May 1943, over the skies of northern France, General Duryagfleer Adolf Galand pushed his Messid BF 109 into a climbing turn, tracking what should have been an easy target.

An American fighter, grotesqually fat and ungainainely, lumbering through the air like a pregnant cow.

His pilots had been calling it the Flegenda Milch flasher, the flying milk bottle.

a joke, an insult to the elegant deadly machines of the Luftvafer.

Galand lined up his shot, preparing to add another kill to his impressive tally of over 100 aerial victories.

Then the impossible happened.

The American fighter, this supposed clumsy behemoth, suddenly rolled inverted and dove.

Not a panicked dive, but a controlled high-speed maneuver that took it from 25,000 ft to near ground level in seconds.

Gallen tried to follow, pushing his 109 into a dive, but within moments his controls began to stiffen.

His aircraft, which handled beautifully in a turning dog fight, became sluggish and unresponsive at high speed.

By the time he pulled out of the dive, the American was gone.

Simply vanished.

Galland returned to his base, shaken.

He’d been flying combat missions since the Spanish Civil War.

He’d faced the best the RAF had to offer during the Battle of Britain.

And in all those years, he’d never encountered anything like this.

That evening, Galan sat down and wrote a detailed report.

The American P47 Thunderbolt was not the joke his pilots believed it to be.

It was fast, possibly faster than the 109 in level flight at high altitude.

It was heavily armed with 850 caliber machine guns that could shred a German fighter in seconds.

And most disturbingly, it seemed to be nearly indestructible.

Reports were coming in from other units of P47s returning to base after absorbing damage that would have destroyed any German aircraft.

Galan’s conclusion was stark and unambiguous.

The P47 represented a serious threat.

Luftwaffer tactics would need to change immediately.

German pilots could no longer rely on the superiority they’d enjoyed for the first years of the war.

If they tried to fight the P-47 using conventional dog fighting techniques, they would die.

He sent the report up the chain of command to Reich’s Marshall Herman Guring, commander of the Luftvafa and the second most powerful man in Nazi Germany.

Galand expected immediate action, orders to disseminate new tactical guidelines, perhaps authorization to accelerate development of new German fighters to counter the threat.

What he got instead was silence, then a week later, a summon to Guring’s headquarters.

What followed was one of the most surreal and infuriating conversations of Gallen’s career, and it marked the beginning of his transformation from loyal officer to internal dissident.

A man who would spend the rest of the war trying desperately to save the Luftwaffer from the incompetence and delusion of its own leadership.

Herman Guring was by 1943 a caricature of his former self.

Once a decorated World War I flying ace and a charismatic leader, he had devolved into a vain, corrupt, drugaddicted megalomaniac.

His opulent lifestyle, his obsession with looting art from occupied territories, and his refusal to accept any information that contradicted his worldview had made him a liability.

But he was Hitler’s oldest and most loyal lieutenant, and his position was unassailable.

When Galland arrived at Guring’s estate, he was kept waiting for hours.

When the Reichs Marshall finally appeared, he was in a foul mood.

The strategic bombing campaign by the Americans and British was intensifying.

German cities were being pounded night and day, and Guring, who had famously promised that no enemy bombs would ever fall on German soil, was feeling the pressure.

Galan began his briefing.

He described his encounter with the P47.

He presented intelligence reports from frontline units.

He laid out the technical specifications as best they could be determined.

speed, armorament, rate of climb, combat radius.

Everything pointed to the same conclusion.

The P47 was a formidable opponent, and the Luftvafer needed to adapt immediately.

Guring listened, his face growing redder with each word.

When Galand finished, there was a long, tense silence.

Then Guring exploded.

“This is defeist propaganda,” he screamed.

“The Americans cannot build airplanes.

They are very good at refrigerators and razor blades, but fighters impossible.

Gallan tried to interject to present more evidence, but Guring cut him off.

The entire report, he declared, was American psychological warfare designed to demoralize German pilots.

The P47 was a crude, heavy machine built by a nation of shopkeepers and mongrels.

