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When Hollywood Ruled The Skies - Volumes 1 through 4 by Bruce Oriss


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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 7:48 am 
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Two Tidal Waves: One targets Islamic State oil, the other bombed Hitler's supply in 1943
Story here: http://www.stripes.com/two-tidal-waves- ... 3-1.380606

WASHINGTON -- The pilot in one of the most iconic air battle photographs of World War II wonders whether the Pentagon really thought things through before naming the current air campaign to destroy Islamic State oil Operation Tidal Wave II. The original Operation Tidal Wave was an Aug. 1, 1943, mission to destroy Hitler’s main oil supply in Ploesti, Romania -- the deadliest single-mission air loss in U.S. history. In the famous photograph, a single B-24 Liberator punches through a wall of black smoke just as it has cleared its burning refinery target. The famous bomber was named The Sandman, and its pilot, then 1st Lt. Robert W. Sternfels, isn’t sure the Defense Department knows how very wrong things went that fateful day in 1943. Despite the losses, the mission itself had multiple acts of extreme heroism as airmen pushed through the dangerous target – five Medals of Honor were awarded that day, and the long-range attack – a 2,600-mile round trip -- was the longest run accomplished to date. But it came at a cost. “I think it’s terrible,” Sternfels, now 95, said from his home in Laguna Woods, Calif. “The people that selected that … really don’t know what happened.” Earlier this month, Central Command announced the namesake mission, with a similar goal. In the same way that the U.S. went after Hitler’s oil supply – in wartime, oil was essential for Germany’s ground and air operations to succeed – the U.S. military is going after the Islamic State’s supply. The terror group has made it a priority to take over refinery cities in Iraq and Syria, and use the revenue from selling the oil to fund its operations. Central Command launched Tidal Wave II on Nov. 8 to shut down that funding source. Unlike the original single-day mission, Tidal Wave II is ongoing; the U.S. military said Monday that it had destroyed 283 tanker trucks used to smuggle oil from eastern Syria mainly to Turkey, where it is sold at a reduced rate to generate about half of the militant group’s income.

Target: Hitler’s oil

After weeks of practicing in extreme heat, where crews flew in formations just 100 feet over the Libyan desert, 177 B-24 Liberator bombers took off Aug. 1, 1943, as part of Operation Tidal Wave. They flew from their North African base in Benghazi to land a crippling blow to oil refineries in Ploesti. The refineries were producing an estimated one-third of Hitler’s oil, and the U.S. Army Air Forces planned a massive run against the target to choke off the supply. Multiple waves of B-24s from the 98th, 376th, 44th, 93rd and 389th Heavy Bombardment Groups flew in -- some 300 to 500 feet off the ground, others as low as 100 feet off the ground -- to surprise and destroy their target. But the Germans were waiting for them. They lit smoke pots to obscure the area, and once U.S. aircrews started bombing the refineries, thick black smoke from the fires made it impossible to see. German fighters dove and shot at the formations, sending bombers crashing to the ground. The crews faced heavy anti-aircraft fire, and several bombers hit thick wire traps that the Germans suspended from balloons over the target. In that single-day strike, 54 bombers did not make it home and 532 airmen were killed, according to “Combat Chronology, 1941-1945,” an official reference maintained by the Air Force Historical Studies Division. Hitler’s refineries, while damaged, survived this deadly attack. It would take another year of relentless bombing, more than 13,000 tons of bombs and the loss of an additional 2,000 airmen before Ploesti would fall in August 1944.

When Sternfels questions the naming of the mission, it’s because he believes serious navigational mistakes that day led to the unnecessary deaths of too many airmen and the failure of the mission to do lasting damage to the refineries. Col. Keith K. (K.K.) Compton, commander of the 376th bombing group, led the waves of bombers and had the first wave turn too early, Sternfels said. That mistake led them to Bucharest, not Ploesti. In correcting the wrong turn, Compton’s lead group missed its assigned target, the Romana Americana refinery – the most important of the targets, according to the U.S. Air Force Historical Support Division -- and the refinery was back to normal within months. “Virtually every study on the Ploesti attack stated that the damage was not at all significant and had little impact on either overall German oil processing or on production at the Ploesti refining complex,” said Archangelo “Archie” DiFante, a senior research archivist at the U.S. Air Force Historical Research Agency at Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala. But the importance of that mission went beyond destroying refineries, DiFante said. “It showed the world, especially the enemy, that despite their losses, the [U.S. Army Air Force] heavy bombers could reach and attack targets deep within German held territory and return.”

