“He’s Over the Convoy!” — German Radios Panicked as Navy Fighter Dropped In Low
Загружено: 2026-01-02
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In Collaboration with @WW2NavalAviation
WW2, In the fog-shrouded waters of the English Channel, one Navy pilot rewrote the rules of aerial combat. Lieutenant James 'Pick' Pickens wasn't supposed to be hunting German convoys off occupied France—Hellcats were built for Pacific carrier decks, not the gray, unforgiving skies of Europe. But in the desperate spring of 1944, as Allied losses mounted and standard tactics sent good men to cold graves, Pick saw what others missed.
The turning point came on a rain-swept April morning when he broke formation and dropped to wave-top height, using fog banks as cover to strike a convoy from an impossible angle. In thirty seconds of controlled fury, he shattered the Germans' coordinated defenses and proved that surprise could defeat firepower. The technique spread through ready rooms across England, and loss rates began to fall.
This is the story of a quiet farm boy from Illinois who calculated his way through the deadliest missions of the war—not for glory, but so fewer letters would reach fewer families. His name rarely appeared in official reports, but his legacy lives on in every doctrine that values disruption over brute force, and in the pilots who came home because one man found a better way to fight.
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