1218 catch up with the Germans
Several technicians began to talk about the topic they were most interested in: from a technical perspective, analyze the advantages of the Germans.
An official gave an example to prove that the German Navy has its own advantages in the use of carrier-based aircraft and aircraft carriers: "Their carrier-based aircraft are very powerful. According to technical speculation, their radar performance is very good, and the commander's understanding of radar is very good."
This is not what he said alone, but a reasonable technical analysis. The Germans avoided almost all the British navy's encirclement during the Atlantic Navy, and this cannot be explained by luck.
Combining the current technology, the US technical department firmly believes in the judgment of the British senior management, that is, they believe that the German Navy has radars with very good performance.
With the support of radar, the German naval commander's trust and reliance on radar technology is also greater than that of the US Navy.
These things can be judged, which is why the United States has always emphasized the research and development of radar technology and the popularization of radar equipment as soon as possible.
They equipped a large number of radars and gained an advantage in the battle with the Japanese Navy. But they still felt that after the Germans had the sweet taste, they would not give up the research and development of radar equipment easily.
The prediction department believes that the Germans' radar technology is more advanced than the Americans'. They have no tangible evidence, but they still believe in their own judgment.
In fact, their judgment is very accurate, because the Germans' radar technology is indeed more advanced than the Americans' technology.
Germany has an advantage in terms of detection distance, and Germans are also slightly better than Americans in terms of display technology.
The key is that the Germans' radar volume is beginning to shrink, which means that the possibility of Germans using radar technology to guide is getting higher and higher.
Unfortunately, the top leaders of the United States have no way to do this. They cannot stop the Germans from continuing to develop radar technology, nor can they surpass the Germans' technical accumulation in the short term.
However, there is not no good news. The good news is that the German carrier-based aircraft technology seems to have encountered a bottleneck and is not stronger than the carrier-based aircraft equipped by the United States.
The German carrier-based aircraft is a modified model of the famous FW-190 fighter, and the code inside the German army was FW-190t Sea Lark.
Unfortunately, this is a naval aircraft modified from the Army Air Fighter, and its performance is not outstanding among carrier-based aircraft.
Compared with Japan's Zero fighter jets, this type of aircraft is slightly inferior in range and plane maneuverability, and it also restricts the German Navy's air strike radius.
"But their success is based on the premise that the British carrier-based aircraft have poor performance, so I personally don't want to believe how strong they are." Another US intelligence official said.
What he said was the fact that the German carrier-based aircraft troops took advantage of the backwardness of British carrier-based aircraft and achieved victory in the Atlantic Battle.
Obviously, using me-109t and fw-190t fighters to bully the British swordfish attack aircraft is not a glorious thing.
There is a generation difference between the two, which is not a product of the same era at all, so the German naval carrier-based aircraft forces are unfair. This is what the British Navy reported to the US intelligence department.
What the British Navy is saying is true, but they will not emphasize to the US intelligence agencies that only the German Navy, which combines radar technology and advanced carrier-based aircraft, can bully the weak to such an extreme level.
Marshall knew the tricks, so he could only remind him: "Don't underestimate the enemy! Although the German navy is not strong, if the British really defect to them, it will be a trouble for us."
"How could the British defect to the Germans?" An American official was startled and asked his colleagues in the US intelligence department around him.
That colleague was obviously not surprised by this speculation, because in the eyes of the United States, the British are not an unswerving ally.
If you really speculate deeply, World War II was completely the second attempt by the United States, a new powerhouse, to bring Britain off the altar.
World War I was the first attempt by the United States, or in other words, World War I was the first attempt by Germany, but the beneficiary was the United States. The second time was secretly supported by the United States. At least a trick against Britain was the purpose of this in the first half of World War II.
However, later, because of Hitler's personal ambitions, or the unexpected rise of Germany's transcendence of control, an attempt to drag down Britain turned into a catastrophe that swept the world.
He thought for a while and answered: "Compared to the Germans, the British are not friendly to us... This is a multiple-choice question, and only the British know the answers themselves."
Obviously, the British were indeed doing multiple-choice questions. They were swaying between Germany and the United States. This time, because of the German paratroopers, they swayed to the Germans again.
"We have increased the control of Canada. The possibility of the Germans using Canada to land is not high. They come across the sea and will easily be defeated by us." A general of the US Army said.
The expansion of the US Army is very large, and it has already accumulated millions of regular troops on the American continent and Australia.
Even a world powerhouse like Germany cannot do it if it wants to defeat millions of US troops at the doorstep of the United States.
"This is good news, much better than the news in New Guinea!" Roosevelt nodded after hearing this news and said sickly.
"Obviously, our counterattack speed in the Pacific region was still slow, and the Germans got the rhythm they wanted." Marshall had to pour a basin of cold water.
Roosevelt heard Marshall's words and didn't know what he was thinking. He was silent for a while before speaking: "Defeat the Japanese defenders in New Guinea as soon as possible and fight for the initiative... This will allow us to get back our advantages in the next time."
"Hope, we can win quickly in New Guinea." Marshall agreed: "We don't have time."
"When the Germans have to face ice and snow on the Eastern Front, we can continue to maintain this opportunity to attack in the Pacific and catch up with the gap between us and the Germans." He said at last.
Roosevelt sat in his wheelchair, holding a report from the German occupation of Rostov, a report he had read several times, which marked that Germany had completed their offensive operations on the Eastern Front.
Chapter completed!