). The European Powers in the First World War: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. p. 13. ISBN 978-0815333517.
  20. ^ Tim Benbow, ed. (2011). British Naval Aviation: The First 100 Years. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 29. ISBN 978-1409406129.
  21. ^ Castle, Ian (August 2017). "Strategic Bombing: Gothas over London". Military History Monthly.
  22. ^ O'Connell, Robert L. (1990). "The Gotha Bomber and the Origins of Strategic Bombing". MHQ Magazine.
  23. ^ Doerr, Paul W. (1998). British Foreign Policy, 1919–1939. Manchester University Press. p. 16. ISBN 978-0719046728.
  24. ^ Richard Overy, The Bombers and the Bombed: Allied Air War Over Europe 1940–1945 (2014) ch 1
  25. ^ Jeremy Black, The Second World War: Causes and Background (2007) p. 392
  26. ^ Robert Pape (1996). Bombing to Win: Air Power and Coercion in War. Cornell UP. p. 60. ISBN 0801483115.
  27. ^ Beau Grosscup (2006). Strategic Terror: The Politics and Ethics of Aerial Bombardment. Zed Books. pp. 21–35. ISBN 978-1842775431.
  28. ^ Grosscup (2006). Strategic Terror: The Politics and Ethics of Aerial Bombardment. Zed Books. p. 55. ISBN 978-1842775431.
  29. ^ a b Hayward 2009, p. 37.
  30. ^ Hayward 2009, pp. 53–54.
  31. ^ Hayward 2009, p. 54.
  32. ^ Omissi 1990.
  33. ^ a b Johnson, History of Air Fighting.[verification needed][page needed]
  34. ^ Air Power by Stephen Budiansky, Viking Penguin Books 2004, pp. 200–08
  35. ^ Harris, Arthur Bomber Offensive (First edition Collins 1947) Pen & Sword military classics 2005; ISBN 1-84415-210-3
  36. ^ Overy, Richard (2013). The Bombing War – Europe 1939–1945. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-713-99561-9.
  37. ^ Fitzsimons 1978a, p. 1736.
  38. ^ Fitzsimons 1978b, p. 1736.
  39. ^ Fitzsimons 1978b, p. 1697.
  40. ^ "The bombload of the B-29 eventually reached 9,000 kg (20,000 lb)" (Lewis 1994, p. 4)
  41. ^ Fitzsimons 1978b, p. 1700.
  42. ^ Grayling, A. C. (2011). Among the Dead Cities: Is the Targeting of Civilians in War Ever Justified?. A&C Black. ISBN 978-1408827901.
  43. ^ Carter, Ian (June 2018). "What Did Fighter Command Do After the Battle of Britain?". Imperial War Museum.
  44. ^ Carter, Ian (February 2018). "RAF Bomber Command During the Second World War". Imperial War Museum.
  45. ^ Conclusion to the Singleton report 20 May 1942 (Copp 1996).
  46. ^ British Bombing Survey Unit, The strategic air war against Germany, 1939–1945: report of the British Bombing Survey Unit (reprint 1998) ch 9 online
  47. ^ a b Hastings, Bomber Command
  48. ^ Stewart Ross, Strategic bombing by the United States in World War II: the myths and the facts (2003) pp. 8, 52, 129–40
  49. ^ Stephen L. McFarland, America's pursuit of precision bombing, 1910–1945 (1995)
  50. ^ Christopher, John. The Race for Hitler's X-Planes (The Mill, Gloucestershire: History Press, 2013), pp. 77, 100.
  51. ^ Cosgrove, Edmund (2003). Canada's Fighting Pilots. Dundurn. p. 135. ISBN 978-0919614970.
  52. ^ Aake Pesonen (1982). "Taistelu Helsingistä". Tuli-iskuja taivaalle (in Finnish). Kirjayhtymä. ISBN 951-26-2318-8.
  53. ^ Jukka O. Kauppinen; Matti Rönkkö (2006-02-27). "Night Of The Bombers". Retrieved 2010-04-12.
  54. ^ Guillemin, Jeanne (2017). Hidden Atrocities: Japanese Germ Warfare and American Obstruction of Justice at the Tokyo Trial. Columbia University Press. pp. Chapter 2 Spoils of War – Secret Japanese Biological Science. ISBN 978-0231544986.
  55. ^ Reichhardt, Tony (March 2015). "The Deadliest Air Raid in History". airspacemag.com.
  56. ^ Kennedy, David M. (2003). The American People in World War II: Freedom from Fear, Part Two. Oxford University Press. p. 421. ISBN 978-0199840052.
  57. ^ "Deadly WWII U.S. firebombing raids on Japanese cities largely ignored". The Japan Times. March 2015.
  58. ^ Wayne Thompson and Bernard C. Nalty (1996). "Within Limits – The U.S. Air Force and the Korean War" (PDF). Defense Technical Information Center. (PDF) from the original on February 28, 2017.
  59. ^ "Korean War 1950–1953" (PDF). National Museum of the US Air Force.
  60. ^ Futrell, Robert F. (February 1983). "The United States Air Force In Korea 1950–1953" (PDF). Defense Technical Information Center. (PDF) from the original on June 29, 2020.
  61. ^ "- LEGACIES OF WAR: UNEXPLODED ORDNANCE IN LAOS". www.govinfo.gov. Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  62. ^ a b c d Francisco Javier Guisández Gómez, a colonel of the Spanish Air Force, ICRC: "The Law of Air Warfare" 2014-12-21 at the Wayback Machine International Review of the Red Cross no 323, pp. 347–63
  63. ^ Craig, Tim; Ryan, Missy; Gibbons-Neff, Thomas (October 10, 2015). "By evening, a hospital. By morning, a war zone" – via www.washingtonpost.com.
  64. ^ "Top-20 destinacija za medeni mesec: Među najboljim na svetu jedna nama i blizu i pristupačna". B92.net.
  65. ^ "Udar po elektroenergetskom sistemu Srbije".
  66. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Niš 1999, NATO bombardovanje, city of Nis, NATO bombing 1999". YouTube.
  67. ^ "Godišnjica bombardovanja centra Niša". Južne vesti.
  68. ^ Earl Tilford. Russia's Georgia Take-Down: Implications for Russia and America
  69. ^ "Ukraine war: Almost half Ukraine's energy system disabled, PM says". BBC News. 18 November 2022. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
  70. ^ Kraemer, Christian (2022-10-26). "Russian bombings of civilian infrastructure raise cost of Ukraine's recovery: IMF". Reuters. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  71. ^ Birnbaum, Michael; Stern, David L.; Rauhala, Emily (October 25, 2022). "Russia's methodical attacks exploit frailty of Ukrainian power system". The Washington Post.
  72. ^ Santora, Marc (2022-10-29). "Zelensky says that some four million Ukrainians face restrictions on power use". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-10-29.
  73. ^ Stephens, Bret (2022-11-01). "Opinion | Don't Let Putin Turn Ukraine Into Aleppo". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-11-02.
  74. ^ Jefferson D. Reynolds. "Collateral Damage on the 21st-century battlefield: Enemy exploitation of the law of armed conflict, and the struggle for a moral high ground". Air Force Law Review Volume 56, 2005(PDF) pp. 4–108
  75. ^ Gene Dannen. International Law on the Bombing of Civilians

Bibliography edit

  • Algeo, John (1993). Fifty years among the new words: a dictionary of neologisms, 1941–1991 (2, reprint ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-44971-5.
  • Axinn, Sidney (2008). A Moral Military. Temple University Press. ISBN 978-1-59213-958-3.
  • Brower, Charles F. (1998). World War II in Europe: the final year: Roosevelt Study Center. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-21133-2.
  • Boyne, Walter J. (1994). Clash of Wings: World War II in the Air. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 343, 344. ISBN 0-671-79370-5.