The Sandman’s flight

Ploesti was on fire and heavy with smoke from Compton’s earlier wave of attack when Sternfels’ group reached the refinery, so the bombers in his formation used train tracks to guide them. But the Germans were ready for that, too, and had 88mm guns mounted on flat railcars. Haystacks along the route began to open, revealing heavy anti-aircraft guns. The Sandman and the other bombers in its wave of attack were moving in at 200 mph, and it was very difficult to keep the bomber under control, Sternfels said. He had his co-pilot, 2nd. Lt. Barney Jackson, grip the bomber’s wheel and both men fought to keep the Sandman level as it flew through the prop wash of the bombers swarming ahead of them. As Sternfels looked out his window at the gun train below, he said he flashed back to the carnival games he saw as a child, where people would pay to shoot at fake ducks that were pulled across a carnival barker’s game stand on a chain to win a prize. Except here, he recalled, “we were the ducks.” The bombers that survived were the ones closest to the train, because the rounds were on time-delayed fuses that did not explode fast enough to destroy the Liberators closest to it. The Sandman pushed into its target, completely enveloped by the smoke. Liberators around him were hit and had engines and bomb bays on fire. They saw some men bail out whose parachutes failed to open. In his mission report of that day, Sternfels and his crew reported seeing 11 bombers around them on fire, breaking apart or crashing. He said he couldn’t think about bombers he saw going down: “I was worried about my survival. I had no feeling.” As soon as he dropped their bombs over the target, bombardier 2nd Lt. David Polaschek used the interphone to reach his pilot. “He said, ‘Let’s get out of here!’ ” Sternfels recalled. “I said, ‘I’m doing the best I can!’ ”

Capturing the moment

When the iconic photograph was taken, Sternfels and his crew had just emerged from the smoke. He was flying 200 mph about 150 feet off the ground. “We went into the smoke and fortunately we came out of it at a moment where I could see the smokestacks. I was headed right for them.” Several brick smokestacks about 200 feet tall were directly in front of him. Based on the length of his bomber’s wings – which were each 55 feet long – he believes he missed the smokestacks by only 35 or 40 feet. “It was pretty close,” he said. “I didn’t have time to think about it. I was busy trying to correct to save the moment. I wasn’t thinking in the future. I saw them and I pulled up and turned.” Another Liberator flying ahead of him captured the moment in a photograph. Once the aircrews returned with the film, the image was selected to distribute to newspapers and quickly became a favorite used to tell the story of the danger crews faced that day. But the iconic image of that moment is actually backward, Sternfels said. Because of the extreme combat over Ploesti, none of the bomber’s open windows and gun turrets could be spared for a camera, so crews rigged up an alternative. “They could not photograph from the side (of the bomber) because of the gun emplacements,” he said. Instead, the crew “attached a mirror out of the back of the plane. It was a front surface mirror, like on a car. When they mounted the camera inside the plane to photograph the mirror’s reflection, things were in reverse,” he said.

The image that was later widely reproduced, and appeared on the Stars and Stripes front page, “is completely wrong,” he said. When he punched his bomber out of the black smoke about 150 feet off the ground, he saw the smokestacks dangerously close on his right hand side. In photographs, the bomber should appear to the right of the smokestacks. But even the National Archives version of the photograph is flipped, and the bomber is on the left of the smokestacks. It’s something Sternfels hopes they will correct for history’s sake.

“One side is correct,” he said. “But the other side is preferred in reprints.”

B-24D Liberator “The Sandman” of the 345th Bomb Squadron over the burning Astra Romania oil refinery in Ploesti, Romania during Operation Tidal Wave, Aug 1 1943.

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 7:58 am 
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On this day in history:
Operation Tidal Wave was an air attack by bombers of the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) based in Libya and Southern Italy on nine oil refineries around Ploiești, Romania
This mission was one of the costliest for the USAAF in the European Theater, with 53 aircraft and 660 aircrew lost. It was the worst loss ever suffered by the USAAF on a single mission. 1st August 1943

Over Gen. Eaker’s objections, the Eighth provided three bomb groups, the 44th, 93rd and 389th bomb groups, to fly with two Ninth Air Force groups in a low level attack on the Ploesti, Romania oil fields on August 1, 1943. 178 B-24 Liberators were assigned the August 1943 Ploesti Raid. The Raid resulted in the loss or extensive damage of 145 B-24’s, 310 aircrew fatalities, another 130 injuries and over 100 becoming Prisoners of War.

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 8:04 am 
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 8:05 am 
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Maj. John L. Jerstad, a pilot with the 93rd BG who was KIA on 08/01/1943 Ploesti mission Operation TIDALWAVE. He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor when he managed to continue his flight course after his B-24 sustained heavy damage en route to the target. Shortly after dropping the bombs, his plane crashed near the target.

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Lt. Col. Addison Baker, who was KIA in the 08/01/1943 Ploesti mission, Operation TIDALWAVE. During the mission, he led the remaining planes to Ploesti after a number of planes made a wrong turn and unknowingly flew towards Bucharest. Although his plane was heavily damaged by flak, his crew dropped the bombs. Baker then attempted to gain altitude to allow the rest of his crew to bail out, but the plane crashed and exploded, killing the entire crew. Baker posthumously received the Medal of Honor for his actions.

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 8:07 am 
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B-24D sn. 42-40265 'Honkey Tonk Gal' of 93rd BG 409th BS - Crash landed during Operation Tidal Wave 1.8.1943

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 8:12 am 
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Last edited by Mark Allen M on Mon Aug 01, 2016 8:23 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 8:20 am 
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 8:33 am 
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B-24 from the 98th BG which took part in the Ploesti Raids.

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B-24 from the 98th BG which took part in the Ploesti Raids.

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USAF A-10 Thunderbolt II after taking on fuel over Afghanistan and the type used in Operation 'Tidal Wave II'.
Operation 'Tidal Wave II' was a US-led coalition military operation commenced on or about 21 October 2015 against oil transport, refining and distribution facilities and infrastructure under the control of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Targets include transport trucks, operated by middlemen, which previously were not usually targeted. Per Wiki.

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Last edited by Mark Allen M on Mon Aug 01, 2016 8:54 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 8:52 am 
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Brave hero's all of them and they deserve to be remembered always. I nice collection of photos in this link.
http://www.armyaircorps-376bg.com/photo ... usaaf.html

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 9:16 am 
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Ploesti oil refineries, Ploesti Romania, Aug 1 1943

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 11:02 am 
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Outstanding! Thanks Mark, new pics that I haven't seen before. :drink3:


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PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2016 2:28 pm 
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Another homerun, Mark. Thanks


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PostPosted: Tue Aug 02, 2016 8:26 am 
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GENERAL LEON WILLIAM JOHNSON - EIGHTH AIR FORCE
MEDAL OF HONOR RECIPIENT FOR HIS EFFORTS AT PLOESTI
Ploesti was the scene of many individual acts of heroism and brought the unprecedented award of FIVE Medals of Honor for a single operation; four to the Eighth Air Force.
The 44th's commander Colonel Leon Johnson was one recipient and that irrepressible "Suzy-Q" was the bomber in which he earned the award. chosen as command plane for the "Eight Balls" effort, "Suzy-Q" had show trouble during the pre-flight run-ups, a broken spark plug in the master cylinder of the second engine was diagnosed but hasty action on the part of M/Sgt M. Ulosovich and his ground crew had her ready just in time. Major William Brandon piloted her with Colonel Johnson in the co-pilot's seat acting as formation commander.
While proceeding to the target on this 2,400-mile flight, his element became separated from the leading elements of the mass formation in maintaining the formation of the unit while avoiding dangerous cumulous cloud conditions encountered over mountainous territory. Though temporarily lost, he reestablished contact with the third element and continued on the mission with this reduced force to the prearranged point of attack, where it was discovered that the target assigned to Col. Johnson's group had been attacked and damaged by a preceding element. Though having lost the element of surprise upon which the safety and success of such a daring form of mission in heavy bombardment aircraft so strongly depended, Col. Johnson elected to carry out his planned low-level attack despite the thoroughly alerted defenses, the destructive antiaircraft fire, enemy fighter airplanes, the imminent danger of exploding delayed action bombs from the previous element, of oil fires and explosions, and of intense smoke obscuring the target. By his gallant courage, brilliant leadership, and superior flying skill, Col. Johnson so led his formation as to destroy totally the important refining plants and installations which were the object of his mission.
Johnson's personal contribution to the success of this historic raid, and the conspicuous gallantry in action, and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty demonstrated by him on this occasion constitute such deeds of valor and distinguished service as have during our Nation's history formed the finest traditions of our Armed Forces.

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Leon W. Johnson - Medal of Honor recipient for his efforts at Ploesti

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Johnson's Medal of Honor ceremony

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PostPosted: Tue Aug 02, 2016 8:44 am 
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Censored nose art?

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PostPosted: Tue Aug 02, 2016 1:07 pm 
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More likely a censored squadron insignia for security reasons.

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