Shuttle bombing explained

Shuttle bombing is a tactic where bombers fly from their home base to bomb a first target and continue to a different location where they are refuelled and rearmed. The aircraft may then bomb a second target on the return leg to their home base.[1] [2] [3] Some examples of operations which have used this tactic are:

While shuttle bombing offered several advantages, allowing distant targets to be hit and complicating the Axis defence arrangements, it posed a number of practical difficulties, not least the awkward relations between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union. Allied shuttle bombing operations were concluded in September 1944 after a three-month period and not repeated.

Notes and References

  1. Staff. Shuttle bombing McGraw-Hill's AccessScience Encyclopedia of Science & Technology Online
  2. Edward T. Russell (1999). Leaping the Atlantic Wall: Army Air Forces Campaigns in Western Europe, 1942–1945 (PDF), United States Air Force History and Museums Program pp. 26, 27. (HTML copy on the website of USAAF.net)
  3. Book: Dear . I. C. B. . Foot . M. R. D. . The Oxford Companion to World War II . Oxford University Press. Oxford. 2005. 778. Shuttle Bombing. 978-0192806703.
  4. Book: Beevor . Antony . Stalingrad . 1999 . Penguin Books . 0140249850 . 138.
  5. Christopher Chant (1986). The Encyclopedia of Codenames of World War II, Routledge, . p. 15
  6. Jon Lake (2002). Lancaster Squadrons 1942–43, Osprey, . p. 66
  7. Book: Bombardiers lourds de la dernière guerre: B-17, forteresse volante, Avro Lancaster, B-24 Liberator . Editions Atlas . 1980 . 2731200316 .
  8. Book: Miller, Donald . Masters of the Air: America's Bomber Boys who Fought the Air War against Nazi Germany . Simon & Schuster . New York . 2006 . 0743235444 . registration .
  9. Charles T. O'Reilly (2001). Forgotten Battles: Italy's War of Liberation, 1943–1945 Lexington Books, . p. 343
  10. Deane, John R. 1947. The Strange Alliance, The Story of our Efforts at Wartime Co-operation with Russia. The Viking Press.
  11. http://paul.rutgers.edu/%7Emcgrew/wwii/usaf/html/Sep.44.html Combat Chronology of the US Army Air Forces September 1944: 17, 18, 19