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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:06,788 --> 00:00:11,788 DOWNLOADED FROM WWW.AWAFIM.TV 2 00:00:11,788 --> 00:00:16,788 For latest movies and series with subtitles Visit WWW.AWAFIM.TV Today 3 00:00:16,788 --> 00:00:21,000 I still get the same reaction when I see a B-17. 4 00:00:21,876 --> 00:00:24,462 But isn't that a beautiful aircraft? 5 00:00:25,171 --> 00:00:26,798 It's like a piece of sculpture. 6 00:00:28,216 --> 00:00:31,594 {\an8}And it's lovely in the air when your wheels are up. 7 00:00:37,100 --> 00:00:39,060 When you flew in formation... 8 00:00:42,939 --> 00:00:45,525 sometimes with a thousand aircraft... 9 00:00:47,944 --> 00:00:50,405 it was a very beautiful and dramatic sight. 10 00:00:52,657 --> 00:00:55,034 [Hanks] In the cold, blue skies over Europe, 11 00:00:55,577 --> 00:00:57,245 a new kind of combat was fought 12 00:00:57,328 --> 00:01:01,249 in an environment that had never been experienced before. 13 00:01:01,875 --> 00:01:04,918 It was a singular event in the history of warfare. 14 00:01:05,003 --> 00:01:08,715 Unprecedented and never to be repeated. 15 00:01:19,267 --> 00:01:21,769 Airmen from 40 American bomber groups 16 00:01:21,853 --> 00:01:25,565 bled and died in staggering numbers in air combat. 17 00:01:26,065 --> 00:01:29,485 One of these groups, hyperaggressive and undisciplined, 18 00:01:29,569 --> 00:01:33,698 suffered so many casualties in such a short period of time 19 00:01:33,781 --> 00:01:36,492 it became known as the Bloody Hundredth. 20 00:01:39,704 --> 00:01:42,957 [crowd cheering, whistling] 21 00:01:43,041 --> 00:01:44,459 [Hitler speaking German] 22 00:01:53,426 --> 00:01:55,261 [crowd cheering] 23 00:01:55,803 --> 00:01:58,014 [reporter 1] Germany has invaded Poland. 24 00:01:58,097 --> 00:02:02,143 {\an8}In a big attack, about nine o'clock, Warsaw itself was bombed. 25 00:02:06,898 --> 00:02:10,151 {\an8}[reporter 2] The German army invaded Holland and Belgium early this morning 26 00:02:10,235 --> 00:02:12,862 by land and from parachutes 27 00:02:16,783 --> 00:02:18,826 {\an8}[Churchill] You ask, what is our policy? 28 00:02:18,910 --> 00:02:22,163 It is to wage war by sea, land and air. 29 00:02:22,247 --> 00:02:26,834 To wage war against a monstrous tyranny never surpassed 30 00:02:26,918 --> 00:02:30,964 in the dark and lamentable catalog of human crime. 31 00:02:34,676 --> 00:02:36,678 [Roosevelt] If Great Britain goes down, 32 00:02:36,761 --> 00:02:42,725 {\an8}the Axis powers will control the continents of Europe and Asia 33 00:02:42,809 --> 00:02:46,396 {\an8}and Africa, and they will be in a position 34 00:02:46,479 --> 00:02:52,485 to bring enormous military and naval resources against this hemisphere. 35 00:02:53,653 --> 00:02:55,530 {\an8}[reporter 3] We have witnessed this morning 36 00:02:55,613 --> 00:02:59,617 {\an8}severe bombing of Pearl Harbor by enemy planes. 37 00:03:00,159 --> 00:03:01,536 It is no joke. 38 00:03:01,619 --> 00:03:03,329 It is a real war. 39 00:03:05,123 --> 00:03:08,293 {\an8}[Roosevelt] I ask that the Congress declare 40 00:03:08,376 --> 00:03:11,212 {\an8}that since the unprovoked 41 00:03:11,838 --> 00:03:15,967 {\an8}and dastardly attack by Japan, 42 00:03:16,634 --> 00:03:18,678 a state of war. 43 00:03:29,147 --> 00:03:32,483 - [troops marching] - [crowd cheering, whistling] 44 00:03:32,567 --> 00:03:33,985 [Hanks] At this point in the war, 45 00:03:34,068 --> 00:03:36,946 {\an8}Hitler's Germany controlled continental Europe. 46 00:03:37,030 --> 00:03:39,699 {\an8}Great Britain stood alone and vulnerable, 47 00:03:39,782 --> 00:03:44,245 the last surviving European democracy at war with the Nazis. 48 00:03:44,787 --> 00:03:47,957 And the question became how to hit back at the enemy. 49 00:03:48,958 --> 00:03:52,212 Britain's bomber command had been striking Germany incessantly 50 00:03:52,295 --> 00:03:54,964 but ineffectively since 1940, 51 00:03:55,048 --> 00:03:59,928 taking huge losses in night raids that often missed their targets by miles. 52 00:04:01,930 --> 00:04:05,391 [Spielberg] There was a clear and present danger to global democracy 53 00:04:05,475 --> 00:04:07,685 because of the Nazis. 54 00:04:07,769 --> 00:04:11,481 {\an8}So, patriotism was something that the Greatest Generation, 55 00:04:11,564 --> 00:04:14,025 {\an8}my father's generation, took very, very seriously. 56 00:04:16,569 --> 00:04:19,112 Now, it isn't as if it was a chore for me to talk to you 57 00:04:19,197 --> 00:04:22,951 {\an8}because I wanna speak on my favorite subject, the Army Air Forces. 58 00:04:23,993 --> 00:04:26,371 {\an8}I-I can't speak from long experience. 59 00:04:27,163 --> 00:04:28,665 I've only been in the service a year, 60 00:04:28,748 --> 00:04:31,960 but I've learned a lot about what the air forces have to offer. 61 00:04:33,127 --> 00:04:34,504 That's what I wanna talk to you about. 62 00:04:35,713 --> 00:04:39,384 The Army Air Forces need 15,000 captains, 63 00:04:39,467 --> 00:04:43,805 40,000 lieutenants, 35,000 flying sergeants. 64 00:04:44,347 --> 00:04:47,058 Young men of America, your future's in the sky. 65 00:04:47,642 --> 00:04:49,269 Your wings are waiting. 66 00:04:51,271 --> 00:04:54,607 [Luckadoo] I was in the middle of my sophomore year in college 67 00:04:54,691 --> 00:05:00,572 {\an8}and didn't have a lot on my mind but chasing girls and-- and drinking whiskey. 68 00:05:00,655 --> 00:05:04,158 [chuckles] Meantime, Pearl Harbor happens, and then, 69 00:05:04,242 --> 00:05:09,706 along with my other fraternity brothers, were recruited as aviation cadets. 70 00:05:09,789 --> 00:05:11,332 [officer] Attention! 71 00:05:11,416 --> 00:05:12,375 [crowd cheering] 72 00:05:12,458 --> 00:05:15,628 [Rosenthal] At that time, there was a great deal of anti-Semitism. 73 00:05:15,712 --> 00:05:20,091 And Hitler, with his talk of superiority of the Aryan nation, 74 00:05:20,174 --> 00:05:24,679 I had a sense of frustration that I couldn't do anything about it. 75 00:05:24,762 --> 00:05:27,515 Suddenly, that frustration disappeared. 76 00:05:27,599 --> 00:05:29,684 I'd felt now that I could do something. 77 00:05:30,184 --> 00:05:33,897 {\an8}I thought the most effective way to serve would be as a pilot. 78 00:05:35,273 --> 00:05:40,111 I went down the next day and volunteered to be an air force cadet. 79 00:05:43,239 --> 00:05:46,868 [Hanks] Before enlisting, thousands of American flyers had never set foot 80 00:05:46,951 --> 00:05:51,706 in an airplane or fired a shot at anything more threatening than a squirrel. 81 00:05:51,789 --> 00:05:54,792 The crews were made up of men from every part of America 82 00:05:54,876 --> 00:05:57,295 and nearly every station in life. 83 00:05:57,378 --> 00:06:01,633 There were Harvard history majors and West Virginia coal miners. 84 00:06:01,716 --> 00:06:04,761 Wall Street lawyers and Oklahoma cowpunchers. 85 00:06:05,386 --> 00:06:08,681 Hollywood idols and football heroes. 86 00:06:11,351 --> 00:06:13,228 [reporter 4] The cadets have passed their test. 87 00:06:13,311 --> 00:06:15,271 And now, they'll get their flying lessons. 88 00:06:16,064 --> 00:06:19,442 [Rosenthal] Each instructor had four students. 89 00:06:19,526 --> 00:06:23,363 The other three students had previous flight training, I had none. 90 00:06:23,446 --> 00:06:25,532 I had never been inside of an airplane. 91 00:06:30,036 --> 00:06:32,956 [Clark] After about ten hours, we'd have solo. 92 00:06:33,456 --> 00:06:36,626 {\an8}When those wheels leave the ground, there's no one to help you. 93 00:06:36,709 --> 00:06:37,669 {\an8}You're on your own. 94 00:06:40,046 --> 00:06:45,301 {\an8}[Crosby] I became a navigator because I was a flop as a pilot. 95 00:06:46,678 --> 00:06:47,762 [Armanini] I got washed out. 96 00:06:47,845 --> 00:06:51,015 {\an8}I'll never forget the guy that washed me out was Lieutenant Maytag, 97 00:06:51,099 --> 00:06:54,519 {\an8}proper name for a-- washing out a prospective flying student. 98 00:06:55,103 --> 00:06:59,691 [Luckadoo] I had a military instructor, and he was about to wash me out, 99 00:07:00,400 --> 00:07:02,443 and he said, "You're gonna kill yourself anyway, 100 00:07:02,527 --> 00:07:06,114 but I'll tell you what, I'm gonna go over and sit under that tree. 101 00:07:06,197 --> 00:07:11,536 {\an8}If you can take this up three times and around the pattern and land it, you're in. 102 00:07:12,078 --> 00:07:14,080 If not, you're out." 103 00:07:16,708 --> 00:07:20,753 [Rosenthal] We flew from eight o'clock in the morning to eight o'clock at night. 104 00:07:20,837 --> 00:07:24,799 I did various maneuvers of chandelles and lazy S's. 105 00:07:24,883 --> 00:07:27,635 And on a rare day off, we would dogfight. 106 00:07:29,637 --> 00:07:32,599 I never enjoyed anything more than I did at that time. 107 00:07:42,442 --> 00:07:43,443 [speaking indistinctly] 108 00:07:43,526 --> 00:07:48,448 [Luckadoo] Forty of my classmates, just graduated from flying school, 109 00:07:48,531 --> 00:07:49,741 along with me, 110 00:07:49,824 --> 00:07:53,077 were all assigned to fly the B-17. 111 00:07:53,161 --> 00:07:55,914 We'd never been in a B-17 before. 112 00:07:58,166 --> 00:08:01,419 [reporter 5] The Boeing Flying Fortress, manned by ten men, 113 00:08:01,502 --> 00:08:04,422 this new bomber has a speed of nearly 300 miles an hour. 114 00:08:04,505 --> 00:08:07,133 The bulges on its fuselage are turrets for machine guns. 115 00:08:07,926 --> 00:08:09,594 With 4,000 horsepower engines, 116 00:08:09,677 --> 00:08:13,473 it can cruise for 3,000 miles without landing to refuel. 117 00:08:13,556 --> 00:08:18,770 B-17 was the first both offensive and defensive aircraft ever designed. 118 00:08:19,479 --> 00:08:23,775 Offensively, it dropped very heavy payloads for its day. 119 00:08:23,858 --> 00:08:27,320 And it was called the Flying Fortress because it had so many 50-caliber guns. 120 00:08:28,905 --> 00:08:31,866 [Rosenthal] The feel of the B-17 was wonderful. 