Psychic
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2015
- Messages
- 3,164
- Reaction score
- 29
- Country
- Location
If you defend everywhere then you cannot defend anywhere. Prevention of daylight raids was a question of the relationship of strength between raiders and defending fighters. A greater number of defenders would inflict severe losses on the raiders and would even disperse the raiders. That superior defender ratio could be achieved even in the real world events; General of fighters Adolf Galland suggested to Hitler that concentration of defending fighter forces could be achieved at the cost of leaving some areas without fighter cover, Hitler rejected the idea(wrongly, not giving an inch didn't work well in the air). With the presence of fuel and success in the East, the overall economic and military situation would also have improved to a great extent, providing the Germans with more options at their disposal.but now Germany would've been dealing with a much larger landscape to defend
Germans already dealt with a landscape upto Rostov and even Maykop at some point in 1942. All the while fighting a huge war with the dangerous Soviet Union(take into account the daily losses in men and material which had to be continuously replaced). In case of a success in the East, the threat from a crushed Soviet Union is very little and hence some areas could be weakened to reinforce other areas. (you no more are allocating a large number of forces for ambitious advances in the East; There's even a possibility of a peace deal in the East)
Daytime bombing would have completely stopped, considering the much greater number of fighters in the defending force compared to the bombers+escorts. The attrition on the bombers would have been unbearable for the allies.I'm not so sure that the allied bombing campaign would've been completely deterred by the Luftwaffe. Nighttime bombing missions were almost impossible to defend
Night-time; difficult but not impossible, German night-fighters achieved remarkable successes till midsummer of 1943, if stopping these raids was impossible then they couldn't have done that. By this time you had radar in night-fighters. Improvement of overall military situation would have allowed the Luftwaffe to carry out retaliatory raids, using bombers and missiles. New tactics and weapons were introduced by both sides. Stopping bomber raids was a question of establishing air-superiority over the Reich which could have been achieved by concentrating a greater number of fighters. Success in the East would have released a number of units for the defence of the Reich. Availability of fuel would have allowed for better training of new recruits in day and night-fighter squadrons.
While it's true that the raiders employed innovative tactics of radar interference which allowed them to devastate Hamburg unmolested, however, the other side can also adapt accordingly, or retaliate accordingly(considering our hypothesis of success in the East).
It was a matter of getting the priorities right. The RAF had switched over from offense (bomber) to defence(fighter) during the Battle of Britain, and then switched over to offense again once air superiority was established over the island.
Consider these facts as they occurred in the face of huge setbacks and fuel shortages; during the first eight months of 1943 7600 fighter planes were produced. But despite the threat of enemy in the air, fighter production still had no priority over bomber production. Of these 7600 fighters, only a very small portion was allocated to the defense of the Reich. Air superiority was lost and instead of re-establishing air superiority with more fighters, it was weakened by taking planes away from the fighter arm and using them for support purposes. In the year 1944 alone 13,000 ME-109s and 4500 FW-190s were diverted to reconnaissance and battle squadrons.
Now consider a success in the East i.e low level threat from the Soviets would have released these support role fighters for the defence of the Reich.
The Germans even considering fuel shortages and other setbacks, suffered a lot more because of wrong priorities. After the Hamburg catastrophe, when Hitler was told that fighter should be getting priority he responded with the words that terror can only be dealt with by counter-terror. He ordered retaliatory bombing which proved to be pin pricks when compared to the allied raids and was unbearable in the long term and had to be abandoned.