Dilandu wrote:
Well, French were of low opinion about the dive bombers. They thought (correctly), that dive bombers are nothing more than a temporary aberration of technology, and further progress in AA defenses would make them quickly outdated (and they were perfectly right).
French military was more interested in guided bombs, than dive bombers. By 1940, they already have one - BHT-38 - in final stage of development (Germans were able to capture French control system, and used it on their own guided weapons till the end of the war).
That is a fair point but, at that period, they were the only way to achieve precision bombing, failure to capitalise on that was criminal negligence.
Germans and Japanese proved this conclusively, to the Allies cost.
Again, the "bomber loons" weren't interested in precision, they wanted to commit mass murder of civilians as the be all and end all. See Barnes Wallis fight to be heard, the higher ups simply did not want to know and squashed anything that took away from their myopia of mayhem.
Also, failure to fund serious research on air launched rockets is proof of their puirblindness.
Far more accurate than bombs with stand off, thus also useful to degrade antiaircraft defences land or sea.
U.S. HVAAR was a superb, comparatively cheap tool British ground attack craft (if we had any in 1940!) could have decimated German columns with.
Sure, "dumb" rockets are not as good as mass producing FritX for precision (mass production and UK was way better than Germany at such and could have made it much more economical)
But HVAARs or similar were absolutely achievable before 1941 and had multiple uses.
US had better solid rockets but UK research from say 1933 onwards could have produced such...rather than "mega-bomber madness"
Such rockets may not be the best but a LOT of a cheaper, less effective weapon you actually have in inventory is miles better than "pie in the sky" you don't have