121 00:08:32,367 --> 00:08:37,789 The plane responded so beautifully that I, uh, immediately related to it. 122 00:08:38,830 --> 00:08:41,334 I was very happy to be on B-17s. 123 00:08:42,919 --> 00:08:45,880 [Murphy] We had about five or six months of practice training 124 00:08:45,964 --> 00:08:48,174 and getting ready for an overseas assignment. 125 00:08:50,134 --> 00:08:54,138 {\an8}In May of 1943 we were sent to England 126 00:08:54,222 --> 00:08:56,015 {\an8}to become a part of the Eighth Air Force. 127 00:08:57,976 --> 00:09:01,104 [Luckadoo] We were told before we went overseas, 128 00:09:01,896 --> 00:09:04,524 "You look on your left and your right, 129 00:09:04,607 --> 00:09:06,693 and only one of you is gonna come back." 130 00:09:07,277 --> 00:09:09,529 We were going overseas to die. 131 00:09:25,378 --> 00:09:28,798 [Hanks] Just as the crews of the 100th began arriving at their new base 132 00:09:28,882 --> 00:09:33,887 in rural eastern England, the European war entered a new phase. 133 00:09:33,970 --> 00:09:36,556 It was the official beginning of Pointblank, 134 00:09:36,639 --> 00:09:39,017 an around-the-clock bombing campaign, 135 00:09:39,100 --> 00:09:42,186 with the Americans bombing by day and the British by night. 136 00:09:42,687 --> 00:09:47,025 Its purpose, to achieve air supremacy over northern Europe 137 00:09:47,108 --> 00:09:49,611 by the D-Day invasion the following spring. 138 00:09:50,612 --> 00:09:54,657 Without air supremacy, the Allies could not invade the European continent. 139 00:09:56,201 --> 00:09:57,410 [airmen chanting] 140 00:09:58,244 --> 00:10:01,915 [Roane] We'd just got there and getting to know one another, 141 00:10:01,998 --> 00:10:06,377 {\an8}and King, the pilot, asked me, "What had you done before?" 142 00:10:06,461 --> 00:10:11,299 {\an8}I said, "Well, recently I did the work of a cowboy." 143 00:10:11,382 --> 00:10:15,053 {\an8}And he said, "Well, fine, you'll be Cowboy from now on." 144 00:10:15,970 --> 00:10:17,847 [Miller] The 100th is a young outfit, 145 00:10:17,931 --> 00:10:20,934 and it had some pretty reckless young commanders. 146 00:10:21,017 --> 00:10:24,229 {\an8}A guy named Gale Cleven, who was a squadron commander 147 00:10:24,312 --> 00:10:26,898 {\an8}and an air executive named John Egan. 148 00:10:26,981 --> 00:10:30,735 {\an8}Egan and Cleven didn't have to fly as squadron leaders, but always did. 149 00:10:30,818 --> 00:10:33,321 {\an8}And that's one of the reasons the men admired them. 150 00:10:33,404 --> 00:10:38,201 [Luckadoo] Buck Cleven, along with Bucky Egan, they wore scarves 151 00:10:38,284 --> 00:10:41,538 and their hats cocked on one side of their heads, 152 00:10:41,621 --> 00:10:43,540 and they were pretty cocky. 153 00:10:43,623 --> 00:10:46,584 {\an8}They'd be at the officers' club, and they would say, 154 00:10:46,668 --> 00:10:49,671 {\an8}"Lieutenant, taxi over here, I wanna talk to you." 155 00:10:50,463 --> 00:10:52,382 {\an8}[Paridon] John Egan, Gale Cleven, 156 00:10:52,465 --> 00:10:55,343 {\an8}their life's ambition was to fly an airplane. 157 00:10:55,426 --> 00:10:56,844 And here they are, flying an airplane. 158 00:10:56,928 --> 00:11:00,014 {\an8}Doing something that they love for a country that they love 159 00:11:00,098 --> 00:11:01,516 {\an8}on a mission that they believe in. 160 00:11:02,559 --> 00:11:05,061 [Hanks] Cleven and Egan would help lead the 100th 161 00:11:05,144 --> 00:11:09,607 against the most formidable air force in the world, the German Luftwaffe, 162 00:11:09,691 --> 00:11:14,320 whose veteran pilots had seen action over Spain, Norway, Poland, 163 00:11:14,404 --> 00:11:19,701 France, Russia, Greece, North Africa and England. 164 00:11:20,201 --> 00:11:25,123 {\an8}They will understand the enormity of their miscalculation 165 00:11:25,957 --> 00:11:30,670 {\an8}that the Nazis would always have the advantage of superior air power. 166 00:11:31,212 --> 00:11:35,383 That superiority has gone forever. 167 00:11:35,967 --> 00:11:41,347 We believe that the Nazis and the fascists have asked for it, 168 00:11:41,431 --> 00:11:43,349 and they're going to get it. 169 00:11:52,400 --> 00:11:55,028 [officer] Captain Kirk, Captain Thompson, Lieutenant Bushka, 170 00:11:55,111 --> 00:11:57,447 Iverson, Holloway and Hawkers scheduled to fly. 171 00:11:57,530 --> 00:11:58,364 Snap it up. 172 00:12:02,035 --> 00:12:04,412 [Alshouse] The commanding officer, he'd come in, he'd come up the front, 173 00:12:05,246 --> 00:12:07,540 he'd pull back a, uh, curtain, 174 00:12:07,624 --> 00:12:12,587 {\an8}and there'd be a red ribbon from Thorpe Abbotts all the way to the target. 175 00:12:13,838 --> 00:12:16,674 [officer] This group of buildings here is your target. 176 00:12:17,425 --> 00:12:20,011 This building will be the aiming point. 177 00:12:20,553 --> 00:12:24,182 If your bomb pattern is concentrated in this area, 178 00:12:24,265 --> 00:12:27,560 it should very effectively knock out the factory. 179 00:12:35,235 --> 00:12:38,988 [Wolff] After getting off the jeep and getting some of the stuff stowed, 180 00:12:39,072 --> 00:12:42,325 {\an8}then climbed aboard, got settled in, and fired up. 181 00:12:55,630 --> 00:12:57,674 [Hanks] Flying in a self-defending formation 182 00:12:57,757 --> 00:13:00,343 they called a combat box, 183 00:13:00,426 --> 00:13:04,847 with accumulative firepower of as many as 13 guns on each plane, 184 00:13:04,931 --> 00:13:09,227 they could muscle their way to the target through waves of enemy planes. 185 00:13:10,603 --> 00:13:13,273 [reporter 6] At the fighter fields, Thunderbolts are ready. 186 00:13:18,403 --> 00:13:20,613 They set out to meet the bombers. 187 00:13:20,697 --> 00:13:23,992 The two groups make rendezvous over the English Channel, 188 00:13:24,075 --> 00:13:27,495 and with the fighters patrolling the skies around the bomber formation, 189 00:13:27,579 --> 00:13:30,331 the air armada moves into enemy territory. 190 00:13:32,250 --> 00:13:35,628 [Hanks] The bombers received limited protection from the smaller, 191 00:13:35,712 --> 00:13:39,549 more nimble fighter planes, like the P-47 Thunderbolt, 192 00:13:39,632 --> 00:13:43,011 whose limited fuel capacity forced it to leave the bombers 193 00:13:43,094 --> 00:13:45,513 once they crossed deep into Germany. 194 00:13:45,597 --> 00:13:47,473 [Paridon] The crewmen were in an alien world 195 00:13:47,557 --> 00:13:52,437 to where they physically could not survive without specialized clothing, 196 00:13:52,520 --> 00:13:54,230 without specialized equipment, 197 00:13:54,314 --> 00:13:57,275 without breathing oxygen that was being pumped to them. 198 00:13:57,358 --> 00:14:00,612 [Luckadoo] As soon as we got to altitude, we had to go on oxygen, 199 00:14:00,695 --> 00:14:03,156 so we had an oxygen mask clasped on our face. 200 00:14:03,239 --> 00:14:05,033 And the-- the stark cold. 201 00:14:05,116 --> 00:14:07,452 The frigid temperatures. 202 00:14:07,535 --> 00:14:11,331 We were operating in 50 or 60 degrees below zero. 203 00:14:17,962 --> 00:14:21,174 [Paridon] The fighter escort did not have the range 204 00:14:21,257 --> 00:14:25,303 to escort the B-17s all the way to the targets inside of Germany, 205 00:14:25,386 --> 00:14:27,555 so the Allied fighters turned around and went back to England. 206 00:14:35,355 --> 00:14:39,150 [Murphy] I remember that when we first crossed over the English Channel, 207 00:14:39,234 --> 00:14:43,404 I remember looking down and realizing that we were over enemy territory, 208 00:14:43,488 --> 00:14:45,448 and I had a lump in my throat. 209 00:14:45,532 --> 00:14:46,866 I was-- [stammers] I was nervous. 210 00:14:46,950 --> 00:14:49,619 [shells exploding] 211 00:14:49,702 --> 00:14:51,704 [reporter 7] There are the black smudges of the flak 212 00:14:51,788 --> 00:14:53,998 that come up from the antiaircraft guns below. 213 00:14:54,791 --> 00:14:56,960 [Miller] A flak gun is a German 88 gun, 214 00:14:57,043 --> 00:15:00,088 and it could fire a shell up to 40,000 feet. 215 00:15:00,171 --> 00:15:05,218 The shell would explode in the air, and it would throw shards of shrapnel. 216 00:15:07,595 --> 00:15:10,682 The skin of the plane is not steel, it's aluminum. 217 00:15:10,765 --> 00:15:13,142 So, that meant flak just blew holes in the plane. 218 00:15:13,226 --> 00:15:15,186 [flak hitting metal] 219 00:15:15,270 --> 00:15:20,358 [Murphy] That was my first time to be exposed to very heavy antiaircraft fire, 220 00:15:20,441 --> 00:15:23,319 and, uh, it was-- [stammers] it was frightening. 221 00:15:23,403 --> 00:15:25,864 [gunfire] 222 00:15:28,074 --> 00:15:31,703 [Luckadoo] We were being confronted by very experienced 223 00:15:31,786 --> 00:15:36,082 and very well equipped and very well trained opposition. 224 00:15:36,165 --> 00:15:39,878 They were pros, and we were rank amateurs. 225 00:15:43,923 --> 00:15:46,509 [Hanks] When the formation neared its target, 226 00:15:46,593 --> 00:15:50,221 the bombardiers entered variables such as airspeed and wind drift 227 00:15:50,305 --> 00:15:51,931 into their Norden bombsights, 228 00:15:52,015 --> 00:15:55,476 top-secret aiming devices designed to guide the planes 229 00:15:55,560 --> 00:15:59,022 to the optimal release point for dropping their payloads. 230 00:15:59,606 --> 00:16:02,567 [Miller] The Norden bombsight, it's supposed to be so accurate 231 00:16:02,650 --> 00:16:07,822 that you can bomb from 20,000 feet and drop your bombs into a pickle barrel. 232 00:16:10,617 --> 00:16:12,076 [Bankston] When we dropped our bombs, 233 00:16:12,160 --> 00:16:14,662 {\an8}I could see bombs from the planes ahead of us dropping 234 00:16:14,746 --> 00:16:17,665 {\an8}but also I could lean out in the plexiglass nose 235 00:16:17,749 --> 00:16:21,252 and see the bombs falling directly down from us. 236 00:16:21,336 --> 00:16:25,590 And then, when they exploded, we could actually see the explosions. 237 00:16:25,673 --> 00:16:27,258 [reporter 8] The first bombers have been over, 238 00:16:27,342 --> 00:16:30,595 and the target's already partially obscured by the fires they've started. 