GERMAN AIR RAIDS
Loss of 27 Planes BRITISH FIGHTERS’ SUPERIORITY. (Received March 15 1.20 a.m.) LONDON, March 14. An analysis’ of the German air raids against Britain shows increasing enemy losses. This has partly been due to a seasonal change in the weather conditions, but another factor has been improved methods of attack by British fighters. Some forty enemy planes have been shot down during the six months of the war, and about seventeen have been more so severely damaged as to be probable losses. Not a single British fighter has been lost in these air actions.
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Bibliographic details
Grey River Argus, 15 March 1940, Page 7
Word Count
97GERMAN AIR RAIDS Grey River Argus, 15 March 1940, Page 7
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