00:00These Republican leaders have not been content with attacks on me, or on my wife, or on my sons.
00:13No, not content with that.
00:17They now include my little dog, Fallon.
00:22Well, of course, I don't resent attacks, and my family don't resent attacks.
00:32But Fallon does resent attacks.
00:51Fallon's Crucics
01:05Fallon's Crucics
01:13Fallon's Crucics
01:16The first thing was actually the first time I was to experience France.
01:22The first time I was to experience France and France,
01:26the last time I was at the end of the day,
01:28the first time I was born and I couldn't work on France.
01:32The first time I was to experience the history.
01:35In fact, I am not able to see my history.
01:39It's not, it's not...
01:42It's all...
01:46Hey, get a load of this, folks. Diabolical Sabotagey.
02:00This is it. This is the B-29. The plane you've been waiting for. And it was worth waiting for.
02:08It's the biggest, fastest, mightiest heavy bomber in the world.
02:13It can travel farther and higher than anything else on wings.
02:17It has a pressurized cabin, permitting high-altitude flight without oxygen masks.
02:22It has five remotely controlled, electrically driven turrets, each carrying twin 50s, with a 20mm cannon added to the turret in the tail.
02:31Yes, the B-29 is everything you've been promised. And the pilot who flies one has an enviable job. Important, glamorous, and tough.
02:42The key development that enabled the USAAF to bomb Nihon at scale was the B-29 Superfortress Strategic Bomber, which had an operational range of 3,250 nautical miles and was capable of attacking at high altitude, above 30,000 feet, where Nihongo air defenses struggled to reach them.
03:04Almost 90% of the bombs dropped on the Nihongo home islands were delivered by the B-29.
03:11I have WK-29, Teresara from UJKO in the UJKO in the UJKO in the UJKO in the UJKO in the UJKO in the UJKO in the UJKO-49 station, Nihongo E-29, and the UJKO, and the UJK in the UJKO in the UJKO.
03:23Thank you very much for joining us today, and we'll see you in the next episode.
03:39I think
04:03They invaded June 15
04:061944 on the 22nd
04:09February, carrier planes of Task Force 58 took off for the softening up attacks
04:13on Saipan's defenses, as well as those of Tinian, Rota, and Guam.
04:39And now, the
04:39Staff added the
04:431st of the
04:461st of the
04:492st of the
04:511st of the
04:552st of the
04:562st of the
05:041st of the
08:03once and for all of Nazism.
08:07God bless us all.
08:09God keep us strong.
08:10The strategic situation improved when flight operations
08:14from the Kita Mariana Chateau commenced in November 1944.
08:20But high altitude bombing attacks
08:22using general purpose bombs were observed to be ineffective
08:26by the USAAF leaders due to high winds,
08:30later discovered to be the jet stream
08:32which carried the bombs off target.
09:02The
09:21見つき残念あわずとも 愛しこい気持ち 夜ごとふるふる夢でくる
09:46本当にとなろうへちいね
09:52In Japan, whole villages customarily turn out to cheer reservists and conscripts when they leave to join the colors.
10:00The public claims the army as its own and looks to it for leadership.
10:05Discipline is good in the Japanese army.
10:08It has to be, for it is the ultimate reflection of the emphasis Japan's military masters place upon the seishin hyoiku,
10:15or spiritual training of the entire people.
10:19寂しい恋人のせずなさに Ladies step by up to the ship
10:24寂しい恋人のせずなさに In the نہیں Dreamtieiicho,
10:30寂しい恋人のせずなさに 放ってたたんだ神尻の 非常に美味しい縁でbs mirror applied to us for business.
10:35Oh
10:38Oh
10:40Oh
10:42Oh
10:44Oh
10:50Oh
10:54Oh
10:56Oh
11:02Oh
11:04Oh
11:30Between May and September 1943
11:33Bombing trials were conducted on the Japan Village Set Piece Target located at the Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah.
11:41These trials demonstrated the effectiveness of incendiary bombs against wood and paper buildings common in Japan and eventually resulted in Curtis LeMay ordering his bomber wings to change tactics and utilize these munitions against Nihongo targets.
12:01The first American raid utilizing incendiary munitions was carried out against Kobe on February 4, 1945.
12:11Tokyo was hit by incendiaries on February 25, 1945, when 170 B-29s flew a high-altitude raid during daylight hours, destroying around 643 acres of the snow-covered city.
12:21using 453.7 tons of both incendiary and fragmentation bombs.
12:31Subsequently, LaMay ordered further B-29 raids on the capital, but at a much lower altitude of 5,000 to 9,000 feet.
12:41And at night, judging that Nihongo's air defenses were weakest in this altitude range, and that Nihongo fighter defenses were ineffective at night.
12:51and that Nihongo fighter defenses were ineffective at night.
13:03and that Nihongo fighter defenses were ineffective at night.
13:07LeMay ordered all defensive guns but the tail gun removed from the B-29s, allowing the aircraft to be lighter, use less fuel, and carry more ordnance.
13:21When selecting targets for incendiary raids, USAAF planners had consulted maps produced by the Office of Strategic Services, which ranked Tokyo's five wards by their potential susceptibility to fire.
13:38OSS analysts had considered factors such as the average density and structural composition of buildings, and had even utilized risk assessments produced by Nihongo insurance companies prior to the war.
14:06While the military objective of incendiary raids was to target small, geographically dispersed light industry workshops, supplying larger Nihongo factories.
14:18The decision of which specific neighborhoods to bomb was made based on how well USAAF strategists believed they would burn.
14:36the damage to their
14:50and a Exceptional
14:52on this
14:54which is the only the first enemy of the war is to survive, and the third enemy of the war in the war is to engagement.
Be the first to comment