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9 - The Luftwaffe on the Eve of Global War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2021

Klaus H. Schmider
Affiliation:
Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst
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Summary

The declaration of war on the US found a Luftwaffe which was already stretched to the limit. 80 % of its units were supporting the war in Russia, with the remainder engaged in western Europe and N. Africa. In Germany the Flak arm (anti-aircraft units were part of the Luftwaffe) was engaged in checking the initial phase of Bomber Command’s war against German cities. Against such a backdrop, a further escalation of the war would appear to be a suicidal undertaking. This chapter will focus on how Hitler and Luftwaffe C-in-C Göring would have perceived the situation in November/December 1941. All available sources support the idea that Hitler had every reason to take an optimistic view of the future development of the air war. Three new promising aircraft designs were nearing readiness, recent victories in Russia led to the shift of a substantial number of units to the Mediterranean and Bomber Command’s campaign against German urban areas had been checked by the introduction of a gun-laying radar for the Flak arm. A series of unexpected events which occurred from late December 1941 would reveal these expectations to be false hopes, but this fact would have remained hidden from the German leadership in early December.

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Chapter
Information
Hitler's Fatal Miscalculation
Why Germany Declared War on the United States
, pp. 484 - 522
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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