AIR WAR IN PACIFIC
SCORE AGAINST JAPANESE" "SUICIDE PILOTS" DISAPPEAR (0.C.) SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 4. United Nations' air forces are defeating the Japanese in tho New Guinea - New Britain area by more than 12 to one, said Colonel Don P. Hall, leader of the raid on Wewak, in an interview on his return from the South-west Pacific. Colonel Hall and his raiders flew 825 Mitchell bombers low over the field to catch the Japanese by surprise. Addressing aviation employees, Colonel Hall said: "We are getting planes and equipment now —but we will need a lot of it. "Morale of our forces is 100 per cent higher than it was a year ago, when we had scarcely anything with which to eppose the Japanese. That is why ii is a different story to-day. "On the Wewak raid, for instance, our cameras showed we destroyed 20G out of 225 Japanese planes lined up on the air strips. After our first raid the Japanese attempted to build the place up again. They brought in more planes and stores, which was just what we wanted. Then we went back and hit them again a few days later. "Japanese fighters we encountered apparently were taught only to attack. They don't know what to do when they have to go on the defensive and they become confused. We don't hear of any Japanese 'suicide pilots' any" more," Colonel Hall said. "The aggressive boys have just about disappeared. They are getting more wary of our boys all the time, and more than once our pilots have turned a pursuing Japanese pilot back by simply flicking their tail cone red 'lights to make the Japanese pilot think it was machine-gun fire." Japanese Navy pilots appear to be better than their Armj- pilots, he added.
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Auckland Star, Volume LXXIV, Issue 293, 10 December 1943, Page 3
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296AIR WAR IN PACIFIC Auckland Star, Volume LXXIV, Issue 293, 10 December 1943, Page 3
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