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Lt Col Charlie Brown
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I saw that collection or part of it at the Smithsonian. All of us learned about Mitchell in AF History. His actions were at least part of the push toward an independent Air Force.
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Maj Marty Hogan
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Always good to be head strong. Some time though people get nervous and even though you are a father of air power ...you are not expendable
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LTC Wayne Brandon
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Billy Mitchell was right in his assessment, wrong in his execution of presentation.
While the ridicule was warranted, there are other much more effective ways of bringing about the changes he insisted were necessary without publicly discrediting the leadership in the various departments he targeted.
Ultimately, the AAF was directed to adopt the changes demanded by Mitchell thus vindicating him.
He was vindicated once again, in a manner of speaking when the North American aircraft company produced the B-25 Mitchell, a long-range bomber which became a major player in the airwar of WWII as it was the aircraft used by Lt. Colonel Jimmy Doolittle in the bombing raid on Tokyo in April 1942 and a significant part of the AAF inventory throughout the war.
The B-25 remained in various military and civilian uses for the next forty years.
The question that remains unanswered but speculative at best is "But for General Mitchell, would we have had the significant advantage in the air during WWII that we enjoyed or would we have been relegated to playing 'catch up' with the Germans and Japanese in both aircraft capability and tactics at an even greater loss of pilots and crews than was suffered throughout both theaters?"

Thanks for the post, SGT David Reynolds and have a great day!
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