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Flying to Victory - Raymond Collishaw and the Western Desert Campaign, 1940–1941 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,204
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Flying to Victory - Raymond Collishaw and the Western Desert Campaign, 1940–1941 (Hardcover)
Series: Campaigns and Commanders Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Canadian-born flying ace Raymond Collishaw (1893-1976) served in
Britain's air forces for twenty-eight years. As a pilot in World
War I he was credited with sixty-one confirmed kills on the Western
Front. When World War II began in 1939, Air Commodore Collishaw
commanded a Royal Air Force group in Egypt. It was in Egypt and
Libya in 1940-41, during the Britain's Western Desert campaign,
that he demonstrated the tenets of an effective air-ground
cooperation system. Flying to Victory examines Raymond Collishaw's
contribution to the British system of tactical air support - a
pattern of operations that eventually became standard in the Allied
air forces and proved to be a key factor in the Allied victory. The
British Army and Royal Air Force entered the war with conflicting
views on the issue of air support that hindered the success of
early operations. It was only after the chastening failure of
Operation Battleaxe in June 1941, fought according to army
doctrine, that Winston Churchill shifted strategy on the direction
of future air campaigns - ultimately endorsing the RAF's view of
mission and target selection. This view adopted principles of
air-ground cooperation that Collishaw had demonstrated in combat.
Author Mike Bechthold traces the emergence of this strategy in the
RAF air campaign in Operation Compass, the first British offensive
in the Western Desert, in which Air Commodore Collishaw's small
force overwhelmed its Italian counterpart and disrupted enemy
logistics. Flying to Victory details the experiences that prepared
Collishaw so well for this campaign and that taught him much about
the application of air power, especially how to work effectively
with the army and Royal Navy. As Bechthold shows, these lessons
learned altered the Allied approach to tactical air support and,
ultimately, changed the course of the Second World War.
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