  • Copp, Terry (September–October 1996). "The Bomber Command Offensive". originally published in the Legion Magazine.
  • Fitzsimons, Bernard, ed. (1978a). Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare. Vol. 9. London: Phoebus. p. 969. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  • Fitzsimons, Bernard, ed. (1978b). Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare. Vol. 16. London: Phoebus. pp. 1697, 1700, 1736. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  • Flight staff (1914). "Aircraft and the War". Flight: 905–06.
  • Fritz, Stephen G. (2004). Endkampf: soldiers, civilians, and the death of the Third Reich (illustrated ed.). University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2325-9.
  • Hayward, Joel (2009). Air Power, Insurgency and the "War on Terror". Royal Air Force Centre for Air Power Studies. ISBN 978-0-9552189-6-5.
  • Hessel, Peter (2005). The Mystery of Frankenberg's Canadian Airman (illustrated ed.). James Lorimer & Company. ISBN 1-55028-884-9.
  • Kochavi, Arieh J. (2005). Confronting captivity: Britain and the United States and their POWs in Nazi Germany (illustrated ed.). UNC Press Books. ISBN 0-8078-2940-4.
  • Lewis, Peter M. H. (1994). "B-29 Superfortress". In Grolier Incorporated (ed.). Academic American Encyclopedia. Vol. 10. Grolier Incorporated. ISBN 978-0-7172-2053-3.
  • Longmate, Norman (1983). The Bombers: The RAF offensive against Germany 1939–1945. Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09-151580-7.
  • Myrdal, Alva (1977). The game of disarmament: how the United States and Russia run the arms race. Manchester University Press ND. ISBN 0-7190-0693-7.
  • Omissi, David (1990). Air Power and Colonial Control: The Royal Air Force 1919–1939. Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-2960-0.
  • Overy, R. J. (2005). The air war, 1939–1945. Brassey's. ISBN 978-1-57488-716-7.
  • Taylor, Frederick (2005). Dresden: Tuesday 13 February 1945. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 0-7475-7084-1.
  • Trimble, Michael M. "Air Force Strategic Bombing and Its Counterpoints from World War I to Vietnam." Joint Force Quarterly : JFQ 91 (2018): 82-89. Web.
  • McCoy A. Reflections on History’s Largest Air War. Critical Asian Studies. 2013;45(3):481-489. doi:10.1080/14672715.2013.829670

Further reading edit

  • Biddle, Tami Davis. Rhetoric and Reality in Air Warfare: The Evolution of British and American Ideas about Strategic Bombing, 1914–1945 (Princeton Studies in International History and Politics) (2004)
  • Boog, Horst, ed. The Conduct of the Air War in the Second World War: An International Comparison (1992) 763 pp.; very important anthology by major researchers
  • Boog, Horst, ed. Germany and the Second World War: Volume VII: The Strategic Air War in Europe and the War in the West and East Asia, 1943–1944/5 (Oxford UP, 2006), 928pp official German history vol 7 excerpt and text search; online edition
  • Buckley, John (1999). Air Power in the Age of Total War. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-33557-4.
  • Clodfelter, Mark. "Aiming to Break Will: America's World War II Bombing of German Morale and its Ramifications", Journal of Strategic Studies, June 2010, Vol. 33 Issue 3, pp. 401–35
  • Clodfelter, Mark. Beneficial Bombing: The Progressive Foundations of American Air Power, 1917–1945 (University of Nebraska Press; 2010) 347 pp.
  • Craven, Wesley Frank, and James Lea Cate. The Army Air Forces in World War II (7 vols 1948–1958; rpr. 1985), official US Army Air Force history
  • Davis, Richard G. "Bombing Strategy Shifts, 1944–45", Air Power History 39 (1989) 33–45
  • Futrell, Robert Frank. Ideas, concepts, doctrine: A history of basic thinking in the United States Air Force, 1907–1964 (2 vols 1974)
  • Grayling, Anthony C. Among the dead cities: The history and moral legacy of the WWII bombing of civilians in Germany and Japan (Bloomsbury Publishing USA, 2009)
  • Griffith, Charles. The quest: Haywood Hansell and American strategic bombing in World War II (1999) online edition
  • Hansell, Jr., Haywood S. Air Plan That Defeated Hitler (1980) online version
  • Kennett, Lee B. A History of Strategic Bombing (1982)
  • Koch, H. W. "The Strategic Air Offensive against Germany: the Early Phase, May–September 1940." The Historical Journal, 34 (March 1991) pp. 117–41. online at JSTOR
  • Levine, Alan J. The Strategic Bombing of Germany, 1940–1945 (1992) online edition
  • MacIsaac, David. Strategic Bombing in World War Two (1976) story of the official American Strategic Bombing Survey
  • Messenger, Charles. "Bomber" Harris and the Strategic Bombing Offensive, 1939–1945 (1984), defends Harris
  • Morris, Craig F. The Origins of American Strategic Bombing Theory (US Naval Institute Press, 2017), 272 pp.
  • Neillands, Robin. The Bomber War: The Allied Air Offensive Against Nazi Germany (Overlook Press, 2001)
  • Overy. Richard. "The Means to Victory: Bombs and Bombing" in Overy, Why the Allies Won (1995), pp. 101–33
  • Overy. Richard. The Bombers and the Bombed: Allied Air War Over Europe 1940–1945 (2014), 592 pp excerpt and text search; a longer version was published in UK as The Bombing War: Europe, 1939–1945 (2013), 880 pp
  • Patler, Nicholas. "Is the U.S. Haunted by Its Nuclear Past? Dropping the atomic bomb crossed a moral threshold." The Progressive Christian (Winter 2009), pp. 15–19, 36.
  • Patler, Nicholas. "Book Reviews/Essay: A Twentieth Century History of Bombing Civilians, and A History of Bombing." Journal of Critical Asian Studies (March 2011), 153–56.
