Enemy Strengths and Weakness
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Interviewer: Mr. Sutherland-Brown, you were
telling me about the dangers of ground
attacking from enemy ground fire, did in fact
the squadron lose aircraft in that manner?
Oh yes. We had about the same rate of
loss as bomber command,
so 30% or something like that.
And as I say, have said, some of these
are through accidents, you know,
when your flying through the odd scattered
palm trees, you know you have to be very alert,
you're going at 250 miles an hour or more.
And so we've talked about the
monsoons and the hazard there.
But the chief hazard was ground fire.
Every railway station had Japanese gunners
in it and as I've told you, the Japanese soldiers
were brave in the face of fire because
they always shot back at ya with rifles.
It's hard to believe but they did.
Interviewer: During that period of time,what
was the strength of the Japanese Air Force?
Well, it was of course, we had complete
control of the air by, soon after I was there.
But they still had a lot of fighters and
they were very mobile,
the Japanese squadrons weren't like ours.
They had, the airfields had the ground crew
and they only, they could move from one to
another with just a few specialists.
So they go from one airfield to another and they,
they also retreated back to, under the pressure
that we put on them, back to Xian(sp) as it
was called then, Thailand. And we'd come up
to Meiktila or Mingladon(sp) at Rangoon to do
specific operations and then go back again,
they're very mobile. But they were greatly
outnumbered and outclassed
Interviewer: I was just going to ask
you about the quality...?
Well, the Oscar Fighter was a very
manoeuvrable, good fighter but wasn't
heavily armed and it had almost no armour.
But at sea level, we were as fast as they
were because we were, had derated boats
and we could go 320 miles an hour when
you went through the gate,
if you know what that means,
which was about the same speed.
So if they saw you from above they only
had sort of a possibility of one attack,
jumping you as it was called.
No our chief enemy was ground fire.
Interviewer: During your tour, did in fact you
come under attack from Japanese aircraft?
I never did, no. But colleagues did
of course and some were shot down.
Description
Mr. Sutherland-Brown says how their biggest threat was enemy ground fire. He also explains that the Japanese were very mobile but were out numbered and out armed.
Atholl Sutherland Brown
Mr. Sutherland Brown was born in Ottawa, Ontario, in 1923. Mr. Sutherland was the youngest of three sons, all of whom where in the military. His father had an extensive military background, but resigned just before Hitler took power. Mr. Sutherland enlisted at the age of 16 as a private with the Piper 16th Canadian Scottish. He then finished his education at Victoria College before joining the air force at 18.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 03:38
- Person Interviewed:
- Atholl Sutherland Brown
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Asia
- Branch:
- Air Force
- Units/Ship:
- Bullfighter Squadron
- Occupation:
- Pilot
Related Videos
- Date modified: