Carpet bombing

On May 14, 1940 at 1:22 p.m., in the Rotterdam Blitz, German bombers set the entire inner city ablaze, killing 814 inhabitants
Wesel was 97% destroyed before it was finally taken by Allied troops in 1945

Carpet bombing, also known as saturation bombing, is a large aerial bombing done in a progressive manner to inflict damage in every part of a selected area of land.[1][2][3][4] The phrase evokes the image of explosions completely covering an area, in the same way that a carpet covers a floor. Carpet bombing is usually achieved by dropping many unguided bombs. In contrast to precision bombing, it is not aimed at a small target[3] such as a bunker, an airfield, or a military unit. One of its uses is the aerial bombing of cities.[1]

The term obliteration bombing is sometimes used to describe especially intensified bombing with the intention of destroying a city or a large part of the city.[5] The term area bombing refers to indiscriminate bombing of an area,[5] and also encompasses cases of carpet bombing, including obliteration bombing. It was used in that sense especially during World War II.[5]

Early history

One of the first cases of carpet bombing was by the German Condor Legion during the Spanish Civil War against Republican infantry during the Battle of El Mazuco;[6][7] in this case the targeted troops were dispersed on rocky slopes and the Condor Legion learned that carpet bombing was not very effective in such terrain.

During World War II

In the European Theatre, the Rotterdam Blitz was an aerial bombardment of Rotterdam by 90 bombers of the German Air Force on 14 May 1940, during the German invasion of the Netherlands. The objective was to support the German assault on the city, break Dutch resistance and force the Dutch to surrender. Despite a ceasefire, the bombing destroyed almost the entire historic city centre, killing nearly nine hundred civilians and leaving 30,000 people homeless. The destructive success of the bombing led the Oberkommando der Luftwaffe (OKL) to threaten to destroy the city of Utrecht if the Dutch Government did not surrender. The Dutch capitulated early the next morning.[8]

As the war progressed, the British built up RAF Bomber Command, which was capable of delivering many thousands of tons of bombs onto a single target, in spite of heavy initial bomber casualties in 1940. The bomber force was then wielded by Arthur Travers Harris in an effort to break German morale and obtain the surrender which Douhet had predicted 15 years earlier. The United States joined the war and the USAAF greatly enforced the campaign. Many cities, both large and small, were virtually destroyed by Allied bombing. W. G. Sebald's book, On the Natural History of Destruction, comments on the carpet bombing of German cities and asks why it does not play a larger part in the German national consciousness, and why virtually no German authors have written about the events. Despite the lack of literary coverage, a style of film shot amongst the urban debris and depicting the gritty lives of those who had to rebuild the destroyed cities called the rubble film, developed in the years after the end of World War II.

Carpet bombing was used as close air support (as "flying artillery") for ground operations. Massive bombing was concentrated in a narrow and shallow area of the front (a few kilometers by a few hundred metres deep), closely coordinated with advance of friendly troops. The first successful use of the technique was on May 6, 1943, at the end of the Tunisia Campaign. Carried out under Sir Arthur Tedder, it was hailed by press as Tedder's bomb-carpet (or Tedder's carpet). The bombing was concentrated in a four by three mile area preparing the way for the First Army.[9] This tactic was later used in many cases in Normandy Campaign, for example in Battle for Caen.[10]

In the Pacific War, carpet bombing was used extensively against Japanese civilian population centers, such as Tokyo.[11][12] On the night of March 9–10, 1945, 334 B-29 Superfortress heavy bombers were directed to attack the most heavily populated civilian sectors of Tokyo.[13] In just one night, over 100,000 of the population had burned to death from a heavy bombardment of incendiary bombs,[13] comparable to the wartime number of U.S. casualties on the entire Pacific theater.[13] Another 100,000 Japanese were left homeless. These attacks were followed by similar ones against Kobe, Osaka, and Nagoya, as well as other sectors of Tokyo, where over 9,373 tons[13] of incendiary bombs were dropped on civilian and military targets. By the time of the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, light and medium bombers were being directed to bomb targets of convenience, as most urban areas had been already destroyed. In the 9-month long civilian bombing campaign, over 580,000 Japanese civilians died.

See also

References

Notes
  1. 1.0 1.1
  2. 3.0 3.1
  3. Gooderson, Ian (1997). Air power at the battlefront : allied close air support in Europe, 1943-45 (1. publ. ed.). London: F. Cass. p. 129. ISBN 0-7146-4680-6.
  4. 5.0 5.1 5.2
  5. Juan Antonio de Blas, "El Mazuco (La defensa imposible)" (pp369383), in La guerra civil en Asturias, Ediciones Júcar, Gijón 1986.
  6. excerpt from de Blas source translated to English "El Mazuco (the impossible defence)" (Spanish version; verified against original book 11/2004)
  7. Hooton 2007, p. 52.
  8. Richards, Denis (1975). "XII Torch and Tunisia". Volume II: The Fight Avails. The Royal Air Force: 1939-1945 (Pbk. ed.) (London: H.M.S.O.). pp. 270–271. ISBN 0-11-771593-X
  9. Levine, Alan J. (1992). The strategic bombing of Germany : 1940-1945 (1. publ. ed.). Westport, Conn. u.a.: Praeger. pp. 141–142. ISBN 0-275-94319-4.
  10. "Tokyo remembers 1945 bombing raid". BBC News. March 10, 2005. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
  11. http://www.ieer.org/comments/bombing.html,
  12. 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 Nie, Jing-Bao (2010-08-17). Japan's Wartime Medical Atrocities: Comparative Inquiries in Science, History, and Ethics. ISBN 9780415583770.

External links