  • Sherry, Michael. The Rise of American Air Power: The Creation of Armageddon (1987), important study 1930s–1960s
  • Smith, Malcolm. "The Allied Air Offensive", Journal of Strategic Studies (1990) 13#1 pp. 67–83
  • Spaight. James M. [1]"Bombing Vindicated"] G. Bles, 1944. ASIN B0007IVW7K (Spaight was Principal Assistant Secretary of the Air Ministry) (UK)
  • Verrier, Anthony. The Bomber Offensive (1968), British
  • Webster, Charles and Noble Frankland, The Strategic Air Offensive Against Germany, 1939–1945 (HMSO, 1961), 4 vols. Important critical official history of RAF Bomber Command effort
  • Werrell, Kenneth P. "The Strategic Bombing of Germany in World War II: Costs and Accomplishments", Journal of American History 73 (1986) 702–13; in JSTOR
  • Werrell, Kenneth P. Death From the Heavens: A History of Strategic Bombing (2009) Good analysis
  • Wetta, Frank J., and Martin A. Novelli. "Good Bombing, Bad Bombing: Hollywood, Air Warfare, and Morality in World War I and World War II." OAH Magazine of History 22.4 (2008): 25–29. online


strategic, bombing, bomber, raid, redirects, here, 1989, master, system, video, game, sanritsu, bomber, raid, systematically, organized, executed, attack, from, which, utilize, strategic, bombers, long, medium, range, missiles, nuclear, armed, fighter, bomber,. Bomber raid redirects here For the 1989 Master System video game by Sanritsu see Bomber Raid Strategic bombing is a systematically organized and executed attack from the air which can utilize strategic bombers long or medium range missiles or nuclear armed fighter bomber aircraft to attack targets deemed vital to the enemy s war making capability It is a military strategy used in total war with the goal of defeating the enemy by destroying its morale its economic ability to produce and transport materiel to the theatres of military operations or both The term terror bombing is used to describe the strategic bombing of civilian targets without military value in the hope of damaging an enemy s morale Tokyo after the massive firebombing attack on the night of March 9 10 1945 the single most destructive raid in military aviation history The Tokyo firebombing cut the city s industrial productivity by half and killed around 100 000 civilians One of the strategies of war is to demoralize the enemy so that peace or surrender becomes preferable to continuing the conflict Strategic bombing has been used to this end The phrase terror bombing entered the English lexicon towards the end of World War II and many strategic bombing campaigns and individual raids have been described as terror bombing by commentators and historians Because the term has pejorative connotations some including the Allies of World War II have preferred to use euphemisms such as will to resist and morale bombings 1 2 The theoretical distinction between tactical and strategic air warfare was developed between the two world wars Some leading theorists of strategic air warfare during this period were the Italian Giulio Douhet the Trenchard school in the United Kingdom and General Billy Mitchell in the United States These theorists were highly influential both on the military justification for an independent air force such as the Royal Air Force and in influencing political thoughts on a future war as exemplified by Stanley Baldwin s 1932 comment that the bomber will always get through Contents 1 Enemy morale 2 The term terror bombing 3 Defensive measures 4 History and origins 4 1 World War I 4 2 Interbellum 4 3 World War II 4 4 Cold War 4 4 1 Korean War 4 4 2 Vietnam War 4 4 3 Iran Iraq War 4 5 Post Cold War 4 5 1 Russian invasion of Ukraine 5 Aerial bombardment and international law 6 Pioneers 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 9 1 Further readingEnemy morale editOne of the aims of war is to demoralize the enemy facing continual death and destruction may make the prospect of peace or surrender preferable The proponents of strategic bombing between the world wars such as General Douhet expected that direct attacks upon an enemy country s cities by strategic bombers would lead to a rapid collapse of civilian morale so that political pressure to sue for peace would lead to a rapid conclusion When such attacks were tried in the 1930s in the Spanish Civil War and the Second Sino Japanese War they were ineffective Commentators observed the failures and some air forces such as the Luftwaffe concentrated their efforts upon direct support of the troops 3 4 The term terror bombing editTerror bombing is an emotive term used for aerial attacks planned to weaken or break enemy morale 5 Use of the term to refer to aerial attacks implies the attacks are criminal according to the law of war 6 or if within the laws of war are nevertheless a moral crime 7 According to John Algeo in Fifty Years among the New Words A Dictionary of Neologisms 1941 1991 the first recorded usage of Terror bombing in a United States publication was in a Reader s Digest article dated June 1941 a finding confirmed by the Oxford English Dictionary 8 9 Aerial attacks described as terror bombing are often long range strategic bombing raids although attacks which result in the deaths of civilians may also be described as such or if the attacks involve fighters strafing they may be labelled terror attacks 10 German propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and other high ranking officials of Nazi Germany 11 frequently described attacks by the Royal Air Force RAF and the United States Army Air Forces USAAF during their strategic bombing campaigns as Terrorangriffe terror attacks nb 1 nb 2 The Allied governments usually described their bombing of cities with other euphemisms such as area bombing RAF or precision bombing USAAF and for most of World War II the Allied news media did the same However at a SHAEF press conference on 16 February 1945 two days after the bombing of Dresden British Air Commodore Colin McKay Grierson replied to a question by one of the journalists that the primary target of the bombing had been on communications to prevent the Germans from moving military supplies and to stop movement in all directions if possible He then added in an offhand remark that the raid also helped destroy what is left of German morale Howard Cowan an Associated Press war correspondent filed a story about the Dresden raid The military press censor at SHAEF made a mistake and allowed the Cowan cable to go out starting with Allied air bosses have made the long awaited decision to adopt deliberate terror bombing of great German population centers as a ruthless expedient to hasten Hitler s doom There were follow up newspaper editorials on the issue and a longtime opponent of strategic bombing Richard Stokes MP asked questions in the House of Commons on 6 March 12 The controversy stirred up by the Cowan news report reached the highest levels of the British Government when on 28 March 1945 the Prime Minister Winston Churchill sent a memo by telegram to General Ismay for the British Chiefs of Staff and the Chief of the Air Staff in which he started with the sentence It seems to me that the moment has come when the question of bombing of German cities simply for the sake of increasing the terror though under other pretexts should be reviewed 13 14 Under pressure from the Chiefs of Staff and in response to the views expressed by Chief of the Air Staff Sir Charles Portal and the head of Bomber Command Arthur Bomber Harris among others Churchill withdrew his memo and issued a new one 14 This was completed on 1 April 1945 and started instead with the usual euphemism used when referring to strategic bombing It seems to me that the moment has come when the question of the so called area bombing of German cities should be reviewed from the point of view of our own interests 15 Many strategic bombing campaigns and individual raids of aerial warfare have been described as terror bombing by commentators and historians since the end of World War II but because the term has pejorative connotations others have denied that such bombing campaigns and raids are examples of terror bombing Defensive measures editDefensive measures against air raids include 16 attempting to shoot down attackers using fighter aircraft and anti aircraft guns or surface to air missiles the use of air raid shelters to protect the population air raid sirens setting up civil defence organisations with air raid wardens firewatchers rescue and recovery personnel firefighting crews and demolition and repair teams to rectify damage Blackouts extinguishing all lights at night to make bombing less accurate Dispersal of war critical factories to areas difficult for bombers to reach Duplication of war critical manufacturing to shadow factories Building factories in tunnels or other underground locations that are protected from bombs Setting up decoy targets in rural areas mimicking an urban area with fires intended to look like the initial effects of a raidHistory and origins editWorld War I edit Main articles Strategic bombing during World War I and German strategic bombing during World War I nbsp A 1918 Air Raid rehearsal evacuating children from a hospital Strategic bombing was used in World War I though it was not understood in its present form The first aerial bombing of a city was on 6 August 1914 when the German Army Zeppelin Z VI bombed with artillery shells the Belgian city of Liege killing nine civilians 17 The second attack was on the night of 24 25 August 1914 when eight bombs were dropped from a German airship onto the Belgian city