It would have been quite easy to stop P-38 escorts in 1943, just attack 
them early, and force them to jettison their external tanks, they were 
carrying about as much or more fuel externally than internally. 
 
It was -shown- that even a few dozen P-38's had a very delerious effect on the 
tactics of the German day fighters. 
 
There's no "it would have been quite easy to..." to it. What you suggest was 
not a factor. 
 
Also P-38 numbers grew from 302 in December 1942 to 567 in 
May 1943 then declined to 372 in October 1943 before rapidly 
expanding to 1,063 in April 1944.  The numbers are for the USAAF 
deployed against Germany and include reserves etc. 
 
Thanks for the minutia. 
 
The point is that Eaker and Hunter, 8th BC and 8th FC CGs respectively could 
have stressed long range escorts and pushed  P-38 enhancements, stressed 
solving the technical problems, and so forth in 1942. P-38's were available in 
England in 1942. 
 
Eaker and Hunter didn't do that. 
 
Eaker was not the only one and he did ask for long range tanks on 
his fighters.  It is not a simple good guy/bad guy situation. 
 
Eaker dawdled on it.  It wasn't important to him. 
 
Eaker thought the B-17's could defend themselves until very late in the game. 
 
He -was- sacked, after all. 
 
Eaker even suggested that the first Mustang groups go to the 9th AF.  He didn't 
understand the problem.  He didn't allow for improvements and reinforcments of 
the German AF.   P-38's of longer range and better reliability could have been 
provided well before they were.  An all P-38 force could have done what a mixed 
P-47, P-51 and P-38 force DID do--  wreck the German day fighter force. -- if 
it had been stressed earlier.  But it was not. 
 
Now, you'll dispute this of course.  But the problems the long range escorts 
gave the Germans rested on this: 
 
The Germans had to up-armor and up-arm their single engine fighters and add 
twin engine bomber destroyers to the mix, in order to kill B-17's in large 
numbers.  -Any- of the three main US fighters on the scene (P-38, P-47, 
P-51)could have made that up-armoring and use of the twin engine bomber 
destroyers impractical. 
 
Walt 
 
 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
		 
			
 
			
			
			
				 
            
			
			
            
            
                
			
			
		 
		
	
	
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