
Contents
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Driving Home the Bombardment Attack Driving Home the Bombardment Attack
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Driving Home the Bombardment Attack Driving Home the Bombardment Attack
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Day Operations at High Altitude Day Operations at High Altitude
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Comments on “Driving Home the Bombardment Attack” Comments on “Driving Home the Bombardment Attack”
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Tactical Offense and Tactical Defense Tactical Offense and Tactical Defense
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Tactical Offense and Tactical Defense Tactical Offense and Tactical Defense
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Comments on “Tactical Offense and Tactical Defense” Comments on “Tactical Offense and Tactical Defense”
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Cite
Abstract
In this chapter, to support the assertion that air power is inherently offensive, Kenneth Walker, in “Driving Home the Bombardment Attack,” argues that in the air, offense dominates defense, and a well-armed and well-flown massed bomber formation can defend against any air-to-air attack. In “Tactical Offense and Tactical Defense,” Frederick Hopkins takes an inductive approach to the question of whether the bomber will always get through. In World War I, only when German defenders concentrated their fighters to British bombers at a ratio of 1.5 to 1 did British attrition rates become too great for sustained operations. Hopkins considers it unlikely such ratios would be achieved in the future given the defender’s dilemma of having to defend everywhere yet also mass forces against an offensive force that could choose the time and location of attack.
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