of Antwerp 18 The first effective strategic bombing was pioneered by the Royal Naval Air Service RNAS in 1914 19 20 The mission was to attack the Zeppelin production lines and their sheds at Cologne Koln and Dusseldorf Led by Charles Rumney Samson the force of four aircraft inflicted minor damage on the sheds The raid was repeated a month later with slightly more success Within a year or so specialized aircraft and dedicated bomber squadrons were in service on both sides These were generally used for tactical bombing the aim was that of directly harming enemy troops strongpoints or equipment usually within a relatively small distance of the front line Eventually attention turned to the possibility of causing indirect harm to the enemy by systematically attacking vital rear area resources The most well known attacks were those done by Zeppelins over England through the course of the war The first aerial bombardment of English civilians was on January 19 1915 when two Zeppelins dropped 24 fifty kilogram 110 pound high explosive bombs and ineffective three kilogram incendiaries on the Eastern England towns of Great Yarmouth Sheringham King s Lynn and the surrounding villages In all four people were killed and sixteen injured and monetary damage was estimated at 7 740 about US 36 000 at the time German airships also bombed on other fronts for example in January 1915 on Liepaja in Latvia nbsp German airship bombing Calais on the night of 21 22 February 1915In 1915 there were 19 more raids in which 37 tons of bombs were dropped killing 181 people and injuring 455 Raids continued in 1916 London was accidentally bombed in May and in July the Kaiser allowed directed raids against urban centers There were 23 airship raids in 1916 in which 125 tons of ordnance were dropped killing 293 people and injuring 691 Gradually British air defenses improved In 1917 and 1918 there were only 11 Zeppelin raids against England and the final raid occurred on August 5 1918 which resulted in the death of KK Peter Strasser commander of the German Naval Airship Department By the end of the war 51 raids had been undertaken in which 5 806 bombs were dropped killing 557 people and injuring 1 358 These raids caused only minor hampering of wartime production by later standards A much greater impact was the diversion of twelve aircraft squadrons many guns and over 10 000 men to air defenses The raids generated a wave of hysteria partially caused by media This revealed the tactic s potential as a weapon that was of use for propagandists on both sides The late Zeppelin raids were complemented by the Gotha bomber which was the first 21 22 heavier than air bomber to be used for strategic bombing The French army on June 15 1915 attacked the German town of Karlsruhe killing 29 civilians and wounding 58 Further raids followed until the Armistice in 1918 In a raid in the afternoon of June 22 1916 the pilots used outdated maps and bombed the location of the abandoned railway station where a circus tent was placed killing 120 persons most of them children The British also stepped up their strategic bombing campaign In late 1915 the order was given for attacks on German industrial targets and the 41st Wing was formed from units of the RNAS and Royal Flying Corps The RNAS took to the strategic bombing in a bigger way than the RFC who were focused on supporting the infantry actions of the Western Front At first the RNAS attacked the German submarines in their moorings and then steelworks further in targeting the origin of the submarines themselves In early 1918 they operated their round the clock bombing raid with lighter bombers attacking the town of Trier by day and large HP O 400s attacking by night The Independent Force an expanded bombing group and the first independent strategic bombing force was created in April 1918 By the end of the war the force had aircraft that could reach Berlin but these were never used Interbellum edit Following the war the concept of strategic bombing developed Calculations of the number of dead to the weight of bombs would have a profound effect on the attitudes of the British authorities and population in the interwar years As bombers became larger it was fully expected that deaths would dramatically increase The fear of aerial attack on such a scale was one of the fundamental driving forces of the appeasement of Nazi Germany in the 1930s 23 These early developments of aerial warfare led to two distinct branches in the writings of air warfare theorists tactical air warfare and strategic air warfare Tactical air warfare was developed as part of a combined arms attack which would be developed to a significant degree by Germany and which contributed much to the success of the Wehrmacht during the first four years 1939 42 of World War II The Luftwaffe became a major element of the German blitzkrieg Some leading theorists of strategic air warfare namely strategic bombing during this period were the Italian Giulio Douhet the Trenchard school in Great Britain and General Billy Mitchell in the United States These theorists thought that aerial bombardment of the enemy s homeland would be an important part of future wars Not only would such attacks weaken the enemy by destroying important military infrastructure they would also break the morale of the civilian population forcing their government to capitulate Although area bombing theorists acknowledged that measures could be taken to defend against bombers using fighter planes and anti aircraft artillery the maxim of the times remained the bomber will always get through These theorists for strategic bombing argued that it would be necessary to develop a fleet of strategic bombers during peacetime both to deter any potential enemy and also in the case of a war to be able to deliver devastating attacks on the enemy industries and cities while suffering from relatively few friendly casualties before victory was achieved 24 In the period between the two world wars military thinkers from several nations advocated strategic bombing as the logical and obvious way to employ aircraft Domestic political considerations saw to it that the British worked harder on the concept than most The British Royal Flying Corps and Royal Naval Air Service of the Great War had been merged in 1918 to create a separate air force which spent much of the following two decades fighting for survival in an environment of severe government spending constraints In Italy the airpower prophet General Giulio Douhet asserted the basic principle of strategic bombing was the offensive and there was no defense against carpet bombing and poison gas attacks The seeds of Douhet s apocalyptic predictions found fertile soil in France Germany and the United States where excerpts from his book The Command of the Air 1921 were published These visions of cities laid waste by bombing also gripped the popular imagination and found expression in novels such as Douhet s The War of 19 1930 and H G Wells s The Shape of Things to Come 1933 filmed by Alexander Korda as Things to Come 1936 25 Douhet s proposals were hugely influential among air force enthusiasts arguing as they did that the bombing air arm was the most important powerful and invulnerable part of any military He envisaged future wars as lasting a matter of a few weeks While each opposing Army and Navy fought an inglorious holding campaign the respective Air Forces would dismantle their enemies country and if one side did not rapidly surrender both would be so weak after the first few days that the war would effectively cease Fighter aircraft would be relegated to spotting patrols but would be essentially powerless to resist the mighty bombers In support of this theory he argued for targeting of the civilian population as much as any military target since a nation s morale was as important a resource as its weapons Paradoxically he suggested that this would actually reduce total casualties since The time would soon come when to put an end to horror and suffering the people themselves driven by the instinct of self preservation would rise up and demand an end to the war 26 As a result of Douhet s proposals air forces allocated greater resources to their bomber squadrons than to their fighters and the dashing young pilots promoted in the propaganda of the time were invariably bomber pilots Royal Air Force leaders in particular Air Chief Marshal Hugh Trenchard believed the key to retaining their independence from the senior services was to lay stress on what they saw as the unique ability of a modern air force to win wars by unaided strategic bombing As the speed and altitude of bombers increased in proportion to fighter aircraft the prevailing strategic understanding became the bomber will always get through Although anti aircraft guns and fighter aircraft had proved effective in the Great War it was accepted there was little warring nations could do to prevent massive civilian casualties from strategic bombing High civilian morale and retaliation in kind were seen as the only answers a later generation would revisit this as Mutual Assured Destruction 27 During the interwar period 1919 1939 the use of aerial bombing was developed as part of British foreign policy in its colonies with Hugh Trenchard as its leading proponent Sir Charles Portal Sir Arthur Harris and Sidney Bufton The Trenchard School theories were successfully put into action in Mesopotamia modern day Iraq where RAF bombers used high explosive bombs and strafing runs against Arab forces The techniques of so called Air Control