239 00:16:31,387 --> 00:16:34,933 Hits were scored on a power plant, submarines under construction, 240 00:16:35,016 --> 00:16:36,976 and at least one U-boat in the water. 241 00:16:38,978 --> 00:16:40,396 [Wolff] We dropped our bombs, 242 00:16:40,480 --> 00:16:43,066 a couple of fighter attacks, nobody got hurt. 243 00:16:43,650 --> 00:16:46,152 {\an8}And I thought, "Well, this isn't so bad." [chuckles] 244 00:16:48,530 --> 00:16:52,242 [Hanks] The early missions for the 100th were mostly coastal targets, 245 00:16:52,325 --> 00:16:56,579 like submarine pens and industrial sites in France and Norway. 246 00:16:57,539 --> 00:16:59,791 [Spielberg] The air force was trying to destroy 247 00:16:59,874 --> 00:17:02,168 the war machine of Nazi Germany. 248 00:17:02,252 --> 00:17:05,463 The factories that made planes, that made tanks. 249 00:17:05,547 --> 00:17:07,215 The factories that produced ball bearings. 250 00:17:07,799 --> 00:17:09,509 [reporter 9] At the British landing fields, 251 00:17:09,591 --> 00:17:11,135 word on the sky battle was out. 252 00:17:12,220 --> 00:17:14,847 Many of the fortresses themselves were crippled. 253 00:17:14,931 --> 00:17:19,185 A few came in with feathered props or with knocked-out landing gear. 254 00:17:20,270 --> 00:17:23,231 [Crosby] The B-17 had the reputation of being trustworthy and safe 255 00:17:23,313 --> 00:17:24,523 and getting people back. 256 00:17:24,607 --> 00:17:26,651 You could lose three engines and get home. 257 00:17:26,734 --> 00:17:30,071 You could lose half of your vertical stabilizer on the tail 258 00:17:30,154 --> 00:17:31,197 and get home. 259 00:17:31,281 --> 00:17:34,075 [Jeffrey] It would bring you home on two engines, 260 00:17:34,158 --> 00:17:36,578 {\an8}and I've seen 'em come in with only one. 261 00:17:42,750 --> 00:17:44,961 [Hanks] Everything was about to change for the Eighth 262 00:17:45,044 --> 00:17:47,589 with the largest raid they would undertake up to now. 263 00:17:47,672 --> 00:17:51,384 A double strike against ball bearing plants in Schweinfurt 264 00:17:51,467 --> 00:17:54,262 and Messerschmitt factories in Regensburg, 265 00:17:54,345 --> 00:17:58,224 massively defended targets deep inside Germany. 266 00:17:58,308 --> 00:18:01,519 The 100th was assigned to the Regensburg Force. 267 00:18:02,186 --> 00:18:04,981 [Wolff] When they pulled the curtain away from the map, 268 00:18:05,064 --> 00:18:07,984 and you saw that red line going all across Germany, 269 00:18:08,067 --> 00:18:10,069 {\an8}you know, we thought, "Holy cow." 270 00:18:10,737 --> 00:18:13,448 [Crane] The plan as designed is really brilliant when you look at it. 271 00:18:13,531 --> 00:18:14,365 So, you've got 272 00:18:14,449 --> 00:18:19,078 {\an8}Curtis LeMay's Third Bombardment Division is going to fly 273 00:18:19,162 --> 00:18:23,291 and attack the Messerschmitt factories at Regensburg and then head for Africa. 274 00:18:23,374 --> 00:18:27,253 And ten minutes behind them is gonna be the First Bombardment Division, 275 00:18:27,337 --> 00:18:30,089 {\an8}and they're gonna attack the ball bearing plants at Schweinfurt 276 00:18:30,173 --> 00:18:31,674 {\an8}and then go back to England. 277 00:18:31,758 --> 00:18:35,053 {\an8}So, the Germans are gonna have to decide which of these groups to hit. 278 00:18:35,136 --> 00:18:39,724 {\an8}The problem is-- surprise, it's August, and there's fog in Great Britain. 279 00:18:41,226 --> 00:18:42,644 [LeMay] We went out that morning. 280 00:18:42,727 --> 00:18:47,190 {\an8}I had took lanterns and flashlights and lead the airplanes out. 281 00:18:48,107 --> 00:18:51,444 I got assembled about ten minutes late, but we got off. 282 00:18:51,528 --> 00:18:54,447 [Crane] Curtis LeMay has trained his bombardment division 283 00:18:54,531 --> 00:18:56,533 to take off in-- in English fog. 284 00:18:56,616 --> 00:18:59,035 The other bombardment division hadn't. 285 00:18:59,118 --> 00:19:02,664 So, all of a sudden, LeMay gets his guys up and gets them all formed, 286 00:19:02,747 --> 00:19:05,041 and the other bombardment division hasn't even taken off yet. 287 00:19:05,792 --> 00:19:08,795 So, it ends up, instead of a ten-minute gap, a two-hour gap. 288 00:19:09,546 --> 00:19:10,630 [siren wailing] 289 00:19:11,256 --> 00:19:14,133 [reporter 10] This captured German film shows how quickly their 109s 290 00:19:14,217 --> 00:19:17,178 and Focke-Wulf 190s got into action after a warning. 291 00:19:17,679 --> 00:19:21,057 They had plenty of time to amass their fighters at a chosen point of attack 292 00:19:21,140 --> 00:19:24,811 and to outnumber our escort at anything from 2-to-1 to 10-to-1. 293 00:19:27,981 --> 00:19:30,984 [Wolff] Flew across the channel. It was a beautiful day out there. 294 00:19:31,776 --> 00:19:32,861 They hit the Dutch coast, 295 00:19:32,944 --> 00:19:35,154 and all of a sudden the whole world exploded. 296 00:19:36,197 --> 00:19:38,157 Kept up for the next two hours. 297 00:19:41,035 --> 00:19:44,205 [Roane] The training we'd had previously gave us the idea 298 00:19:44,289 --> 00:19:46,749 that we could outrun German fighters. 299 00:19:46,833 --> 00:19:50,128 Of course, we learned that that was not true. 300 00:19:51,004 --> 00:19:55,174 {\an8}[Wolff] There was flak, there were fighters, more flak, more fighters. 301 00:19:55,258 --> 00:19:59,888 {\an8}And I could hear the top turret chattering away with machine-gun fire. 302 00:20:00,555 --> 00:20:04,267 [Miller] Cleven's plane took six hits. 303 00:20:04,350 --> 00:20:07,270 They knocked out the hydraulic system. They knocked out one of the engines. 304 00:20:07,854 --> 00:20:09,522 The cockpit is on fire. 305 00:20:09,606 --> 00:20:13,610 Cleven turns around, and he... [stammers] ...looks at the radio gunner, 306 00:20:13,693 --> 00:20:15,904 and the radio gunner doesn't have any legs. 307 00:20:15,987 --> 00:20:17,071 They'd been sheared off. 308 00:20:19,908 --> 00:20:22,035 [Wolff] And I still remember one plane, 309 00:20:22,118 --> 00:20:24,829 fire was coming out of every opening in that hull. 310 00:20:26,831 --> 00:20:29,542 I dreamed about that one for a long time. 311 00:20:30,585 --> 00:20:32,420 [Spielberg] Every single member of that flight crew 312 00:20:32,503 --> 00:20:35,632 was fighting so democracy and freedom could reign. 313 00:20:35,715 --> 00:20:39,219 But when you're in combat, you know who you're fighting for? 314 00:20:39,302 --> 00:20:42,013 The guy to your left and the guy to your right. 315 00:20:42,096 --> 00:20:44,349 The guy just ahead of you and the guy just behind you. 316 00:20:44,432 --> 00:20:45,767 That's the pod you're fighting for. 317 00:20:47,810 --> 00:20:48,645 [gunfire] 318 00:20:48,728 --> 00:20:53,566 [Miller] Cleven is sitting in the cockpit, and his copilot said, in so many words, 319 00:20:53,650 --> 00:20:55,693 "We gotta get out of here. Let's hit the bail out bell." 320 00:20:55,777 --> 00:20:57,862 Cleven said, "We-- We gotta get to the target. 321 00:20:57,946 --> 00:21:00,114 We're gonna complete the bomb run." 322 00:21:00,198 --> 00:21:05,453 [Wolff] Five minutes before we got to the target, everything stopped. 323 00:21:05,537 --> 00:21:07,413 No fighters, no flak, no nothing. 324 00:21:08,248 --> 00:21:10,833 We succeeded in dropping our bombs. 325 00:21:14,003 --> 00:21:16,089 [Hanks] Perilously low on fuel, 326 00:21:16,172 --> 00:21:21,261 the Regensburg group fought its way over the Alps down to North Africa, 327 00:21:21,344 --> 00:21:25,974 while the Schweinfurt group flew straight into the full brunt of the Luftwaffe. 328 00:21:26,849 --> 00:21:30,228 So that means for the Germans, they get up and ravage LeMay's guys, 329 00:21:30,311 --> 00:21:33,565 then they get to land and have a schnapps and rearm and refuel too. 330 00:21:33,648 --> 00:21:35,441 And then they get to hit the Schweinfurt guys. 331 00:21:39,195 --> 00:21:44,534 The whole Luftwaffe jumped on the Schweinfurt group and just shattered them. 332 00:21:51,833 --> 00:21:53,960 [Hanks] Having made it to North Africa by day's end, 333 00:21:54,544 --> 00:21:58,673 the crews of the 100th Bomb Group were battle-worn and weary, 334 00:21:59,215 --> 00:22:01,551 but feeling lucky to be alive. 335 00:22:02,927 --> 00:22:05,805 [Eaker] Any commander that had to commit forces to combat 336 00:22:05,889 --> 00:22:07,765 when they were outnumbered 337 00:22:07,849 --> 00:22:10,059 and with equipment which was not suitable 338 00:22:10,143 --> 00:22:15,815 {\an8}and with a minimum of training, faced very tough decisions. 339 00:22:15,899 --> 00:22:19,152 Uh-- [stammers] It's like, uh, sentencing men to death. 340 00:22:23,615 --> 00:22:28,953 {\an8}[Rosenthal] I had landed in England in the summer of 1943, 341 00:22:30,205 --> 00:22:33,541 {\an8}and I was sent to the 100th Bomb Group. 342 00:22:33,625 --> 00:22:36,502 [Luckadoo] Rosie Rosenthal, uh, arrived at the group 343 00:22:36,586 --> 00:22:40,757 as a replacement crew for crews that were lost. 344 00:22:41,341 --> 00:22:45,345 [Miller] Egan had gotten word that this kid, Rosie, was a pretty good flyer. 345 00:22:45,428 --> 00:22:48,973 And so, Egan took him out and ran him through the-- the struts 346 00:22:49,057 --> 00:22:51,059 and said, "I want you in my squadron." 347 00:22:54,896 --> 00:22:56,689 [Luckadoo] I happened to be in the bar. 348 00:22:56,773 --> 00:23:03,279 And I was having my usual Scotch and felt this tap on my shoulder 349 00:23:03,780 --> 00:23:06,908 and turned around, and here was the squadron commander. 350 00:23:07,492 --> 00:23:10,411 He said, "Lucky, you better go home and get some sleep. 351 00:23:11,079 --> 00:23:12,413 You're flying tomorrow." 352 00:23:16,543 --> 00:23:20,255 [Hanks] When the weather over Germany cleared on October 8th, 353 00:23:20,338 --> 00:23:24,259 the Americans launched a succession of maximum-effort missions 354 00:23:24,342 --> 00:23:27,387 to take out aircraft manufacturing plants. 