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Perhaps one of the greatest what-ifs of post World War Two history is what would have happened if the US and UK had succeeded in getting the Atomic Bomb to work?
President Truman and Curtis Le May's round the clock bombing of Japan drawing on the destruction of Dresden by the RAF and USAAF is credited with persuading the Japanese Emperor to surrender after nearly every major city had been flattened. Le May commented in his autobiography in 1962 "if the damn Bomb had worked a lot of aircrew would be alive today".
Even without the A Bomb the USAF and RAF deployed bombers capable of reducing enemy cities to rubble with increasingly nasty firestorm and thermobaric effects.
Until the invention of thermobaric warheads the bomber rather than the missile was needed to "truck" enough weapons to destroy enemy cities and industry.
The USSR soon deployed its own bomber force based on B29s that fell into Soviet hands. Tupolev and Myasichev vied to build ever bigger and faster bombers with Boeing, Convair and North American.
Unfortunately for "deterrence by bomber" the anti aircraft missile soon offered a way of thinning down the waves of city slamming bombers.
The US bombing of North Vietnam showed that even SAC's B70 Valkyrie was no match for the flying telegraph poles or SAMs.
But SAC did succeed in bombing Hanoi and Haiphong flat albeit using tactical strike aircraft and carrier borne strikes to help the Valkyries and Hustlers.
The cost of the big bombers let to SALT talks in 1972 to reduce their numbers without losing the ability to destroy.
Napalm and Thermobaric bombs could easily stop modern cities from functioning.
Missiles had started to take on some of the job. They were much harder to shoot down but required in very large numbers.
The B2 stealth bomber entered US service in 1988. This aircraft could penetrate SAM defences and deliver newly developed buster ordinance. The Soviet Union was losing the bomber race.
By 1991 the superior economic muscle of the US left SAC the global striking force which no other country could match.
President Truman and Curtis Le May's round the clock bombing of Japan drawing on the destruction of Dresden by the RAF and USAAF is credited with persuading the Japanese Emperor to surrender after nearly every major city had been flattened. Le May commented in his autobiography in 1962 "if the damn Bomb had worked a lot of aircrew would be alive today".
Even without the A Bomb the USAF and RAF deployed bombers capable of reducing enemy cities to rubble with increasingly nasty firestorm and thermobaric effects.
Until the invention of thermobaric warheads the bomber rather than the missile was needed to "truck" enough weapons to destroy enemy cities and industry.
The USSR soon deployed its own bomber force based on B29s that fell into Soviet hands. Tupolev and Myasichev vied to build ever bigger and faster bombers with Boeing, Convair and North American.
Unfortunately for "deterrence by bomber" the anti aircraft missile soon offered a way of thinning down the waves of city slamming bombers.
The US bombing of North Vietnam showed that even SAC's B70 Valkyrie was no match for the flying telegraph poles or SAMs.
But SAC did succeed in bombing Hanoi and Haiphong flat albeit using tactical strike aircraft and carrier borne strikes to help the Valkyries and Hustlers.
The cost of the big bombers let to SALT talks in 1972 to reduce their numbers without losing the ability to destroy.
Napalm and Thermobaric bombs could easily stop modern cities from functioning.
Missiles had started to take on some of the job. They were much harder to shoot down but required in very large numbers.
The B2 stealth bomber entered US service in 1988. This aircraft could penetrate SAM defences and deliver newly developed buster ordinance. The Soviet Union was losing the bomber race.
By 1991 the superior economic muscle of the US left SAC the global striking force which no other country could match.