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Japan 1944–45

Mark Lardas

LeMay’s B-29 strategic bombing campaign

Barcode 9781472832467
Paperback

Original price £13.99 - Original price £13.99
Original price
£13.99
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Release Date: 21/02/2019

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Politics & Government
Illustrator: Paul Wright
Label: Osprey Publishing
Series: Air Campaign
Contributors: Paul Kime (By (artist)), Paul Wright (Illustrated by), Adam Tooby (By (artist)), Bounford.com (By (artist))
Language: English
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

LeMay’s B-29 strategic bombing campaign

The air campaign that incinerated Japan’s cities was the first and only time that independent air power has won a war.

As the United States pushed Imperial Japan back towards Tokyo Bay, the US Army Air Force deployed the first of a new bomber to the theater. The B-29 Superfortress was complex, troubled, and hugely advanced. It was the most expensive weapons system of the war, and formidably capable. But at the time, no strategic bombing campaign had ever brought about a nation’s surrender. Not only that, but Japan was half a world away, and the US had no airfields even within the extraordinary range of the B-29.

This analysis explains why the B-29s struggled at first, and how General LeMay devised radical and devastating tactics that began to systematically incinerate Japanese cities and industries and eliminate its maritime trade with aerial mining. It explains how and why this campaign was so uniquely successful, and how gaps in Japan’s defences contributed to the B-29s’ success.