355 00:23:28,179 --> 00:23:31,891 The airmen would eventually call it Black Week. 356 00:23:32,600 --> 00:23:36,396 [reporter 11] On October 8th, 855 planes left Great Britain 357 00:23:36,479 --> 00:23:38,898 for a raid on Bremen and Vegesack. 358 00:23:38,982 --> 00:23:41,734 They were loaded with two and a half million pounds of bombs. 359 00:23:41,818 --> 00:23:44,612 Two and three-quarter million rounds of ammunition. 360 00:23:46,531 --> 00:23:50,034 [Luckadoo] As we came off the target, out of the corner of my eye, 361 00:23:50,118 --> 00:23:56,374 I saw this flight of two Fw 190s aiming directly for us. 362 00:23:56,457 --> 00:23:59,836 He shot down the ship directly in front of me, 363 00:23:59,919 --> 00:24:03,756 and it blew them out of the formation, and they exploded. 364 00:24:05,091 --> 00:24:06,759 [Crosby] The group was decimated. 365 00:24:06,843 --> 00:24:10,638 We were shot clear out of the formation. Our number three engine was on fire. 366 00:24:11,890 --> 00:24:13,391 [Luckadoo] Cleven tried to move up 367 00:24:13,474 --> 00:24:16,519 and take over the group when he was shot down. 368 00:24:17,854 --> 00:24:18,980 [Miller] Cleven, he got hit. 369 00:24:19,689 --> 00:24:21,691 There's a lot of chaos in the plane. 370 00:24:21,774 --> 00:24:23,610 The cockpit caught fire. They gotta bail. 371 00:24:27,405 --> 00:24:28,948 [Paridon] Gale Cleven is shot down. 372 00:24:29,032 --> 00:24:33,119 This is a huge hole left in the 100th Bomb Group at this time. 373 00:24:33,203 --> 00:24:36,497 And for all intents and purposes, everybody thinks he's dead. 374 00:24:37,832 --> 00:24:43,338 That was the first time that I doubted that I really was gonna get back. 375 00:24:44,339 --> 00:24:49,135 {\an8}[Rosenthal] My plane, Rosie's Riveters, was badly damaged, 376 00:24:49,219 --> 00:24:51,346 and a couple of engines were out. 377 00:24:53,181 --> 00:24:54,933 [Luckadoo] After we dropped our bombs, 378 00:24:55,016 --> 00:24:58,686 I brought what was left of the formation home, 379 00:24:58,770 --> 00:25:01,105 which was only six airplanes. 380 00:25:04,400 --> 00:25:08,446 [Crane] I mean, imagine the morale, to lose all those crews in one day. 381 00:25:09,030 --> 00:25:11,324 What they would try to do is clean out the barracks. 382 00:25:11,407 --> 00:25:13,409 As soon as a plane went down, they'd clean it out. 383 00:25:13,493 --> 00:25:15,954 So, you'd walk in-- you'd walk into an empty barracks. 384 00:25:17,288 --> 00:25:20,792 [Luckadoo] Egan was in London on leave, 385 00:25:20,875 --> 00:25:23,586 and he got word that Cleven had been shot down. 386 00:25:24,837 --> 00:25:28,716 Egan was so incensed that he immediately canceled his leave 387 00:25:28,800 --> 00:25:33,471 and returned to the base, and said, "I'm leading the next mission." 388 00:25:34,222 --> 00:25:37,183 [Hanks] The Münster raid was a city-busting operation, 389 00:25:37,267 --> 00:25:39,310 a new thing for the Eighth Air Force. 390 00:25:39,394 --> 00:25:43,731 The target was a strategically essential rail yard in the city center 391 00:25:43,815 --> 00:25:47,610 and also a neighborhood of workers' housing that abutted it. 392 00:25:48,236 --> 00:25:53,366 In the fight against Nazi tyranny, human flesh and bone became a target, 393 00:25:53,449 --> 00:25:56,578 an essential part of the Reich's war machine. 394 00:25:56,661 --> 00:25:58,580 [Miller] There was tension in the room. 395 00:25:58,663 --> 00:26:01,666 A lot of the airmen, for the first time ever, 396 00:26:01,749 --> 00:26:03,126 questioned the mission. 397 00:26:03,710 --> 00:26:05,628 Egan makes a speech. 398 00:26:05,712 --> 00:26:10,300 They were gonna fly this one for Cleven, and this is a revenge raid. 399 00:26:14,804 --> 00:26:19,934 {\an8}[Rosenthal] Because we had high losses, our group was pretty well banged up, 400 00:26:20,435 --> 00:26:24,397 {\an8}and we could only put 13 planes in the air. 401 00:26:26,024 --> 00:26:28,693 {\an8}[Paridon] When it came to German fighter attacks, 402 00:26:28,776 --> 00:26:34,157 if your formations were loose, if you had 13 aircraft as opposed to 18, 403 00:26:34,240 --> 00:26:36,534 the Germans are gonna attack the lesser target. 404 00:26:36,618 --> 00:26:40,788 [Murphy] We were immediately attacked by over 200 German fighter aircraft. 405 00:26:41,372 --> 00:26:46,544 Two, uh, Me 109s came in behind us and killed our tail gunner. 406 00:26:46,628 --> 00:26:50,381 I was sprayed with shrapnel flak from an exploding cannon shell 407 00:26:50,465 --> 00:26:51,925 and knocked to the floor. 408 00:26:52,008 --> 00:26:54,802 It was clear that the airplane was out of control, 409 00:26:54,886 --> 00:26:57,055 and we were going to go down. 410 00:26:57,597 --> 00:27:00,767 I remember we were about 21-- 22,000 feet. 411 00:27:00,850 --> 00:27:04,854 The ground looked a million miles away, but I had no choice. 412 00:27:04,938 --> 00:27:07,273 I had to go out, and so I did. 413 00:27:07,357 --> 00:27:09,108 [gunfire] 414 00:27:15,740 --> 00:27:20,161 We went down the flight line, and we kept waiting around. 415 00:27:24,499 --> 00:27:26,876 Finally, one of ours came in. 416 00:27:28,044 --> 00:27:30,838 [Jeffrey] Only one airplane of the 100th had returned. 417 00:27:30,922 --> 00:27:33,925 Uh, Rosenthal was the man that was flying that airplane. 418 00:27:34,008 --> 00:27:38,721 So, he had seen, uh, his share of, uh-- of rough times. 419 00:27:41,015 --> 00:27:43,893 [Rosenthal] We returned to the officers' club. 420 00:27:43,977 --> 00:27:46,813 There was an eerie silence there. 421 00:27:46,896 --> 00:27:49,941 There were a few people who hadn't flown the mission, 422 00:27:50,567 --> 00:27:53,194 and nobody seemed to approach us. 423 00:27:53,278 --> 00:27:55,113 We were sort of left by ourselves. 424 00:27:55,196 --> 00:27:57,615 It was a very strange feeling. 425 00:27:59,200 --> 00:28:04,289 [Roane] We certainly felt the loss of the people that had been shot down. 426 00:28:04,372 --> 00:28:10,920 I especially l-lost my very best friend on the Münster mission. 427 00:28:14,507 --> 00:28:17,969 [Luckadoo] When Bucky Egan and Cleven were shot down, 428 00:28:18,052 --> 00:28:21,014 it was really a tremendous morale factor 429 00:28:21,097 --> 00:28:24,809 because everybody just assumed they were invincible. 430 00:28:26,603 --> 00:28:30,565 [Hanks] The Münster mission was the greatest air battle up to that time. 431 00:28:30,648 --> 00:28:33,359 Not just a raid, but a titanic struggle 432 00:28:33,443 --> 00:28:37,030 between two large and murderous air armies. 433 00:28:37,113 --> 00:28:40,909 The 100th had arrived in England four months before Münster 434 00:28:40,992 --> 00:28:43,828 with 140 flying officers. 435 00:28:43,912 --> 00:28:48,875 After Münster, only three of them were still able to fly and fight. 436 00:28:49,375 --> 00:28:52,086 {\an8}[Rosenthal] This kind of record got around, 437 00:28:52,170 --> 00:28:54,380 {\an8}and people became worried about us. 438 00:28:54,464 --> 00:28:56,382 {\an8}They called us the Bloody Hundredth. 439 00:28:58,718 --> 00:29:00,428 [Crane] When you're an airman, and you go out, 440 00:29:00,511 --> 00:29:02,555 you have four hours of pure terror. 441 00:29:02,639 --> 00:29:04,974 All of a sudden, you get on your bicycle, go to the local pub, 442 00:29:05,058 --> 00:29:07,977 drink a beer, go out with a local girl, go back to base, 443 00:29:08,061 --> 00:29:09,312 sit nice and peaceful. 444 00:29:09,395 --> 00:29:12,482 Then, the next day, you're up, and you're back into the terror again. 445 00:29:15,068 --> 00:29:22,033 This had the ultimate result, in some cases, of causing people to crack. 446 00:29:25,620 --> 00:29:27,121 [Hanks] After Black Week, 447 00:29:27,205 --> 00:29:30,291 morale in the Eighth plummeted to a new low, 448 00:29:30,375 --> 00:29:32,877 and commanders worried about crew revolts. 449 00:29:33,419 --> 00:29:35,922 There were distressing reports from flight surgeons 450 00:29:36,005 --> 00:29:40,927 and air force psychiatrists of abnormal behavior among crewmen 451 00:29:41,010 --> 00:29:46,599 as combat insidiously shook the moorings of airmen's self-control. 452 00:29:46,683 --> 00:29:48,685 [Luckadoo] I have seen instances 453 00:29:48,768 --> 00:29:53,982 where they weren't in control enough to just walk out of the airplane. 454 00:29:54,983 --> 00:29:57,694 Those were individuals that were on the verge 455 00:29:57,777 --> 00:30:01,072 of what we called victims of combat fatigue. 456 00:30:03,366 --> 00:30:06,119 [reporter 12] We have learned that many of these men with neurotic reactions 457 00:30:06,202 --> 00:30:07,370 can recover quickly 458 00:30:07,453 --> 00:30:10,290 when the battle situation has been left behind temporarily. 459 00:30:10,790 --> 00:30:13,418 Fundamentally, we must depend for this recovery 460 00:30:13,501 --> 00:30:16,129 on the patient's own recuperative powers. 461 00:30:16,212 --> 00:30:19,966 But these powers can best be exercised away from a hospital atmosphere. 462 00:30:22,176 --> 00:30:26,681 [Luckadoo] We would try to get them out of the wartime environment 463 00:30:26,764 --> 00:30:30,518 for a few days and sent to the rest home. 464 00:30:30,602 --> 00:30:32,478 We called it the Flak House. 465 00:30:33,521 --> 00:30:37,609 Oftentimes, it was effective. Sometimes it was not. 466 00:30:39,110 --> 00:30:41,988 [Jeffrey] This was a problem that all commanders had to deal with 467 00:30:42,071 --> 00:30:46,451 because there are some people whose chemical and mental makeup, 468 00:30:46,534 --> 00:30:49,162 uh, is such that, uh, they just can't stand this sort of thing. 469 00:30:49,829 --> 00:30:53,333 [Luckadoo] We had to immediately remove those people 470 00:30:53,416 --> 00:30:56,461 from the crew and from the base 471 00:30:56,544 --> 00:31:00,632 because that sort of attitude was contagious, 472 00:31:00,715 --> 00:31:04,469 and we couldn't afford to have it affect the morale of the rest of the people 473 00:31:04,552 --> 00:31:08,681 that were going out every day and continuing to perform their duties. 