more at:
http://scitech.quickfound.net/aviation_news_and_search
.html
Although this film refers to these shuttle bombing activities as "
Operation Titanic," the official name is now considered to be "
Operation Frantic."
'OPERATION TITANIC
... On
U.S. shuttle-bombing operations over
Germany between bases in
Great Britain,
Italy, and
Russia.
-Reel 1,
B-17 planes bomb the
French coast,
B-24s bomb a
German factory. B-17s are attacked by German fighters and some fall in flames; others fly on to land in Russia. An animated diagram shows advantages of using
Russian airfields.
Gens. Spaatz and
Anderson plan "Operation Titanic" (the construction of airfields in Russia) at
USAAF headquarters.
Ships are loaded with supplies in
British ports, the convoy passes through the Arctic, supplies are unloaded in
Murmansk, Russia, and are transported by train to an airport site in central Russia.
-Reel 2, personnel of the U.S.
8th Air Force in Great Britain and of the
15th Air Force in Italy are briefed for the first shuttle bombing run to the new Russian airfields.
Gen. Twining bids them farewell. B-17s, led by Gen. Eaker, take off. B-24s take off from Great Britain.
P-51 and
P-38 fighter planes escort the bombers on their way. The two bombing forces bomb targets in Germany, land in Russia, and are greeted by Gen.
Ross. and Russian Gen. Seymenov.
-
Reel 3, U.S. bombers land, crews disembark, and fraternize with
Russian pilots.
Officers interrogate the flyers on the mission. Russian and U.S. crewmen service the planes.
Flyers eat at an outdoor kitchen, sleep in tents, and fall out for reveille. Col.
Kepler and Russian officers confer on the next bombing mission. Crewmen of a bomber play baseball and cards, write letters home, milk a cow, and drive a jeep to visit war ruins.
Shows Russian "Yak" fighters lined up on a field.
-Reel 4,
Russians entertain
Americans with folk songs and dances. Crews are briefed and planes take off. Reel 5, B-17 bombers take off from an airfield. Shows a montage of shots of bombing raids on
Axis cities.'
Public domain film from the
US National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/
3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Frantic
Operation Frantic was a series of seven shuttle bombing operations during
World War II conducted by
American aircraft based in Great Britain and
Southern Italy which then landed at three
Soviet airfields in
Ukraine. The operation began in June,
1944 and ended in September...
Overview
American plans to use air bases in the
USSR began as
United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) staff studies soon after the
German invasion on 22 June
1941. After the
Japanese attack on the
United States on
7 December, the concept was expanded to hit the
Japanese Home Islands from
Siberia. However, Soviet air cooperation was negligible through
1942, and it was not until the
Foreign Ministers' conference (
Moscow Conference) in
Moscow in October 1943 that the American delegation raised the issue formally with
Foreign Commissar Vyacheslav Molotov.
At the
Tehran Conference in late
November 1943,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt personally proposed the use of Soviet bases by American aircraft to
Marshal Joseph Stalin...
Operation Frantic, originally known as
Operation Baseball, was intended to permanently establish three heavy bomber groups in Soviet territory, but only a small contingent, about 1,
300 men, was eventually detached to the American bases in the USSR.
During the four months of major operations, 24 targets in German-held territory, some never before within effective range of the American strategic bomber forces, were attacked...
The operations were reduced and finally discontinued due to 1) a catastrophic German air attack on the bases in June, 2) Soviet hostility and non-cooperation that began in August, and 3) the inability of the Americans to receive permission to use the bases for support of the
Warsaw Uprising, which soured relations between the two countries.
The main operational difficulty encountered by the
US forces was inadequate force protection by the
Soviets.
The Soviets refused US requests to introduce adequate radar-guided artillery and night fighter support, and US aircraft were frequently fired upon by
Soviet forces...
Operation Frantic has greater historical importance for the development of
Soviet-American relations than for its effect on Germany's war effort. Starting out with high hopes, it eventually set a discordant note that foreshadowed the
Cold War...
- published: 24 May 2015
- views: 2717