also included target marking and locating as well as formation flying Arthur Harris a young RAF squadron commander later nicknamed Bomber reported after a mission in 1924 The Arab and Kurd now know what real bombing means in casualties and damage They know that within 45 minutes a full sized village can be practically wiped out and a third of its inhabitants killed or injured 28 On an official level RAF directives stressed In these attacks endeavour should be made to spare the women and children as far as possible and for this purpose a warning should be given whenever practicable It would be wrong even at this stage to think that airpower was simply seen as a tool for rapid retribution 29 A statement clearly pointed out that the ability of aircraft to inflict punishment could be open to abuse Their power to cover great distances at high speed their instant readiness for action their independence within the detachment radius of communications their indifference to obstacles and the unlikelihood of casualties to air personnel combine to encourage their use offensively more often than the occasion warrants 29 In British strikes over Yemen in over a six month period sixty tons of bombs were dropped in over 1 200 cumulative flying hours By August 1928 total losses in ground fighting and air attack on the Yemeni side were 65 killed or wounded one RAF pilot was killed and one airman wounded 30 Between the wars the RAF conducted 26 separate air operations within the Aden Protectorate The majority were conducted in response to persistent banditry or to restore the Government s authority Excluding operations against Yemeni forces which had effectively ceased by 1934 a total of twelve deaths were attributed to air attacks conducted between 1919 and 1939 31 Bombing as a military strategy proved to be an effective and efficient way for the British to police their Middle East protectorates in the 1920s Fewer men were required as compared to ground forces 32 page needed Pre war planners on the whole vastly overestimated the damage bombers could do and underestimated the resilience of civilian populations Jingoistic national pride played a major role for example at a time when Germany was still disarmed and France was Britain s only European rival Trenchard boasted the French in a bombing duel would probably squeal before we did 33 At the time the expectation was any new war would be brief and very brutal A British Cabinet planning document in 1938 predicted that if war with Germany broke out 35 of British homes would be hit by bombs in the first three weeks This type of expectation would justify the appeasement of Hitler in the late 1930s 33 nbsp Ruins of Guernica 1937 During the Spanish Civil War the bombing of Guernica by German aviators including the Condor Legion under Nationalist command resulted in its near destruction Casualties were estimated to be between 500 and 1500 Though this figure was relatively small aerial bombers and their weaponry were continually improving already suggesting the devastation that was to come in the near future Yet the theory that the bomber will always get through started to appear doubtful as stated by the U S Attache in 1937 The peacetime theory of the complete invulnerability of the modern type of bombardment airplane no longer holds The increased speeds of both the bombardment and pursuit plane have worked in favor of the pursuit The flying fortress died in Spain Large scale bombing of the civilian population thought to be demoralizing to the enemy seemed to have the opposite effect E B Strauss surmised Observers state that one of the most remarkable effects of the bombing of open towns in Government Spain had been the welding together into a formidable fighting force of groups of political factions who were previously at each other s throats a sentiment with which Hitler s Luftwaffe supporting the Spanish Nationalists generally agreed 34 World War II edit Main articles Strategic bombing during World War II and Air warfare of World War II The strategic bombing conducted in World War II was unlike any before The campaigns conducted in Europe and Asia could involve aircraft dropping thousands of tons of conventional bombs or a nuclear weapon over a single city Area bombardment came to prominence during World War II with the use of large numbers of unguided gravity bombs often with a high proportion of incendiary devices to bomb the target region indiscriminately to kill war workers destroy materiel and demoralize the enemy In high enough concentration it was capable of producing a firestorm 35 The high explosives were often delay action bombs intended to kill or intimidate those fighting the fires caused by incendiaries 36 329 nbsp Destroyed townhouses in Warsaw after the German Luftwaffe bombing of the city September 1939At first this required multiple aircraft often returning to the target in waves Nowadays a large bomber or missile can be used to the same effect on a small area an airfield for example by releasing a relatively large number of smaller bombs Strategic bombing campaigns were conducted in Europe and Asia The Germans and Japanese made use of mostly twin engined bombers with a payload generally less than 5 000 pounds 2 300 kg and never produced larger craft to any great extent By comparison the British and Americans who started the war with predominantly similarly sized bombers developed their strategic force based upon much larger four engined bombers for their strategic campaigns The payload carried by these planes ranged from 4 000 lb 1 800 kg for the B 17 Flying Fortress on long range missions 37 to 8 000 lb 3 600 kg for the B 24 Liberator 38 14 000 lb 6 400 kg for the Avro Lancaster 39 and 20 000 lb 9 000 kg B 29 Superfortress 40 with some specialized aircraft such as the Special B Avro Lancaster carrying the 22 000 lb 10 000 kg Grand Slam 41 During the first year of the war in Europe strategic bombing was developed through trial and error The Luftwaffe had been attacking both civilian and military targets from the very first day of the war when Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939 A strategic bombing campaign was launched by the Germans as a precursor to the invasion of the United Kingdom to force the RAF to engage the Luftwaffe and so be destroyed either on the ground or in the air That tactic failed and the RAF began bombing German cities on 11 May 1940 42 After the Battle of Britain the Germans launched their night time Blitz hoping to break British morale and to have the British be cowed into making peace At first the Luftwaffe raids took place in daylight but changed to night bombing attacks when losses became unsustainable The RAF who had preferred precision bombing also switched to night bombing also due to excessive losses 43 44 Before the Rotterdam Blitz on 14 May 1940 the British restricted themselves to tactical bombing west of the Rhine and naval installations The day after the Rotterdam Blitz a new directive was issued to the RAF to attack targets in the Ruhr including oil plants and other civilian industrial targets which aided the German war effort such as blast furnaces that at night were self illuminating After the Butt Report released in September 1941 proved the inadequacy of RAF Bomber Command training methods and equipment the RAF adopted an area attack strategy by which it hoped to impede Germany s war production her powers of resistance by destroying resources and forcing Germany to divert resources from her front lines to defend her air space and her morale 45 The RAF dramatically improved its navigation so that on average its bombs hit closer to target 46 Accuracy never exceeded a 3 mi 4 8 km radius from point of aim in any case 47 page needed nbsp 1943 USAAF raid on ball bearing works at Schweinfurt GermanyThe United States Army Air Forces adopted a policy of daylight precision bombing for greater accuracy as for example during the Schweinfurt raids That doctrine based on the erroneous supposition that bombers could adequately defend themselves against air attack entailed much higher American losses until long range fighter escorts e g the Mustang became available Conditions in the European theatre made it very difficult to achieve the accuracy achieved using the exceptional and top secret Norden optical bombsight in the clear skies over the desert bombing ranges of Nevada and California Raids over Europe commonly took place in conditions of very poor visibility with targets partly or wholly obscured by thick cloud smokescreens or smoke from fires started by previous raids As a result bomb loads were regularly dropped blind using dead reckoning methods little different from those used by the RAF night bombers In addition only the leading bomber in a formation actually utilized the Norden sight the rest of the formation dropping their bombs only when they saw the lead aircraft s bombload falling away Since even a very tight bomber formation could cover a vast area the scatter of bombs was likely to be considerable Add to these difficulties the disruptive effects of increasingly accurate anti aircraft fire and head on attacks by fighter aircraft and the theoretical accuracy of daylight bombing was often hard to achieve 48 49 Accuracy described as pinpoint never exceeded the best British average of about a 3 mi 4 8 km radius from point of aim in any case 47 page needed Postwar German engineers considered the bombing of railways trains canals and roads more harmful to production than attacks on factories themselves Sir Roy Fedden in his