It might look intimidating, but in the hands of Germany’s superior pilots, it would be swept from the sky.

Galland, choosing his words carefully, pointed out that he himself had engaged the P47, that he had seen its capabilities firsthand, that it was not propaganda, but observable reality.

This was a mistake.

Guring’s face went from red to purple.

Are you questioning my judgment, hair general? Are you suggesting that I who commanded fighters in the Great War do not understand air combat? Galland knew he was on dangerous ground in Hitler’s Germany.

Contradicting a superior, especially one as powerful and vindictive as Guring could be fatal, but he pressed on.

Her rice marshal, I am simply reporting what I have observed.

The P47 is a serious threat.

If we do not adapt our tactics, we will suffer unnecessary losses.

Guring waved his hand dismissively.

You worry too much, Galand.

The Luftwafa is invincible.

We have the best aircraft, the best pilots, the best tactics.

These American bombers and their escorts are temporary inconveniences.

Once our new jets are operational, we will sweep them from the sky.

Now, I have more important matters to attend to.

Dismissed.

Galland left the meeting in a state of disbelief and rage.

He had presented facts, hard data from combat operations, and been dismissed as if he were a hysterical child.

But Guring’s attitude wasn’t unique.

It was pervasive throughout the Nazi leadership.

The ideology of German racial and technological superiority had created a cognitive wall that facts simply could not penetrate.

The Americans were inferior.

Therefore, anything they built had to be inferior.

It was a circular logic immune to evidence.

And Galland knew with a sinking certainty that this delusion was going to cost thousands of German lives.

In the months following that disastrous meeting, Galland watched his worst fears come true.

The P-47 Thunderbolts, flying escort for American bomber formations, began to appear in everinccreasing numbers, and they were slaughtering Luftvafa fighters.

The tactics that had worked so well against the RAF Spitfires and Hurricanes were proving suicidal against the Thunderbolt.

German pilots trained in the art of the turning dog fight would engage the P47s at medium altitude.

The Americans, following their doctrine of boom and zoom, would refuse the engagement.

Instead, they would climb to 30,000 ft or higher, where the P47’s turbos supercharged engine gave it overwhelming superiority.

From that altitude, the Thunderbolts would dive on the German formations with terrifying speed.

The attack would last only seconds.

A high-speed pass, 8.

50 caliber machine guns blazing, and then the P47 would zoom climb back to altitude before the German pilots could react.

If a German fighter tried to follow the Thunderbolt into the dive, he would find his control stiffening, his aircraft becoming unresponsive at high speed.

By the time he pulled out, the American was already back at altitude, ready for another pass.

It was a form of combat the Luftwaffer had no answer for.

The German fighters, optimized for agility and turning performance, were being systematically destroyed by an opponent who refused to fight on German terms.

The loss rates were catastrophic.

In the summer and fall of 1943, the Luftvafa was losing pilots and aircraft faster than they could be replaced.

Every week, Galland received reports of experienced pilots shot down.

Men who had survived years of combat, who had dozens or even hundreds of kills, were being killed by American fighters flown by pilots with a fraction of their experience.

The difference was the aircraft and the tactics.

A mediocre pilot in a P-47 following the boom and zoom doctrine could kill an ace in a BF 109 or FW190 if the German pilot made the mistake of engaging on the Americans terms.

Galan tried repeatedly to get the high command to acknowledge the problem.

He wrote report after report.

He presented statistics.

He brought frontline pilots to briefings to describe their experiences.

The response was always the same.

excuses, denial, and accusations of defeatism.

Juring insisted the problem was not the enemy aircraft, but the quality of German pilots.

They were becoming cowards, he claimed, unwilling to press home their attacks.

He began to question the courage and fighting spirit of the Luftvafer’s fighter pilots, the same men who were dying in droves trying to defend German cities from the relentless Allied bombing campaign.

The breaking point came during a staff meeting in late 1943.

Guring, frustrated by the Luftwaffer’s inability to stop the American daylight bombing raids, launched into a Thai raid.

He accused the fighter pilots of cowardice and incompetence.