474 00:31:10,975 --> 00:31:13,853 [Crane] You can argue not only has the Allied air forces 475 00:31:13,937 --> 00:31:17,023 don't have any sense of air superiority over Germany and Europe, 476 00:31:17,106 --> 00:31:18,983 you could argue they're losing the air war. 477 00:31:20,443 --> 00:31:23,821 [Clark] You know, we did not drop into a pickle barrel all the time. 478 00:31:23,905 --> 00:31:27,116 {\an8}We would scatter bombs even on good, clear days, 479 00:31:27,200 --> 00:31:29,661 {\an8}several miles from the intended target. 480 00:31:30,745 --> 00:31:32,372 [Hansen] They couldn't hit their targets, 481 00:31:32,455 --> 00:31:35,959 and they were much more, themselves, a target 482 00:31:36,042 --> 00:31:39,671 {\an8}for German fighter defense. So the force was being slaughtered. 483 00:31:40,421 --> 00:31:43,800 [reporter 13] Every few cubic feet of this pile contains a plane, 484 00:31:43,883 --> 00:31:46,219 22,000 hours of American labor. 485 00:31:47,178 --> 00:31:50,890 Every yard of it means ten American boys dead or captured. 486 00:31:56,229 --> 00:31:59,816 [Murphy] Probably the most dreadful thing that one could expect was to be shot down. 487 00:32:00,441 --> 00:32:02,235 We always knew it was possible. 488 00:32:02,318 --> 00:32:05,196 Being young and thinking that we were immortal, 489 00:32:05,280 --> 00:32:07,699 we always figured that they might get everybody else, 490 00:32:07,782 --> 00:32:09,033 but they wouldn't get us. 491 00:32:09,951 --> 00:32:12,704 I-I knew how much my mother worried about me, 492 00:32:12,787 --> 00:32:14,622 and I knew that she would be getting 493 00:32:14,706 --> 00:32:18,626 a missing-in-action telegram from the War Department, 494 00:32:18,710 --> 00:32:21,170 and she would not know what happened to me. 495 00:32:23,548 --> 00:32:26,843 [Hanks] Airmen were given parachutes but not trained how to use them, 496 00:32:26,926 --> 00:32:31,055 and they were given only scant training in escape and evasion tactics. 497 00:32:31,139 --> 00:32:35,268 Nor were they properly warned when civilians in bombed-out towns 498 00:32:35,351 --> 00:32:38,688 began to attack downed airmen in increasing numbers. 499 00:32:40,815 --> 00:32:43,193 [Miller] Cleven, he goes down, 500 00:32:43,276 --> 00:32:46,738 and he can see that farmers are gathering all around. 501 00:32:46,821 --> 00:32:47,864 The next thing he remembers, 502 00:32:47,947 --> 00:32:51,492 a farmer has a pitchfork a ninth of an inch in his chest 503 00:32:51,576 --> 00:32:52,660 and wants to press down on it. 504 00:32:53,328 --> 00:32:56,247 Some local Luftwaffe police show up. 505 00:32:58,333 --> 00:33:01,711 [Murphy] I was taken to a German Air Force airfield 506 00:33:01,794 --> 00:33:03,087 that was a collection point 507 00:33:03,171 --> 00:33:06,257 for all of the American flyers who had been captured that day. 508 00:33:11,721 --> 00:33:13,598 [Wolff] I got interviewed by this guy, 509 00:33:13,681 --> 00:33:17,310 and, uh, he congratulated me... [chuckles] ...on my promotion. 510 00:33:18,228 --> 00:33:22,398 I had just gotten first lieutenant about three days before. 511 00:33:22,482 --> 00:33:24,984 That sort of took me by surprise. 512 00:33:25,068 --> 00:33:27,737 And he hands me a 3-by-5 card, 513 00:33:27,820 --> 00:33:33,034 and there's my name and birth date, my parents' name, and my address. 514 00:33:34,786 --> 00:33:37,664 [Miller] The Germans had spies in the United States 515 00:33:37,747 --> 00:33:40,166 send them their hometown newspaper. 516 00:33:40,250 --> 00:33:41,334 So, they relax you 517 00:33:41,417 --> 00:33:43,962 to get this sense that you're having a conversation, 518 00:33:44,045 --> 00:33:46,130 and they know everything about you. 519 00:33:46,214 --> 00:33:48,258 [Hanks] This cagey interrogation technique 520 00:33:48,341 --> 00:33:51,928 was sometimes effective in persuading unsuspecting airmen 521 00:33:52,011 --> 00:33:55,473 to give up information they considered inconsequential, 522 00:33:55,557 --> 00:33:58,393 but which master interrogators prized. 523 00:33:59,310 --> 00:34:02,647 [Wolff] The next morning, they put us in a boxcar. 524 00:34:02,730 --> 00:34:05,817 There were 30 or 40 of us in the boxcar. 525 00:34:07,110 --> 00:34:09,070 None of us knew what was gonna happen. 526 00:34:15,577 --> 00:34:17,579 [Wolff] I can remember walking through the gate, 527 00:34:17,662 --> 00:34:19,956 and there were big, wooden stakes there, 528 00:34:20,039 --> 00:34:22,709 and there was barbed wire all over the place, 529 00:34:22,792 --> 00:34:25,753 and there were guard towers at all the corners. 530 00:34:25,836 --> 00:34:30,173 And there was about a 10- or 12-foot space between the big fence, 531 00:34:30,258 --> 00:34:32,343 and then there was a smaller fence. 532 00:34:32,427 --> 00:34:35,345 We were told not to go over the small fence, or we'd be shot. 533 00:34:36,598 --> 00:34:38,932 [Murphy] The American POWs who were there, 534 00:34:39,017 --> 00:34:41,477 many of whom, uh, were members of the 100th Bomb Group 535 00:34:41,561 --> 00:34:44,522 who had been shot down before I was shot down. 536 00:34:44,606 --> 00:34:46,399 The minute they saw us come in, well, they-- 537 00:34:46,481 --> 00:34:49,110 Some of them laughed and said, "Well, we've been expecting you. 538 00:34:49,193 --> 00:34:50,195 You're finally here." 539 00:34:51,613 --> 00:34:56,117 {\an8}[Hanks] Cleven and Egan arrived at Stalag Luft III within days of each other. 540 00:34:56,200 --> 00:34:59,704 Cleven was immediately wisecracking with the injured Egan, 541 00:34:59,787 --> 00:35:02,290 and soon, the two were roommates again 542 00:35:02,373 --> 00:35:05,585 and quickly assumed leadership roles inside the camp. 543 00:35:05,668 --> 00:35:08,296 [Wolff] We lived together, cooked together, 544 00:35:08,379 --> 00:35:11,257 washed our clothes together, showered together. 545 00:35:11,341 --> 00:35:14,802 Showers were once a week, maybe... [chuckles] ...if you were lucky. 546 00:35:15,803 --> 00:35:18,264 [Paridon] Life inside the Stalag Luft camps 547 00:35:18,348 --> 00:35:19,974 was very, very regimented. 548 00:35:20,058 --> 00:35:23,269 Everything was done in a military way to keep their minds busy, 549 00:35:23,353 --> 00:35:26,356 to keep discipline, and basically to keep everybody alive. 550 00:35:31,903 --> 00:35:34,113 [Hanks] At a secret meeting at the Tehran Conference 551 00:35:34,197 --> 00:35:36,115 in late November 1943, 552 00:35:36,199 --> 00:35:41,788 Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin agreed to a second front against Nazi Germany 553 00:35:41,871 --> 00:35:45,542 to be planned and executed principally by the Americans and the British. 554 00:35:47,043 --> 00:35:49,504 There was to be a massive amphibious assault, 555 00:35:49,587 --> 00:35:51,005 the greatest in history, 556 00:35:51,089 --> 00:35:55,677 across five beaches in Normandy, France, code-named "Overlord." 557 00:35:55,760 --> 00:36:00,932 It was scheduled for May 1944, just six months away. 558 00:36:01,808 --> 00:36:04,352 [Miller] General Eisenhower has been brought to London. 559 00:36:05,687 --> 00:36:09,858 He said that we can't launch the fleet until you knock out the Luftwaffe. 560 00:36:09,941 --> 00:36:12,402 That is our mission now. 561 00:36:12,485 --> 00:36:17,824 [Jeffrey] We were aware that no land invasion can occur 562 00:36:17,907 --> 00:36:20,743 unless air superiority has been achieved. 563 00:36:22,287 --> 00:36:25,123 [Hansen] The ultimate goal was to shoot down so many fighters 564 00:36:25,206 --> 00:36:27,667 that the Germans could no longer put up a fighter defense. 565 00:36:30,879 --> 00:36:36,759 {\an8}[Doolittle] We had been having very high losses due to fighter action. 566 00:36:37,427 --> 00:36:42,682 {\an8}And so, a rush program at home began to get us more and more fighters. 567 00:36:43,391 --> 00:36:46,352 [Paridon] Late 1943, a fighter aircraft arrived in England, 568 00:36:46,436 --> 00:36:49,355 and it was the fighter plane that the Eighth Air Force had been waiting for. 569 00:36:49,439 --> 00:36:51,191 It was the P-51 Mustang. 570 00:36:52,192 --> 00:36:54,444 {\an8}[reporter 14] The Mustang. The P-51. 571 00:36:54,527 --> 00:36:56,905 The longest-range fighter in the world. 572 00:36:56,988 --> 00:37:01,326 Speed, fast climb, quick dive, tight turn. 573 00:37:01,868 --> 00:37:03,912 [Rosenthal] When P-51s came over, 574 00:37:03,995 --> 00:37:08,666 they had the range to accompany us to the target and back. 575 00:37:08,750 --> 00:37:11,878 And they also fixed up the 47s 576 00:37:11,961 --> 00:37:15,506 and put wing tanks on them so that they could accompany us. 577 00:37:17,634 --> 00:37:21,512 [Crosby] When we went to Emden, and I saw all those gorgeous P-51s, 578 00:37:21,596 --> 00:37:23,890 I thought, maybe for the first time, "I'm gonna get through." 579 00:37:25,767 --> 00:37:26,893 [Miller] The primary mission 580 00:37:26,976 --> 00:37:28,811 is not to protect the bombers and get 'em home safely. 581 00:37:28,895 --> 00:37:33,107 It'll be to go after the Luftwaffe in the air and on the ground. 582 00:37:34,150 --> 00:37:36,486 [gunfire] 583 00:37:37,529 --> 00:37:40,156 [reporter 15] Sunday morning 20 February, 584 00:37:40,698 --> 00:37:42,951 we prepared for the heaviest assault 585 00:37:43,034 --> 00:37:46,829 in the history of the American Strategic Air Forces up to that time. 586 00:37:47,997 --> 00:37:50,750 This was the prelude to invasion. 587 00:37:52,043 --> 00:37:57,048 [Miller] They planned a succession of continuous raids one day after the other. 588 00:37:57,131 --> 00:37:59,008 This is gonna decide the whole war. 589 00:38:05,765 --> 00:38:07,809 [reporter 16] Day after day, month after month, 590 00:38:08,309 --> 00:38:13,481 Mustang, Thunderbolt against the Me 109s and the Fw 190s. 591 00:38:13,565 --> 00:38:16,651 Our fighters attack, attack, attack. 592 00:38:17,360 --> 00:38:20,613 Our victory column soared at the rate of 4-to-1. 593 00:38:21,906 --> 00:38:25,243 [Crane] The casualty rate for German pilots on the western front 594 00:38:25,326 --> 00:38:29,747 between January and May 1944 was 99%. 