report on a postwar British scientific intelligence mission calling it fatal and saying it reduced aero engine production by two thirds from a maximum output of 5 000 to 7 000 a month 50 Strategic bombing was a way of taking the war into Europe while Allied ground forces were unable to do so Between them Allied air forces claimed to be able to bomb around the clock In fact few targets were ever hit by British and American forces the same day the strategic isolation of Normandy on D Day and the bombing of Dresden in February 1945 being exceptions rather than the rule There were generally no coordinated plans for the around the clock bombing of any target In some cases single missions have been considered to constitute strategic bombing The bombing of Peenemunde was such an event as was the bombing of the Ruhr dams The Peenemunde mission delayed Nazi Germany s V 2 program enough that it did not become a major factor in the outcome of the war 51 Soviet Air Forces conducted strategic bombings of Helsinki the capital of Finland between 1939 and 1944 with Finland being subjected to a number of bombing campaigns by the USSR in that period The largest were three raids in February 1944 which have been called The Great Raids Against Helsinki 52 The Finnish Air Force responded to the air raids with a series of night infiltration bombings of ADD airfields near Leningrad 53 Strategic bombing in Europe never reached the decisive completeness the American campaign against Japan achieved helped in part by the fragility of Japanese housing which was particularly vulnerable to firebombing through the use of incendiary devices The destruction of German infrastructure became apparent but the Allied campaign against Germany only really succeeded when the Allies began targeting oil refineries and transportation in the last year of the war At the same time the strategic bombing of Germany was used as a morale booster for the Allies in the period before the land war resumed in Western Europe in June 1944 nbsp Child amid ruins following German aerial bombing of London 1945In the Asiatic Pacific Theater the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service and the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service frequently used strategic bombing over Singaporean Burmese and Chinese cities such as Shanghai Guangzhou Nanjing Chongqing Singapore and Rangoon However the Japanese military in most places advanced quickly enough that a strategic bombing campaign was unnecessary and the Japanese aircraft industry was incapable of producing truly strategic bombers in any event In those places where it was required the smaller Japanese bombers in comparison to British and American types did not carry a bombload sufficient to inflict the sort of damage regularly occurring at that point in the war in Europe or later in Japan The development of the B 29 gave the United States a bomber with sufficient range to reach the Japanese home islands from the safety of American bases in the Pacific or western China The capture of the Japanese island of Iwo Jima further enhanced the capabilities that the Americans possessed in their strategic bombing campaign High explosive and incendiary bombs were used against Japan to devastating effect with greater indiscriminate loss of life in the firebombing of Tokyo on March 9 10 1945 than was caused either by the Dresden mission or the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima or Nagasaki Unlike the USAAF s strategic bombing campaign in Europe with its avowed if unachievable objective of precision bombing of strategic targets the bombing of Japanese cities involved the deliberate targeting of residential zones from the outset Bomb loads included very high proportions of incendiaries with the intention of igniting the highly combustible wooden houses common in Japanese cities and thereby generating firestorms 54 55 56 57 The final development of strategic bombing in World War II was the use of nuclear weapons On August 6 and 9 1945 the United States exploded nuclear bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki killing 105 000 people and inflicting a psychological shock on the Japanese nation On August 15 Emperor Hirohito announced the surrender of Japan stating Moreover the enemy has begun to employ a new and most cruel bomb the power of which to do damage is indeed incalculable taking the toll of many innocent lives Should We continue to fight it would not only result in an ultimate collapse and obliteration of the Japanese nation but also it would lead to the total extinction of human civilization Such being the case how are We to save the millions of Our subjects or to atone Ourselves before the hallowed spirits of Our Imperial Ancestors This is the reason why We have ordered the acceptance of the provisions of the Joint Declaration of the Powers Cold War edit See also Nuclear triad nbsp A U S Air Force F 100C practices a nuclear bombing run Nuclear weapons defined strategic bombing during the Cold War The age of the massive strategic bombing campaign had come to an end It was replaced by more devastating attacks using improved targeting and weapons technology Strategic bombing by the Great Powers also became politically indefensible The political fallout resulting from the destruction being broadcast on the evening news ended more than one strategic bombing campaign Korean War edit Strategic bombing during the Korean war was a huge part of the aerial warfare for the United States It was widely used at targeting infrastructure and economic targets forcing the USSR and China to leverage more economically and materially in the supporting North Korean efforts It was also consistently reliable for the US even amongst Chinese and USSR interference throughout the war While nuclear weapons were never used at the outset of the war the US Strategic Air Command was ready with 9 B 29s from the 9th Bomb Wing acting as an atomic task force which were sent to Guam on standby duty The United States Air Force USAF at first conducted only tactical attacks against strategic targets Because it was widely considered a limited war the Truman Administration prohibited the USAF to bomb near the borders of China and the Soviet Union in fear of provoking the countries to enter into the war 58 Common targets were railroad yards bridges and airfields seeking to disrupt supply lines and ability to produce materials for the war The first notable strategic bombing was a bombing consisting of nine B 29s which bombed the Rising Sun oil refinery at Wonsan on July 6 1950 followed by a bombing of a chemical plant at Hungnam Later that month on July 30 a Chosen nitrogen explosives factory at Hungnam was bombed destroying the largest of the Konan Industrial Chemical Complex The Chinese intervention in the war in November 1950 changed the aerial bombing policy dramatically In response to the Chinese intervention the USAF carried out an intensive bombing campaign against North Korea to demoralize the North Koreans and inflict as much economic cost to North Korea in order to reduce their ability to wage war The largest incendiary raid of the war had 70 B 29s drop firebombs on the town of Sinuiju and was a representation for the change in aerial bombing policy The extensive bombing raids on North Korea continued until the armistice agreement was signed between communist and UN forces on July 27 1953 59 60 Vietnam War edit In the Vietnam War the strategic bombing of North Vietnam in Operation Rolling Thunder could have been more extensive but fear by the Johnson Administration of the entry of China into the war led to restrictions on the selection of targets as well as only a gradual escalation of intensity The aim of the bombing campaign was to demoralize the North Vietnamese damage their economy and reduce their capacity to support the war in the hope that they would negotiate for peace but it failed to have those effects The Nixon Administration continued this sort of limited strategic bombing for most of the war but pivoted towards the ending of it Operation Linebacker campaigns were much heavier bombing campaigns taking off many of the restrictions that were placed initially and began flying B 52 bombers Images such as that of Kim Phuc Phan Thi although this incident was the result of close air support rather than strategic bombing disturbed the American public enough to demand a stop to the campaign Due to this and the ineffectiveness of carpet bombing partly because of a lack of identifiable targets new precision weapons were developed The new weapons allowed more effective and efficient bombing with reduced civilian casualties High civilian casualties had always been the hallmark of strategic bombing but later in the Cold War this began to change Laos was also bombed heavily during the Vietnam War While originally denied by the US government Laos became the most heavily bombed country per capita as the result of more than 2 million tons of ordinance dropped 61 Laos contained heavy supply lines for communist troops and the US sought to destroy them safely before they could enter Vietnam and be used against American troops The first of many targets within the country was the Plain of Jars which was known as a logistical center for military forces to gather and is the main air base in Urdon While there were two different aerial operations held within Laos Operation Steel Tiger is the one that focused on the Strategic Bombing of supporting civilian infrastructure that could aid in the up and coming communist regime and