He claimed they were abandoning the bombers, refusing to engage the enemy.

Galland, who had attended the meeting along with other senior Luftvafa officers, finally snapped.

He stood up and in front of the entire room called Guring a liar.

He described in brutal detail the conditions the fighter pilots were facing.

Outnumbered, outgunned, flying obsolete aircraft against an enemy with overwhelming material superiority.

The pilots weren’t cowards.

They were heroes fighting an impossible battle while their own leadership buried its head in the sand.

The room went silent.

No one spoke to Guring like that.

Several officers expected Gallon to be arrested on the spot.

But Guring, perhaps recognizing that removing his most capable fighter commander would be a public relations disaster, simply glared at Galland and ended the meeting.

From that moment on, Galland was a marked man.

Guring and his cronies began looking for any excuse to remove him from command.

But Galland didn’t care anymore.

He had seen the future and it was written in the contrails of thousands of American bombers and fighters darkening the skies over Germany.

The Luftvafa was doomed not because it lacked brave men, but because it was led by fools and fanatics.

In February 1944, Galan’s worst predictions came to pass in the most devastating fashion imaginable.

The Allies launched Operation Argument, which would come to be known as Big Week.

It was a coordinated massive assault on the German aircraft industry designed to achieve absolute air superiority before the planned invasion of France.

For 6 days, waves of American B7 and B-24 bombers escorted by swarms of P47 Thunderbolts, P-38 Lightnings, and the new P-51 Mustangs pounded aircraft factories across Germany and occupied Europe.

The Luftvafa rose to defend, throwing every available fighter into the battle.

It was exactly what the Americans wanted.

The combat was apocalyptic.

On the first day alone, the Luftwaffa launched over 200 sorties against the American formations.

The German pilots were brave, pressing their attacks with suicidal determination.

But they were facing an enemy they simply couldn’t match.

The P-47s flying high cover dove on the German formations with brutal efficiency.

The Thunderbolts 850 caliber machine guns created a wall of lead that shredded the lightly built German fighters.

A single burst could tear the wing off a BF109.

A two second burst could set an FW190 ablaze.

And the P-47s themselves seemed nearly indestructible.

German pilots reported pouring cannon fire into the big American fighters, seeing hits register, and watching in disbelief as the P-47s simply absorbed the damage and kept fighting.

Galland personally flew multiple missions during big week, leading from the front as he always had.

On the third day, he engaged a formation of P47s, escorting bombers over Brunswick.

His wingman was shot down in the first pass.

Galland himself narrowly avoided being killed when a thunderbolt appeared out of nowhere, its guns tearing through his left wing.

He managed to break off and escape, but it was a close call.

That night, examining his damaged aircraft, Galland counted over 3050 caliber bullet holes.

If even one of those rounds had hit the fuel tank or the coolant system of his liquid cooled engine, he would have been dead.

The realization was sobering.

He was one of the best fighter pilots in the world, flying with over 15 years of combat experience.

And he had nearly been killed by an American pilot he never even saw coming.

By the end of big week, the statistics were catastrophic for Germany.

The Luftwafa had lost over 350 fighters and nearly 100 bombers.

More importantly, they had lost over 250 pilots, many of them experienced veterans who could not be replaced.

The German aircraft industry had been dealt a crippling blow.

Factories that produced fighter aircraft, engines, and components had been destroyed or heavily damaged.

It would take months to recover, months Germany didn’t have.

The Americans, by contrast, had lost about 250 bombers and fewer than 30 fighters.

And every single one of those losses would be replaced within weeks.

The production pipeline from American factories was limitless.

Galland wrote yet another report, this one even more urgent than his previous warnings.

The Luftvafer, he stated bluntly, had lost the battle for air superiority over Germany.

The industrial and material advantage of the Allies, particularly the Americans, was so overwhelming that no amount of tactical brilliance or pilot bravery could overcome it.

The P-47, which had been dismissed as a joke just a year earlier, was now the dominant fighter over Europe, and there was nothing Germany could do about it.

Guring’s response was predictable.

He accused Galland of defeatism and ordered the report buried.