595 00:38:29,831 --> 00:38:31,833 I mean, they just get butchered. 596 00:38:34,002 --> 00:38:36,671 [Spielberg] It wasn't until the Mustang really got involved in the war 597 00:38:36,754 --> 00:38:39,924 that America and England gained air superiority over Germany. 598 00:38:41,259 --> 00:38:42,886 [Biddle] If you want to go to the heart of the enemy 599 00:38:42,969 --> 00:38:47,223 {\an8}and be sure the Luftwaffe will be pulled into the sky, you go to Berlin. 600 00:38:48,266 --> 00:38:50,810 {\an8}[Crosby] When they had the briefing, and they pulled the curtain back, 601 00:38:50,894 --> 00:38:53,479 {\an8}and the tape went all the way to Berlin, 602 00:38:54,189 --> 00:38:57,775 first it was just stunned silence and then just a shout. 603 00:39:01,446 --> 00:39:03,448 [reporter 17] You can't hear what's going on down there 604 00:39:03,531 --> 00:39:05,116 five miles below you, 605 00:39:05,658 --> 00:39:09,704 but marshaling yards and chemical tanks, ships and warehouses, 606 00:39:09,787 --> 00:39:14,334 spare engines, and ball bearing factories are disintegrating in molten chaos. 607 00:39:15,543 --> 00:39:20,131 [Hanks] This would be the American's first foray into bombing Berlin. 608 00:39:20,215 --> 00:39:23,218 It would be the toughest target the Eighth ever attacked, 609 00:39:23,801 --> 00:39:25,136 but it had to be done. 610 00:39:27,263 --> 00:39:29,474 [Bankston] I can say that if I had been in Germany 611 00:39:29,557 --> 00:39:35,104 and witnessed, everyday, hordes of bombers coming over and dropping bombs, 612 00:39:35,188 --> 00:39:37,774 it would have had a very adverse effect on my morale. 613 00:39:37,857 --> 00:39:41,819 It must have had an adverse effect morale on the civilians and military alike. 614 00:39:47,784 --> 00:39:50,995 [Murphy] One of the worst things about being a prisoner of war 615 00:39:51,496 --> 00:39:54,749 is that you don't know how long you're gonna be held captive. 616 00:39:54,832 --> 00:39:57,752 It's not as if you've been given a fixed sentence. 617 00:39:57,835 --> 00:40:01,422 You're going to be there until you either escape or it's all over. 618 00:40:02,215 --> 00:40:03,925 [Wolff] I did start a tunnel. 619 00:40:04,425 --> 00:40:07,470 They had an old toilet that had a tile floor 620 00:40:07,554 --> 00:40:10,348 and I figured, well, let's see if we can do something here. 621 00:40:10,431 --> 00:40:14,686 And my object was to have these removable tiles 622 00:40:14,769 --> 00:40:16,187 and we could start digging. 623 00:40:16,271 --> 00:40:18,648 The guards caught that almost immediately. 624 00:40:20,191 --> 00:40:25,154 {\an8}[Murphy] Some 76 British prisoners tunneled out of the compound 625 00:40:25,238 --> 00:40:28,867 immediately adjacent to us through a tunnel that they dug. 626 00:40:28,950 --> 00:40:31,160 It was known as the Great Escape. 627 00:40:31,244 --> 00:40:37,333 All but two were recaptured, and 50 were executed by the Germans. 628 00:40:38,418 --> 00:40:41,379 What little decent relations we had with the Germans 629 00:40:41,462 --> 00:40:43,339 evaporated completely after that. 630 00:40:46,676 --> 00:40:49,971 [Jeffrey] One day I received a telephone call and they said, 631 00:40:50,054 --> 00:40:52,223 "General LeMay would like to speak to you." 632 00:40:52,307 --> 00:40:55,310 He said, "Jeffrey, I need a group commander 633 00:40:55,393 --> 00:40:58,229 at the 95th Bomb Group and the 100th Bomb Group. 634 00:40:58,313 --> 00:40:59,981 You can take your choice." 635 00:41:00,648 --> 00:41:03,193 The 95th could essentially do no wrong. 636 00:41:03,276 --> 00:41:05,195 They lost the minimum number of airplanes. 637 00:41:05,278 --> 00:41:09,490 Their bombing record was good, and I figured that I could do more 638 00:41:09,574 --> 00:41:11,451 for the 100th than I could for the 95th. 639 00:41:11,534 --> 00:41:15,163 So, I called him back and I told him with his-- his permission, 640 00:41:15,246 --> 00:41:17,290 uh, I would accept the 100th Bomb Group. 641 00:41:17,373 --> 00:41:19,417 And I asked him, "When do you want me to report?" 642 00:41:19,500 --> 00:41:20,710 And he said, "This afternoon." 643 00:41:25,215 --> 00:41:30,345 My first action was to ask General LeMay if he would take the 100th 644 00:41:30,428 --> 00:41:33,890 off of operations for two days and he granted that. 645 00:41:33,973 --> 00:41:35,642 And so, over the next two days, 646 00:41:35,725 --> 00:41:37,727 four hours in the morning and four hours in the afternoon, 647 00:41:37,810 --> 00:41:42,106 we flew every airplane in the 100th Bomb Group in formation. 648 00:41:42,941 --> 00:41:49,322 [Rosenthal] Tom Jeffrey, he was dynamic, charismatic and knowledgeable, 649 00:41:49,405 --> 00:41:53,159 not only about the aircraft, but about combat flying. 650 00:41:54,702 --> 00:41:56,746 [Jeffrey] I had people in the lead airplane 651 00:41:56,829 --> 00:41:58,081 photographing the formation 652 00:41:58,164 --> 00:42:01,543 so that we could identify who was flying good and who wasn't. 653 00:42:01,626 --> 00:42:05,380 And then I took an old airplane and circled around the formation, 654 00:42:05,463 --> 00:42:08,424 back and forth, and tried to herd 'em into position. 655 00:42:08,508 --> 00:42:11,010 {\an8}[Clark] The commanding officers were just blue in the face 656 00:42:11,094 --> 00:42:14,013 {\an8}about us keeping our formations tight. 657 00:42:14,097 --> 00:42:16,808 You think you're tight and they say tighten 'em up more. 658 00:42:17,809 --> 00:42:19,852 [Jeffrey] At the end of two days, 659 00:42:19,936 --> 00:42:23,982 the 100th was flying the best formation, uh, that I have ever seen. 660 00:42:25,108 --> 00:42:30,321 [Rosenthal] It was not until Jeffrey came did we become a superb group. 661 00:42:31,114 --> 00:42:33,700 I think the best group in the air force. 662 00:42:37,787 --> 00:42:42,292 [Paridon] An Eighth Air Force bomber crew had a tour of duty of 25 missions. 663 00:42:42,375 --> 00:42:44,335 Once you completed your 25 missions, 664 00:42:44,419 --> 00:42:46,462 you were rotated back home to the United States. 665 00:42:47,714 --> 00:42:52,343 [Luckadoo] Upon completion, I was told that I could either remain 666 00:42:52,427 --> 00:42:58,141 and accept command of a squadron or rotate back to the States. 667 00:42:58,224 --> 00:43:04,397 I concluded that I had been extremely fortunate 668 00:43:04,480 --> 00:43:09,777 and lucky to have survived and that I shouldn't push it any further. 669 00:43:09,861 --> 00:43:13,072 So, uh, I elected to return. 670 00:43:14,866 --> 00:43:17,243 [Paridon] Rosie Rosenthal completes his 25 missions 671 00:43:17,327 --> 00:43:21,164 on March 8th, 1944, on a raid over Berlin. 672 00:43:21,873 --> 00:43:25,627 [Rosenthal] The crew urged me to buzz the field when we returned. 673 00:43:25,710 --> 00:43:29,130 I was a very conservative pilot and I said, "I don't think so." 674 00:43:29,881 --> 00:43:33,384 But on the way back, I said, "What the heck." 675 00:43:33,468 --> 00:43:38,056 And headed right for the tower and everybody hit the deck there 676 00:43:38,640 --> 00:43:42,435 and I buzzed the field three or four times and then came in. 677 00:43:42,518 --> 00:43:44,437 And then somebody approached me and said, 678 00:43:44,520 --> 00:43:48,525 "Rosie, did you know that General Huglin was there? 679 00:43:49,025 --> 00:43:52,445 And he hit the deck and he-- his clothes are all messed up." 680 00:43:52,529 --> 00:43:56,241 And there coming into the debriefing room was General Huglin. 681 00:43:56,324 --> 00:43:58,618 He came over and grabbed my hand 682 00:43:58,701 --> 00:44:01,412 and he said, "One hell of a buzz job, Rosie." 683 00:44:02,497 --> 00:44:05,458 [Miller] Everyone knew that D-Day was on the horizon 684 00:44:05,542 --> 00:44:10,213 and finishing off the Reich was a big objective for Rosie. 685 00:44:10,713 --> 00:44:14,634 To leave here is to leave the center of the universe. 686 00:44:14,717 --> 00:44:18,012 [Rosenthal] And that's when I decided to continue flying, 687 00:44:18,096 --> 00:44:22,642 and ultimately, I was assigned to be a squadron commander. 688 00:44:23,560 --> 00:44:27,730 [reporter 18] On this day, 650 American flying fortresses 689 00:44:27,814 --> 00:44:31,484 inflicted severe damage on German defenses along the coast. 690 00:44:35,864 --> 00:44:39,158 [Jeffrey] I had flown over to France to drop some bombs on some target. 691 00:44:39,242 --> 00:44:42,537 And when I returned, I was met at the airplane 692 00:44:42,620 --> 00:44:48,293 and told that I was t-- to report to General LeMay's headquarters that evening. 693 00:44:49,544 --> 00:44:54,966 {\an8}General LeMay marched in and announced to us that the Allied Forces 694 00:44:55,049 --> 00:44:58,761 {\an8}would land on the beaches of Normandy the next morning. 695 00:44:58,845 --> 00:45:03,141 {\an8}But he said in order for you to thoroughly understand 696 00:45:03,224 --> 00:45:06,436 {\an8}the, uh, importance of this occasion, 697 00:45:06,519 --> 00:45:11,441 that the Eighth Air Force will expend every airplane that it has 698 00:45:11,524 --> 00:45:14,903 in its inventory to be sure that these people got ashore. 699 00:45:16,154 --> 00:45:18,364 {\an8}[Rosenthal] I remember coming to the briefing 700 00:45:18,448 --> 00:45:22,744 and when they moved the curtain from the map and there were cheers. 701 00:45:22,827 --> 00:45:25,747 I had never heard this kind of thing from the crews. 702 00:45:25,830 --> 00:45:27,665 Finally, D-Day had arrived. 703 00:45:31,753 --> 00:45:34,297 [Eisenhower] Soldiers, sailors and airmen 704 00:45:34,380 --> 00:45:36,382 of the Allied Expeditionary Force, 705 00:45:37,926 --> 00:45:41,012 {\an8}you are about to embark upon the Great Crusade 706 00:45:41,095 --> 00:45:43,681 {\an8}toward which we have striven these many months. 707 00:45:44,599 --> 00:45:46,559 The eyes of the world are upon you. 708 00:45:48,019 --> 00:45:50,146 Your task will not be an easy one. 709 00:45:51,022 --> 00:45:54,609 Your enemy is well trained, well equipped and battle-hardened. 