was assisting in getting rebels to aid the North Vietnamese military Strategic bombing was entering a new phase of high intensity attacks specifically targeting factories that take years to build and enormous investment capital These new high intensity and focused attacks made extra use of newer and modern fighter aircraft such as the McDonnell Douglas F 4 Phantom II enabling less reliance on heavier more vulnerable bombers Iran Iraq War edit Main article War of the Cities After the fall of 1981 in the context of the Iranian ground counter offensives the USSR lifted their arms embargo and massively rearmed Iraq including with 40 MiG 25s which enabled the Iraqi air force to challenge Iran s F 14s in their air space Iraq used Tu 22 Blinder and Tu 16 Badger strategic bombers to carry out long range high speed raids on Iranian cities including Tehran Fighter bombers such as the MiG 25 Foxbat and Su 22 Fitter were used against smaller or shorter range targets as well as escorting the strategic bombers Civilian and industrial targets were hit by the raids and each successful raid inflicted economic damage from regular strategic bombing Iran also launched several retaliatory air raids on Iraq while primarily shelling border cities such as Basra Iran also bought some Scud missiles from Libya and launched them against Baghdad These too inflicted damage upon Iraq Post Cold War edit See also NATO bombing of Yugoslavia Strategy nbsp Smoke in Novi Sad Serbia after NATO bombardmentStrategic bombing in the post Cold War era is defined by American advances in and the use of smart munitions The developments in guided munitions meant that the Coalition forces in the First Gulf War were able to use them although the majority 93 62 of bombs dropped in that conflict were still conventional unguided bombs More frequently in the Kosovo War and the initial phases of Operation Iraqi Freedom of 2003 strategic bombing campaigns were notable for the heavy use of precision weaponry by those countries that possessed them Although bombing campaigns were still strategic in their aims the widespread area bombing tactics of World War II had mostly disappeared This led to significantly fewer civilian casualties associated with previous bombing campaigns though it has not brought about a complete end to civilian deaths or collateral property damage 63 Additionally strategic bombing via smart munitions is now possible through the use of aircraft that have been considered traditionally tactical in nature such as the F 16 Fighting Falcon or F 15E Strike Eagle which had been used during Operation Desert Storm Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom to destroy targets that would have required large formations of strategic bombers during World War II citation needed During the Kosovo campaign NATO forces bombed targets far from Kosovo like bridges in Novi Sad 64 power plants around Belgrade 65 and flea market in Nis 66 67 During the 2008 South Ossetia war Russian aircraft attacked the shipbuilding center of Poti 68 Russian invasion of Ukraine edit Main article Russian strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure 2022 present As part of the Russian invasion of Ukraine several waves hit Ukraine infrastructure periodically increasing damages deaths injured and deeply affecting energy distribution across Ukraine and nearby countries By late November 2022 nearly half of the country s energy systems had been destroyed leaving millions of Ukrainians without power and Ukrainian energy workers rushing the restore services via various ways 69 The methodical attacks on power stations and electrical nodes imposed large economic and practical costs on Ukraine 70 with a severe impact for millions of civilians over the winter 71 72 It was assumed that Russia s strategic intention was to break the will of the Ukrainian population to continue the war 73 Aerial bombardment and international law editMain article Aerial bombardment and international law Air warfare must comply with laws and customs of war including international humanitarian law by protecting the victims of the conflict and refraining from attacks on protected persons 62 These restraints on aerial warfare are covered by the general laws of war because unlike the war on land and at sea which is specifically covered by rules such as the 1907 Hague Convention and Protocol I additional to the Geneva Conventions which contain pertinent restrictions prohibitions and guidelines there are no treaties specific to aerial warfare 62 To be legal aerial operations must comply with the principles of humanitarian law military necessity distinction and proportionality 62 An attack or action must be intended to help in the defeat of the enemy it must be an attack on a legitimate military objective and the harm caused to protected civilians or civilian property must be proportional and not excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated 74 75 Pioneers editHenry H Hap Arnold USAF Giulio Douhet Regia Aeronautica Italy Arthur Bomber Harris RAF Curtis LeMay USAF Billy Mitchell USAAS Alexander P de Seversky in Victory Through Air Power 1942 book and 1943 film Carl Spaatz USAF Hugh Trenchard RAFSee also editDahiya doctrineReferences editInformational notes Hessel 2005 p 107 Goebbels used several terms including Terrorangriffe terror raids or Terrorhandlungen terrorist activities Terrorflieger terror flyers or terrorist airman No one in Germany used such terminology in connection with German bombing raids against cities in England Fritz 2004 p 44 Western Allies were air pirates They are murderers screamed the headlines of an article emanating from Berlin on February 22 Not only did the writer denounce the allied terror bombing but he also stressed the special joy that the Anglo American air gangsters took in the murder of innocent German civilians Citations Longmate 1983 pp 122 123 quoting the Singleton Report Barrett Tillman 2014 Forgotten Fifteenth The Daring Airmen Who Crippled Hitler s War Machine Simon and Schuster p 35 ISBN 978 1 62157 235 0 The National Review The National Review 111 51 1938 The Round Table The Round Table 515 1937 Overy 2005 p 119 Myrdal 1977 p 252 Axinn 2008 p 73 Algeo 1993 p 111 Terror Bombing Bombing designed to hasten the end of the war by terrorising the enemy population 1941 Read Dig June p 58 2 Oxford English Dictionary terror n terror bombing intensive and indiscriminate bombing designed to frighten a country into surrender terror raid a bombing raid of this nature Brower 1998 p 108 mentions that Historian Ronald Shaffer described Operation Clarion an operation that involved both bombing and strafing as a terror attack Kochavi 2005 p 172 Taylor 2005 pp 413 414 Siebert Detlef British Bombing Strategy in World War Two 1 August 2001 BBC a b Taylor 2005 p 430 Taylor 2005 p 434 Overy 2013 Boyne Walter J 2003 The Influence of Air Power on History Gretna LA Pelican p 99 ISBN 9 781 589800 342 Zeppelin Flight staff 1914 p 906 Spencer Tucker Laura Matysek Wood Justin D Murphy eds 1999 The European Powers in the First World War An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis p 13 ISBN 978 0815333517 Tim Benbow ed 2011 British Naval Aviation The First 100 Years Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 29 ISBN 978 1409406129 Castle Ian August 2017 Strategic Bombing Gothas over London Military History Monthly O Connell Robert L 1990 The Gotha Bomber and the Origins of Strategic Bombing MHQ Magazine Doerr Paul W 1998 British Foreign Policy 1919 1939 Manchester University Press p 16 ISBN 978 0719046728 Richard Overy The Bombers and the Bombed Allied Air War Over Europe 1940 1945 2014 ch 1 Jeremy Black The Second World War Causes and Background 2007 p 392 Robert Pape 1996 Bombing to Win Air Power and Coercion in War Cornell UP p 60 ISBN 0801483115 Beau Grosscup 2006 Strategic Terror The Politics and Ethics of Aerial Bombardment Zed Books pp 21 35 ISBN 978 1842775431 Grosscup 2006 Strategic Terror The Politics and Ethics of Aerial Bombardment Zed Books p 55 ISBN 978 1842775431 a b Hayward 2009 p 37 Hayward 2009 pp 53 54 Hayward 2009 p 54 Omissi 1990 a b Johnson History of Air Fighting verification needed page needed Air Power by Stephen Budiansky Viking Penguin Books 2004 pp 200 08 Harris Arthur Bomber Offensive First edition Collins 1947 Pen amp Sword military classics 2005 ISBN 1 84415 210 3 Overy Richard 2013 The Bombing War Europe 1939 1945 Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 713 99561 9 Fitzsimons 1978a p 1736 Fitzsimons 1978b p 1736 Fitzsimons 1978b p 1697 The bombload of the B 29 eventually reached 9 000 kg 20 000 lb Lewis 1994 p 4 Fitzsimons 1978b p 1700 Grayling A C 2011 Among the Dead Cities Is the Targeting of Civilians in War Ever Justified A amp C Black ISBN 978 1408827901 Carter Ian June 2018 What Did Fighter Command Do After the Battle of Britain Imperial War Museum Carter Ian February 2018 RAF Bomber Command During the Second World War Imperial War Museum Conclusion to the Singleton report 20 May 1942 Copp 1996 British Bombing Survey Unit The strategic air war against Germany 1939 1945 report of the British Bombing Survey Unit reprint 1998 ch 9 online a b Hastings Bomber Command Stewart Ross Strategic bombing by the United States in World War II the myths and the facts 2003 pp 8 52 129 40 Stephen L McFarland America s pursuit of precision bombing 1910 1945 1995 Christopher John The Race for Hitler s X Planes The Mill Gloucestershire History Press 2013 pp 77 100 Cosgrove Edmund 2003 Canada s Fighting Pilots Dundurn p 135 ISBN 978 