But by this point, even Guring couldn’t completely ignore reality.

The skies over Germany were darkening with Allied aircraft.

German cities were being reduced to rubble.

The Luftvafa was being ground down in a war of attrition it could never win.

By late 1944, the situation had deteriorated beyond recognition.

The Allies had successfully invaded France.

German forces were retreating on all fronts, and the Luftvafer, once the pride of the Third Reich, was a shadow of its former self.

Pilot losses had been so severe that new pilots were being sent to frontline units with minimal training.

In 1940, a Luftvafa fighter pilot might have had 200 or 300 hours of flight training before seeing combat.

By 1944, many had fewer than 50 hours.

They were being thrown into combat against experienced Allied pilots flying superior aircraft.

It was, as Gallen described it, sending lambs to the slaughter.

The P47 Thunderbolt was now ubiquitous in the skies over Germany, and it had been joined by even more advanced American fighters like the P-51 Mustang, which combined the Thunderbolts firepower with even greater range and speed.

German pilots who survived their first few missions learned quickly.

Never ever try to turn with the American fighters at low altitude.

Never try to outclimb them.

Never let them dictate the terms of engagement.

But for inexperienced pilots, these lessons came too late.

The attrition rate for new Luftwaffer pilots was horrific.

Some units were losing 50% of their new pilots in the first week of combat.

Galland, who had been promoted to general of the fighter arm, responsible for all Luftwaffer fighter operations, was in an impossible position.

He had the authority on paper, but no real power.

Guring interfered constantly, issuing contradictory orders and refusing to allocate resources where they were needed.

Hitler, increasingly detached from reality, demanded miracle weapons and final victories.

Galland was expected to defend German airspace with an ever shrinking force of poorly trained pilots flying aircraft that were outclassed by the enemy.

In November 1944, Gallen did something unprecedented.

He organized what came to be known as the fighter pilots revolt.

Along with several other senior fighter commanders, he drafted a letter directly to Guring demanding changes.

The letter was blunt to the point of insubordination.

It stated that the current leadership of the Luftvafer was incompetent, that Guring’s refusal to accept reality was costing German lives, that the constant interference from the high command was making it impossible to conduct effective operations, and it demanded that either Guring step down or give the fighter commanders the autonomy to run operations without political interference.

The letter was signed by some of the most decorated and respected fighter pilots in the Luftvafa.

Men with hundreds of kills between them, men who had risked their lives for Germany countless times.

Guring’s response was immediate and vicious.

He called the signitories traitors.

He threatened them with court marshall and execution, and he removed Galland from command, effectively ending his operational career.

Galand was devastated, but not surprised.

He had known the risks, but he and his fellow pilots had reached a point where they could no longer remain silent.

Too many good men were dying because of incompetent leadership.

Too many lies were being told to the German people about the state of the war.

Someone had to speak the truth, even if it meant career suicide.

Galland was placed under house arrest, forbidden from flying combat missions.

For a man who had lived and breathed aerial combat for his entire adult life, it was a kind of death.

He sat in his quarters, listening to the reports of Allied bombers pounding German cities, knowing that the Luftvafa was being systematically destroyed, unable to do anything about it.

In the final months of the war, Germany was collapsing.

The Soviets were closing in from the east, the Americans and British from the west.

German cities were in ruins.

The economy was shattered and the Luftvafer, what remained of it, was flying on fumes, literally.

Fuel was so scarce that training flights had been almost entirely suspended.

New pilots were being sent to combat with virtually no preparation.

In a last desperate gamble, Galland was allowed to form an elite unit, Yagvand 44, equipped with the revolutionary Mi262 jet fighter.

The Mi262 was in many ways the aircraft Germany should have had 2 years earlier.

It was fast, over 100 mph, faster than any Allied fighter.

It was heavily armed.

In the hands of an experienced pilot, it was deadly.

But it was too little, too late.

Germany was out of fuel, out of time, and out of pilots.

Galan’s unit flew a handful of missions, achieving some success, but it was meaningless in the grand strategic picture.

The war was over.

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