JohnTerrell wrote:
In other tellings of the story, Goering is simply said to have looked up and saw fighters escorting the American bombers over Berlin, and said "the jig is up"..
I believe the actual full quote is:
Quote:
General Spaatz asked Hermann Goering, soon after his capture, when he first realized that the Nazis were defeated. Goering replied, "When I saw your bombers over Berlin protected by your long-range fighters, I knew then that the Luftwaffe would be unable to stop your bombers. Our weapons plants would be destroyed; our defeat was inevitable."
The Combined Bomber Offensive: Classical and Revolutionary,
Combined and Divided, Planned and Fortuitous
Noble Frankland
Office of Air Force History, Headquarters USAF 1968
And variations on that theme
Quote:
When I saw escort fighters over Hanover, I became worried. When I saw escort fighters over Berlin, I knew the jig was up.
Quote:
The first time your bombers came over Hanover, escorted by fighters, I began to be worried. When they came with fighter escorts over Berlin — I knew the jig was up.
Quote:
Interview with Goring conducted by Major Kenneth W. Hechler U.S. Army Europe's Historical Division, with Captain Herbert R. Sensenig serving as translator
July 25, 1945
Hechler: Despite correct estimates of our potential, what made you think that you could emerge victorious in a war against us?
Göring: We had assessed the capacity of your air force especially well. The best engines were produced in the United States. We used to work on your engines and bought up every kind we could. Since the end of the last war, Germany had fallen behind in the air, while U.S. commercial aviation was far ahead of us. But in the beginning, we had not fully assessed the possibility of daylight bombers. Our fighters could not cope with them. When we were able to do so, there was a pause and then you sent them out with fighter escort. The Flying Fortress, for example, had more than we had anticipated. Our estimate was incorrect.
http://www.historynet.com/lost-prison-i ... ations.htm