They Mocked This "Suicidal" Fighter — Until One Pilot Stopped 30 German Attackers Alone
Автор: WW2 Records
Загружено: 2025-11-05
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Why one fighter pilot attacked 30 German fighters alone during WW2 — against every rule in the manual. This World War 2 story reveals how the "suicidal" P-51 Mustang proved everyone wrong.
January 11, 1944. Major James Howard, commander of the 356th Fighter Squadron, 354th Fighter Group, circled his P-51B Mustang over Oschersleben, Germany. Thirty German Bf-109s and Fw-190s dove toward sixty unprotected B-17 bombers. Howard's flight had scattered. He was alone. Every fighter doctrine manual said never engage when outnumbered more than two to one. Military brass called the untested P-51B "suicidal" for long-range escort missions. His fuel was limited. His ammunition even more so.
They were all wrong.
What Howard discovered that morning wasn't about following doctrine. It was about aggressive tactics and superior speed in a way that contradicted everything fighter command taught. The German pilots expected defensive flying. They got something completely different. And what happened over Oschersleben that day changed how the US Air Force thought about fighter escorts forever.
This mission's impact spread through the Eighth Air Force. The 354th Pioneer Mustang Group became the highest-scoring fighter group in the European Theater. The tactics proven that day continue to influence air combat doctrine today.
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