0919614970 Aake Pesonen 1982 Taistelu Helsingista Tuli iskuja taivaalle in Finnish Kirjayhtyma ISBN 951 26 2318 8 Jukka O Kauppinen Matti Ronkko 2006 02 27 Night Of The Bombers Retrieved 2010 04 12 Guillemin Jeanne 2017 Hidden Atrocities Japanese Germ Warfare and American Obstruction of Justice at the Tokyo Trial Columbia University Press pp Chapter 2 Spoils of War Secret Japanese Biological Science ISBN 978 0231544986 Reichhardt Tony March 2015 The Deadliest Air Raid in History airspacemag com Kennedy David M 2003 The American People in World War II Freedom from Fear Part Two Oxford University Press p 421 ISBN 978 0199840052 Deadly WWII U S firebombing raids on Japanese cities largely ignored The Japan Times March 2015 Wayne Thompson and Bernard C Nalty 1996 Within Limits The U S Air Force and the Korean War PDF Defense Technical Information Center Archived PDF from the original on February 28 2017 Korean War 1950 1953 PDF National Museum of the US Air Force Futrell Robert F February 1983 The United States Air Force In Korea 1950 1953 PDF Defense Technical Information Center Archived PDF from the original on June 29 2020 LEGACIES OF WAR UNEXPLODED ORDNANCE IN LAOS www govinfo gov Retrieved 2023 04 28 a b c d Francisco Javier Guisandez Gomez a colonel of the Spanish Air Force ICRC The Law of Air Warfare Archived 2014 12 21 at the Wayback Machine International Review of the Red Cross no 323 pp 347 63 Craig Tim Ryan Missy Gibbons Neff Thomas October 10 2015 By evening a hospital By morning a war zone via www washingtonpost com Top 20 destinacija za medeni mesec Među najboljim na svetu jedna nama i blizu i pristupacna B92 net Udar po elektroenergetskom sistemu Srbije Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Nis 1999 NATO bombardovanje city of Nis NATO bombing 1999 YouTube Godisnjica bombardovanja centra Nisa Juzne vesti Earl Tilford Russia s Georgia Take Down Implications for Russia and America Ukraine war Almost half Ukraine s energy system disabled PM says BBC News 18 November 2022 Retrieved 23 November 2022 Kraemer Christian 2022 10 26 Russian bombings of civilian infrastructure raise cost of Ukraine s recovery IMF Reuters Retrieved 2022 10 26 Birnbaum Michael Stern David L Rauhala Emily October 25 2022 Russia s methodical attacks exploit frailty of Ukrainian power system The Washington Post Santora Marc 2022 10 29 Zelensky says that some four million Ukrainians face restrictions on power use The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 10 29 Stephens Bret 2022 11 01 Opinion Don t Let Putin Turn Ukraine Into Aleppo The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 11 02 Jefferson D Reynolds Collateral Damage on the 21st century battlefield Enemy exploitation of the law of armed conflict and the struggle for a moral high ground Air Force Law Review Volume 56 2005 PDF pp 4 108 Gene Dannen International Law on the Bombing of CiviliansBibliography editAlgeo John 1993 Fifty years among the new words a dictionary of neologisms 1941 1991 2 reprint ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 44971 5 Axinn Sidney 2008 A Moral Military Temple University Press ISBN 978 1 59213 958 3 Brower Charles F 1998 World War II in Europe the final year Roosevelt Study Center Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 21133 2 Boyne Walter J 1994 Clash of Wings World War II in the Air New York Simon amp Schuster pp 343 344 ISBN 0 671 79370 5 Copp Terry September October 1996 The Bomber Command Offensive originally published in the Legion Magazine Fitzsimons Bernard ed 1978a Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare Vol 9 London Phoebus p 969 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Fitzsimons Bernard ed 1978b Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare Vol 16 London Phoebus pp 1697 1700 1736 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Flight staff 1914 Aircraft and the War Flight 905 06 Fritz Stephen G 2004 Endkampf soldiers civilians and the death of the Third Reich illustrated ed University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2325 9 Hayward Joel 2009 Air Power Insurgency and the War on Terror Royal Air Force Centre for Air Power Studies ISBN 978 0 9552189 6 5 Hessel Peter 2005 The Mystery of Frankenberg s Canadian Airman illustrated ed James Lorimer amp Company ISBN 1 55028 884 9 Kochavi Arieh J 2005 Confronting captivity Britain and the United States and their POWs in Nazi Germany illustrated ed UNC Press Books ISBN 0 8078 2940 4 Lewis Peter M H 1994 B 29 Superfortress In Grolier Incorporated ed Academic American Encyclopedia Vol 10 Grolier Incorporated ISBN 978 0 7172 2053 3 Longmate Norman 1983 The Bombers The RAF offensive against Germany 1939 1945 Hutchinson ISBN 0 09 151580 7 Myrdal Alva 1977 The game of disarmament how the United States and Russia run the arms race Manchester University Press ND ISBN 0 7190 0693 7 Omissi David 1990 Air Power and Colonial Control The Royal Air Force 1919 1939 Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 2960 0 Overy R J 2005 The air war 1939 1945 Brassey s ISBN 978 1 57488 716 7 Taylor Frederick 2005 Dresden Tuesday 13 February 1945 London Bloomsbury ISBN 0 7475 7084 1 Trimble Michael M Air Force Strategic Bombing and Its Counterpoints from World War I to Vietnam Joint Force Quarterly JFQ 91 2018 82 89 Web McCoy A Reflections on History s Largest Air War Critical Asian Studies 2013 45 3 481 489 doi 10 1080 14672715 2013 829670Further reading edit Biddle Tami Davis Rhetoric and Reality in Air Warfare The Evolution of British and American Ideas about Strategic Bombing 1914 1945 Princeton Studies in International History and Politics 2004 Boog Horst ed The Conduct of the Air War in the Second World War An International Comparison 1992 763 pp very important anthology by major researchers Boog Horst ed Germany and the Second World War Volume VII The Strategic Air War in Europe and the War in the West and East Asia 1943 1944 5 Oxford UP 2006 928pp official German history vol 7 excerpt and text search online edition Buckley John 1999 Air Power in the Age of Total War Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 33557 4 Clodfelter Mark Aiming to Break Will America s World War II Bombing of German Morale and its Ramifications Journal of Strategic Studies June 2010 Vol 33 Issue 3 pp 401 35 Clodfelter Mark Beneficial Bombing The Progressive Foundations of American Air Power 1917 1945 University of Nebraska Press 2010 347 pp Craven Wesley Frank and James Lea Cate The Army Air Forces in World War II 7 vols 1948 1958 rpr 1985 official US Army Air Force history Davis Richard G Bombing Strategy Shifts 1944 45 Air Power History 39 1989 33 45 Futrell Robert Frank Ideas concepts doctrine A history of basic thinking in the United States Air Force 1907 1964 2 vols 1974 Grayling Anthony C Among the dead cities The history and moral legacy of the WWII bombing of civilians in Germany and Japan Bloomsbury Publishing USA 2009 Griffith Charles The quest Haywood Hansell and American strategic bombing in World War II 1999 online edition Hansell Jr Haywood S Air Plan That Defeated Hitler 1980 online version Kennett Lee B A History of Strategic Bombing 1982 Koch H W The Strategic Air Offensive against Germany the Early Phase May September 1940 The Historical Journal 34 March 1991 pp 117 41 online at JSTOR Levine Alan J The Strategic Bombing of Germany 1940 1945 1992 online edition MacIsaac David Strategic Bombing in World War Two 1976 story of the official American Strategic Bombing Survey Messenger Charles Bomber Harris and the Strategic Bombing Offensive 1939 1945 1984 defends Harris Morris Craig F The Origins of American Strategic Bombing Theory US Naval Institute Press 2017 272 pp Neillands Robin The Bomber War The Allied Air Offensive Against Nazi Germany Overlook Press 2001 Overy Richard The Means to Victory Bombs and Bombing in Overy Why the Allies Won 1995 pp 101 33 Overy Richard The Bombers and the Bombed Allied Air War Over Europe 1940 1945 2014 592 pp excerpt and text search a longer version was published in UK as The Bombing War Europe 1939 1945 2013 880 pp Patler Nicholas Is the U S Haunted by Its Nuclear Past Dropping the atomic bomb crossed a moral threshold The Progressive Christian Winter 2009 pp 15 19 36 Patler Nicholas Book Reviews Essay A Twentieth Century History of Bombing Civilians and A History of Bombing Journal of Critical Asian Studies March 2011 153 56 Sherry Michael The Rise of American Air Power The Creation of Armageddon 1987 important study 1930s 1960s Smith Malcolm The Allied Air Offensive Journal of Strategic Studies 1990 13 1 pp 67 83 Spaight James M 1 Bombing Vindicated G Bles 1944 ASIN B0007IVW7K Spaight was Principal Assistant Secretary of the Air Ministry UK Verrier Anthony The Bomber Offensive 1968 British Webster Charles and Noble Frankland The Strategic Air Offensive Against Germany 1939 1945 HMSO 1961 4 vols Important critical official history of RAF Bomber Command effort Werrell Kenneth P The Strategic Bombing of Germany in World War II Costs and Accomplishments Journal of American History 73 1986 702 13 in JSTOR Werrell Kenneth P Death From the Heavens A History of Strategic Bombing 2009 Good analysis Wetta Frank J and Martin A Novelli Good Bombing Bad Bombing Hollywood Air Warfare and Morality in World War I and World War II OAH Magazine of History 22 4 2008 25 29 online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Strategic bombing amp oldid 1208770583, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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