This work examines the practice of air interdiction in three wars:
World War II, the Korean War, and the war in Southeast Asia or
Vietnam War. It considers eleven important interdiction campaigns,
all of them American or Anglo-American, for only the United States
and Great Britain had the resources to conduct interdiction
campaigns on a large scale in World War II. Mark proposes a
realistic objective for interdiction - preventing me, equipment and
supplies from reaching the combat area when the enemy needs them
and in the quantity he requires. Center for Air Force History,
Washington, D.C.
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