710 00:45:55,109 --> 00:45:56,778 He will fight savagely. 711 00:45:57,654 --> 00:46:02,742 I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle. 712 00:46:03,701 --> 00:46:06,996 We will accept nothing less than full victory. 713 00:46:10,458 --> 00:46:12,043 [Rosenthal] As we flew over the channel, 714 00:46:12,126 --> 00:46:16,881 we looked down and saw thousands of ships in an armada down there. 715 00:46:18,591 --> 00:46:25,473 It was so thrilling one of the crew started to pray, and we all joined in. 716 00:46:27,225 --> 00:46:28,893 [radio beeping] 717 00:46:30,562 --> 00:46:34,357 [St. John] This is Robert St. John in the NBC newsroom in New York. 718 00:46:34,440 --> 00:46:37,360 This is a momentous hour in world history. 719 00:46:37,944 --> 00:46:42,198 The men of General Dwight Eisenhower are leaving their landing barges, 720 00:46:42,282 --> 00:46:45,910 fighting their way up the beaches into the fortress of Nazi Europe. 721 00:46:46,744 --> 00:46:48,538 They are moving in from the sea 722 00:46:48,621 --> 00:46:52,292 to attack the enemy under a mammoth cloud of fighter planes. 723 00:46:53,543 --> 00:46:56,170 [reporter 18] The fury from the air went on and on. 724 00:46:56,254 --> 00:47:01,134 Our airmen in tactical support of the ground forces took no rest that day. 725 00:47:01,217 --> 00:47:05,555 Back from one sortie, they gassed up, loaded their bombs and ammunition belts 726 00:47:05,638 --> 00:47:08,850 and grimly went out again and again. 727 00:47:12,228 --> 00:47:16,608 [Biddle] There was hardly any air intervention by the Luftwaffe 728 00:47:16,691 --> 00:47:17,901 when we invaded Normandy. 729 00:47:19,110 --> 00:47:21,487 [Spielberg] The Air Force really paved the way 730 00:47:21,571 --> 00:47:24,782 for the invasion across the English Channel. 731 00:47:28,494 --> 00:47:31,039 [Hanks] Germany now had to fight on two fronts, 732 00:47:31,122 --> 00:47:35,335 {\an8}against the Anglo-American allies in the west and the Russians in the east. 733 00:47:35,418 --> 00:47:39,339 In August 1944, the Red Army discovered Majdanek, 734 00:47:39,422 --> 00:47:44,552 an abandoned Nazi concentration and extermination camp near Lublin, Poland, 735 00:47:44,636 --> 00:47:50,225 indisputable evidence of Hitler's program to exterminate the Jews of Europe. 736 00:47:56,105 --> 00:47:58,858 [reporter 19] Our invasion forces are on the offensive 737 00:47:58,942 --> 00:48:03,905 against Nazi troops who have been ordered to die rather than retreat. 738 00:48:03,988 --> 00:48:08,117 However, die or retreat they must, for this attack is being made 739 00:48:08,201 --> 00:48:12,705 with all the strength the Allied Command can throw into battle. 740 00:48:12,789 --> 00:48:15,291 {\an8}[Couch] The army camp had these clandestine radios 741 00:48:15,375 --> 00:48:19,379 {\an8}and we knew just about everything the BBC knew. 742 00:48:19,462 --> 00:48:23,383 [Wolff] When the invasion started in June of '44, 743 00:48:23,466 --> 00:48:25,718 we knew that we weren't gonna be there forever. 744 00:48:27,011 --> 00:48:30,598 [Hanks] Downed airmen were still streaming into Stalag Luft III. 745 00:48:30,682 --> 00:48:32,433 Among them, a number of Black pilots 746 00:48:32,517 --> 00:48:36,896 {\an8}including Second Lieutenants, Alexander Jefferson and Richard Macon, 747 00:48:36,980 --> 00:48:41,693 {\an8}who were with the renowned 332nd fighter group, the Red Tails. 748 00:48:41,776 --> 00:48:45,029 [Delmont] The Tuskegee pilots painted a deep red on the tails of their planes. 749 00:48:45,113 --> 00:48:48,199 {\an8}Even when people didn't know that these were Black pilots flying the planes 750 00:48:48,283 --> 00:48:50,577 {\an8}they recognized that they were Red Tails. 751 00:48:51,077 --> 00:48:54,789 [Macon] We didn't have any concern about running into the enemy 752 00:48:54,873 --> 00:48:57,834 because we knew that we were better flyers than they were, 753 00:48:57,917 --> 00:49:00,461 {\an8}and I would "Ready, aim, fire." 754 00:49:02,297 --> 00:49:04,674 [Spielberg] These courageous Black flyers had been waiting 755 00:49:04,757 --> 00:49:09,596 to contribute to the war effort, and they distinguished themselves brilliantly. 756 00:49:11,806 --> 00:49:15,643 [Moye] Within the Air Force, and especially among the bomber crews 757 00:49:15,727 --> 00:49:20,315 that are making those long dangerous runs, say that they appreciated the Red Tails 758 00:49:20,398 --> 00:49:23,943 {\an8}more than any of the other squadrons that they flew with in the war. 759 00:49:24,736 --> 00:49:27,155 [Hanks] Macon and Jefferson had been racially segregated 760 00:49:27,238 --> 00:49:29,824 on Air Force bases in America and Italy, 761 00:49:29,908 --> 00:49:31,409 and were shocked to discover 762 00:49:31,492 --> 00:49:34,871 that the barracks at Stalag Luft III were integrated. 763 00:49:34,954 --> 00:49:36,623 [Jefferson] There were approximately 150 men 764 00:49:36,706 --> 00:49:40,043 who had come in to this camp, and we were lined up. 765 00:49:40,126 --> 00:49:45,465 {\an8}Finally, down the line came a long, tall Kentucky hillbilly 766 00:49:46,216 --> 00:49:51,012 {\an8}and he walked back and says, "By cracky, I think I'll take this boy." 767 00:49:51,095 --> 00:49:54,349 Colonel walked across and said, "Lieutenant, you go with him." 768 00:49:55,183 --> 00:49:56,184 "Yes, sir." 769 00:49:57,185 --> 00:49:59,020 [Macon] The Germans took me into the room 770 00:49:59,103 --> 00:50:03,107 and showed me where I was going to be, on the third bed up. 771 00:50:03,650 --> 00:50:06,361 I didn't realize how badly I had been injured. 772 00:50:06,444 --> 00:50:09,030 I was paralyzed from my waist down. 773 00:50:09,113 --> 00:50:11,616 So, once they saw that I couldn't move, 774 00:50:11,699 --> 00:50:14,452 the Germans tried to tell them 775 00:50:14,536 --> 00:50:17,580 who will give up his bottom bunk for this man. 776 00:50:17,664 --> 00:50:19,040 Nobody moved. 777 00:50:19,123 --> 00:50:23,253 And finally, the guy from Texas said, "He can have my bunk, I'll go up there." 778 00:50:23,878 --> 00:50:26,464 He and I became the best of friends. 779 00:50:27,382 --> 00:50:30,176 [Delmont] These men had to come together to survive the prisoner camp. 780 00:50:30,260 --> 00:50:34,722 They let whatever racial attitudes, racial animosities go or at least lessen 781 00:50:34,806 --> 00:50:37,392 because they had to work together to keep up each other's spirits 782 00:50:37,475 --> 00:50:38,601 to survive that experience. 783 00:50:40,603 --> 00:50:44,774 [Hanks] One of the last Air Force operations was to starve the Reich of fuel 784 00:50:44,858 --> 00:50:47,902 by bombing German synthetic oil plants. 785 00:50:47,986 --> 00:50:52,115 The Allies also would need to hit transportation and storage facilities 786 00:50:52,198 --> 00:50:55,410 for the coal that powered jet production plants. 787 00:50:55,493 --> 00:50:58,913 This air blockade would cripple the Reich's war machine 788 00:50:58,997 --> 00:51:01,624 and leave the German army without adequate air cover 789 00:51:01,708 --> 00:51:04,335 in the culminating battles of the war. 790 00:51:04,419 --> 00:51:07,130 {\an8}[Clark] We were in the officers' club until 1:00 or 2:00 a.m. 791 00:51:07,881 --> 00:51:10,133 {\an8}Suddenly we heard the announcement: 792 00:51:10,216 --> 00:51:12,135 "Be prepared for a mission in the morning." 793 00:51:15,054 --> 00:51:18,391 We put up 2,000 heavy bombers. 794 00:51:18,474 --> 00:51:22,395 All you could see was four-engined bombers to the horizon. 795 00:51:24,939 --> 00:51:27,025 [Miller] To knock out one plant in World War II, 796 00:51:27,108 --> 00:51:29,235 a place called Leuna near Merseburg, 797 00:51:29,319 --> 00:51:35,283 it took 6,000 bombers flying about 40 missions to knock that plant out. 798 00:51:36,618 --> 00:51:40,413 [Rosenthal] Our group led one of the biggest raids on Berlin. 799 00:51:40,496 --> 00:51:42,207 It was a very beautiful day. 800 00:51:42,290 --> 00:51:44,959 The sun was shining, not a cloud in sight. 801 00:51:45,627 --> 00:51:49,797 As we approached the target, the plane was hit, 802 00:51:49,881 --> 00:51:52,884 but we continued and bombed the target, 803 00:51:52,967 --> 00:51:56,221 knowing that we couldn't return to our base. 804 00:51:56,804 --> 00:52:00,558 There was smoke and fire in the plane, and I knew I had to get out. 805 00:52:00,642 --> 00:52:03,144 And when I got out, I thought I was in heaven. 806 00:52:04,395 --> 00:52:07,857 And suddenly, I hit the ground and I looked up, 807 00:52:08,650 --> 00:52:11,694 and I saw three soldiers coming at me with guns. 808 00:52:12,695 --> 00:52:16,824 One of the soldiers raised his gun and was about to strike me, 809 00:52:16,908 --> 00:52:21,788 and I noticed that he had, on his hat, the Red Army symbol. 810 00:52:22,455 --> 00:52:25,500 And I yelled, Amerikanski, Roosevelt, 811 00:52:25,583 --> 00:52:28,044 Stalin, Churchill, Pepsi-Cola, 812 00:52:28,127 --> 00:52:31,506 Coca-Cola, uh, Lucky Strike. 813 00:52:32,674 --> 00:52:36,469 [Hanks] The Berlin raid was Rosie's 52nd and final mission. 814 00:52:36,553 --> 00:52:39,847 The most raids flown by a pilot in the 100th. 815 00:52:39,931 --> 00:52:42,517 After recuperating in a Russian hospital, 816 00:52:42,600 --> 00:52:44,852 Rosie made his way back to Thorpe Abbotts, 817 00:52:44,936 --> 00:52:49,315 where he had flown his first mission a year and a half earlier. 818 00:52:52,610 --> 00:52:55,864 [Couch] The Russians were knocking on the door. 819 00:52:55,947 --> 00:52:57,991 We could hear artillery 820 00:52:58,074 --> 00:53:01,452 and other sounds of combat in the distance. 821 00:53:02,078 --> 00:53:03,580 [Walton] Hitler debated back and forth: 822 00:53:03,663 --> 00:53:07,208 {\an8}should we march the prisoners out of the camp or kill them? 823 00:53:07,292 --> 00:53:09,294 {\an8}That was a real possibility. 824 00:53:10,003 --> 00:53:11,254 [Murphy] And suddenly, one night, 825 00:53:11,337 --> 00:53:14,924 our American senior officer was told by the Germans 826 00:53:15,008 --> 00:53:17,385 that we were going to be evacuated immediately, 827 00:53:17,468 --> 00:53:22,015 and we would be leaving the camp within an hour to march out on foot. 828 00:53:22,932 --> 00:53:25,685 They just said, we're moving you for your safety. 829 00:53:26,269 --> 00:53:28,646 That was what they said, but we all knew better. 830 00:53:30,523 --> 00:53:32,525 [Miller] The airmen had no idea where they're going. 831 00:53:32,609 --> 00:53:35,486 They feared Hitler was going to take American airmen 832 00:53:35,570 --> 00:53:37,697 and use them as human shields. 833 00:53:37,780 --> 00:53:41,075 And it's the worst European winter in 100 years. 834 00:53:42,452 --> 00:53:44,037 [Murphy] It was bitterly cold. 835 00:53:44,120 --> 00:53:46,581 The snow was about knee-deep, 836 00:53:46,664 --> 00:53:51,002 and they walked us all that night until late the next afternoon 837 00:53:51,085 --> 00:53:52,086 with just brief stops. 838 00:53:57,050 --> 00:53:59,260 {\an8}[Jefferson] At Spremberg, they put us on a train. 839 00:53:59,344 --> 00:54:01,763 {\an8}We were locked inside of these boxcars. 840 00:54:01,846 --> 00:54:04,349 {\an8}They jammed in 60 to 70 men. 841 00:54:04,432 --> 00:54:06,100 Didn't have room enough to sit down. 842 00:54:06,184 --> 00:54:07,477 It was hell. 843 00:54:08,186 --> 00:54:10,688 {\an8}[Wolff] That one, we were packed in tighter than heck. 844 00:54:10,772 --> 00:54:13,691 {\an8}Anybody falling down would get stomped on. 845 00:54:13,775 --> 00:54:14,943 [Walton] When the train pulled in, 846 00:54:15,026 --> 00:54:17,570 men were banging on the door to get out of the cars. 847 00:54:17,654 --> 00:54:19,781 The guards finally opened the doors. 848 00:54:20,406 --> 00:54:22,575 It's as bad as-as you can imagine. 849 00:54:28,206 --> 00:54:31,167 [Wolff] It was a camp that apparently had been designed 850 00:54:31,251 --> 00:54:34,546 to hold 8,000 or 10,000 people max. 851 00:54:34,629 --> 00:54:36,965 There was over 100,000 there. 852 00:54:37,048 --> 00:54:38,841 Camp Hell would be a good word for it. 853 00:54:40,760 --> 00:54:43,054 [Miller] There were no barracks, people camped outside. 854 00:54:43,137 --> 00:54:44,514 The conditions were horrible. 855 00:54:44,597 --> 00:54:46,266 No one knew what was gonna happen to them. 856 00:54:49,769 --> 00:54:52,313 {\an8}[Macon] One day, we were walking around in the camp. 857 00:54:52,397 --> 00:54:55,441 {\an8}Somebody says, "There's a tank. There's a Sherman tank." 858 00:54:55,525 --> 00:54:57,193 And then we looked and, surely enough, 859 00:54:57,277 --> 00:54:59,654 there was a Sherman tank on the horizon. 860 00:55:00,655 --> 00:55:02,782 [Jefferson] Patton's Third Army came through. 861 00:55:02,866 --> 00:55:07,620 I saw Patton on-- on a tank when he came through the main gate of--of Stalag VII-A. 862 00:55:07,704 --> 00:55:08,705 We'd been liberated. 863 00:55:08,788 --> 00:55:10,206 [chuckles] 864 00:55:10,957 --> 00:55:15,962 The men went to the flagpole and rung down the swastika 865 00:55:16,045 --> 00:55:21,175 while they opened up Old Glory and raised it, and we came to attention. 866 00:55:21,259 --> 00:55:24,262 We weren't in uniforms. Tattered clothes and all that stuff. 867 00:55:24,345 --> 00:55:28,975 And I guess that was the greatest salute I ever gave. [chuckles] 868 00:55:29,851 --> 00:55:31,686 [Murphy] It was very emotional. 869 00:55:31,769 --> 00:55:33,771 We were finally going to be freed 870 00:55:33,855 --> 00:55:38,651 after all those months and years of having been held as POWs. 871 00:55:38,735 --> 00:55:42,655 In many ways, it was hard to believe that we were finally gonna be able to go home. 872 00:55:43,781 --> 00:55:45,950 [reporter 20] This is London Calling. 873 00:55:46,034 --> 00:55:47,994 Here is a news flash. 874 00:55:48,494 --> 00:55:53,291 The German radio has just announced that Hitler is dead. 875 00:55:55,251 --> 00:56:00,131 [Hanks] On May 1st, 1945, the day the world learned of Hitler's suicide, 876 00:56:00,215 --> 00:56:02,467 the 100th flew one final mission, 877 00:56:02,550 --> 00:56:05,511 part of what was called Operation Chowhound. 878 00:56:05,595 --> 00:56:09,766 The crews would be dropping, by parachute, food, not bombs. 879 00:56:09,849 --> 00:56:12,977 Relief for nearly five million starving people in the Netherlands, 880 00:56:13,061 --> 00:56:15,730 still occupied by die-hard Nazis. 881 00:56:16,231 --> 00:56:19,609 As the bombers reached the outskirts of Amsterdam, 882 00:56:19,692 --> 00:56:23,821 {\an8}they passed over fields of brilliantly colored tulips. 883 00:56:23,905 --> 00:56:25,490 {\an8}In one of them, the heads of the flowers 884 00:56:25,573 --> 00:56:29,410 {\an8}had been clipped to say, "Many thanks, Yanks." 885 00:56:31,913 --> 00:56:33,706 [cheering, whistling] 886 00:56:37,835 --> 00:56:39,671 {\an8}[Hanks] The war in Europe was over. 887 00:56:39,754 --> 00:56:43,049 The crews of the 100th packed up their duffels, 888 00:56:43,132 --> 00:56:46,094 and the local folk from the villages around Thorpe Abbotts, 889 00:56:46,177 --> 00:56:48,263 dressed in their Sunday finest, 890 00:56:48,346 --> 00:56:51,641 gathered to see them off for their long journey home. 891 00:56:55,603 --> 00:56:57,772 [cheering] 892 00:57:00,108 --> 00:57:02,569 [Murphy] When I got to Atlanta, I went to the public telephone 893 00:57:02,652 --> 00:57:05,697 and called my mother and told 'em I was home. 894 00:57:06,239 --> 00:57:07,866 Course, she immediately broke down, 895 00:57:09,534 --> 00:57:11,202 and they-they ca-- they came out-- 896 00:57:11,286 --> 00:57:15,790 They drove out to Fort McPherson, and they picked me up and I got home. 897 00:57:16,666 --> 00:57:17,667 [sniffles] 898 00:57:18,459 --> 00:57:20,086 [Wolff] We got back to California. 899 00:57:20,169 --> 00:57:22,005 My dad and mother were there. 900 00:57:22,088 --> 00:57:25,717 There was a big reunion, of course, and I was halfway to the moon. 901 00:57:26,843 --> 00:57:30,305 And then I saw my wife-to-be, Barbara. 902 00:57:30,388 --> 00:57:33,099 And three weeks later, we were married. 903 00:57:34,809 --> 00:57:37,979 [Hanks] The men of the Bloody Hundredth were finally home, 904 00:57:38,855 --> 00:57:41,107 reunited with their families 905 00:57:41,774 --> 00:57:43,151 and their wives 906 00:57:44,027 --> 00:57:45,695 and their sweethearts. 907 00:57:46,196 --> 00:57:49,741 Some for the first time since leaving for war. 908 00:57:50,783 --> 00:57:54,829 [Rosenthal] When I l-left the service, I was exhausted. 909 00:57:54,913 --> 00:57:57,207 I'd been through these trying experiences, 910 00:57:57,290 --> 00:58:00,793 and I wanted to put that behind me and I wanted to resume civilian life. 911 00:58:02,003 --> 00:58:05,673 I went back to work at the same firm that I had been with, 912 00:58:05,757 --> 00:58:09,219 and I was not ready, really, to go back to work. 913 00:58:09,302 --> 00:58:12,680 And finally, after being there for six months, 914 00:58:12,764 --> 00:58:18,144 {\an8}I heard about an opportunity to go to Nuremberg as a prosecutor. 915 00:58:20,605 --> 00:58:23,566 On the ship over there, I met this beautiful woman 916 00:58:23,650 --> 00:58:27,570 who was also a lawyer and was going over as a prosecutor. 917 00:58:27,654 --> 00:58:31,199 And within 10 days, we were engaged to marry, 918 00:58:31,741 --> 00:58:33,743 and we were married over in Nuremberg. 919 00:58:35,578 --> 00:58:40,458 I saw these defendants there who were powerless now, 920 00:58:40,542 --> 00:58:44,170 sitting abjectly and being tried and being convicted. 921 00:58:44,712 --> 00:58:48,800 And when I saw that, that, in fact, ended the war for me. 922 00:58:53,888 --> 00:58:57,475 [Hanks] World War II was the most devastating event in human history. 923 00:58:58,685 --> 00:59:02,146 More costly in lives than any war ever fought. 924 00:59:03,147 --> 00:59:08,152 In it, the Eighth Air Force suffered the highest casualty rate 925 00:59:08,236 --> 00:59:11,197 of any of the American Armed Forces. 926 00:59:14,325 --> 00:59:16,786 [Luckadoo] Now that I've survived it 927 00:59:16,870 --> 00:59:22,375 and can look back on it for all these intervening years, 928 00:59:23,334 --> 00:59:25,545 it was a life changer for me. 929 00:59:27,046 --> 00:59:28,339 [Crosby] If, in this time, 930 00:59:28,423 --> 00:59:32,510 there's a feeling of excitement and romance and mythology, it's there. 931 00:59:32,594 --> 00:59:37,015 My friends that I made then saved my life any number of times. 932 00:59:37,098 --> 00:59:40,101 They were the friends of all friends. 933 00:59:40,685 --> 00:59:43,605 [Rosenthal] The people we served with, they were dedicated, 934 00:59:43,688 --> 00:59:46,608 they sacrificed, they had great courage. 935 00:59:47,150 --> 00:59:50,069 We shared heartbreak and hilarity. 936 00:59:50,153 --> 00:59:54,532 We saw our comrades go down and being killed, 937 00:59:54,616 --> 00:59:57,869 being wounded, become prisoners of war. 938 00:59:57,952 --> 01:00:02,916 {\an8}And we developed a tremendous respect for each other and we shared a victory. 939 01:00:03,416 --> 01:00:07,212 {\an8}And I think this was the experience of all of our people. 940 01:00:07,295 --> 01:00:09,923 Miraculously, people came together. 941 01:00:12,717 --> 01:00:16,262 You have to give all the credit to the men and the women 942 01:00:16,346 --> 01:00:21,267 that sacrificed their lives and basically saved the world from fascism. 943 01:00:23,770 --> 01:00:28,399 [Murphy] The freedoms that we enjoy did not come about by accident. 944 01:00:28,483 --> 01:00:32,070 They were bought and paid for by my generation 945 01:00:32,153 --> 01:00:35,323 and the generations that preceded us. 946 01:00:35,406 --> 01:00:36,741 And for that reason, 947 01:00:36,824 --> 01:00:42,622 I think the World War II generation deserves to be remembered. 948 01:00:42,622 --> 01:00:47,622 DOWNLOADED FROM WWW.AWAFIM.TV 949 01:00:42,622 --> 01:00:52,622 For latest movies and series with subtitles Visit WWW.AWAFIM.TV Today 82143

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