Top News
|India Strategic Greets President Emmanuel Macron and the People of France on their National Day 14 of July | Viva la France | Qatar mourns passing away of former Emir Shaikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani. He was 74 | Australia to supply Uranium to power Indian Reactors after Modi, Albanese announce agreements on Defence and Nuclear Energy | Modi, New Zealand PM Christopher Luxon elevate ties to Strategic Partnership | 12 Pacts include cooperation in Indo-Pacific and Logistics Support to Naval Ships | Bilateral trade to double to about US $ 4 billion by 2030 | Indian Navy Commissions 6th Nilgiri class Stealth Frigate INS Mahendragiri | Future Wars will use AI but will be won by Trained Soldiers and Robust Military Power, says Rajnath Singh | Akashvani, the popular state-run All India Radio, is 90 | China recovers Reusable Rocket, as visualised in the 1962 James Bond film Dr No | US Elon Musk’s SpaceX was the First to do so, and China follows as the Second | Modi in Indonesia, and then Australia and New Zealand to strengthen Indo-Pacific partnerships | Defence, Minerals, AI top agenda | Jaishankar commends Qatar’s role in Iran-US Peace Talks | India building Semiconductors and Electronics clusters, in collaboration with Japanese and other companies: PM Modi | China conducts rare Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile Test, the first since 1980 | India Joins UN Global Dialogue on Artificial Intelligence in Geneva July 6-7 | LNG supplies resume through Strait of Hormuz after US, Iran Ceasefire | 15 of 20 Indian Fertiliser ships stuck in Hormuz set sail | India sourced Fuel from 40 countries during the Hormuz closure, says Modi | Modi signing Agreements with Australia to buy Uranium and Minerals | India creates 900 million Unique Health IDs towards Digital health ecosystem | India to double Gas buys from US from existing 2.2 million tonnes of LPG | Trump says Iran’s Nuclear Programme Obliterated in US bombings | Egypt inaugurates its new 22-acre Defence HQ, shaped as Octagon | US Celebrates 250 Years of Democracy, History and Power | India Strategic Greets All American Friends on this Blessed Occassion🙏😇🎉♥️💫 | India, Japan to boost bilateral trade from the existing $25b | Japan interested in utilising ISRO rockets for Space launches | Shipbuilding major for Japan or frigates Air Land and Naval Specific issues will cone on the table | J projects look at Notth East Think Tank exchanges | Semiconductor being developed in Assam with Japan Enhancing bilateral cooperation | Imp of quad Of co-op in info pacific | General Dhiraj Seth Took Over as India’s 31st Army chief on June 30 | He succeeds Gen Upendra Dwivedi who Retired after 40 Years of service | Gen Seth was commissioned into the Armoured Corps in 1986 | Gen Seth has commanded Strike formations and was also GOC of the important Delhi Area | India to Warmly Welcome Japanese PM Sanae Takaichi July 1-3 for Annual Summit | India sends Portable Field Hospital to Venezuela along with Doctors and Medicines | 41 Indian Army Para Field personnel sent under Op Amistad, or Friendship | Two IAF Boeing C 17 fly 15,000 km with Medics and Equipment to the faraway Friends | Iran reiterates exclusive right to control Strait of Hormuz | Iran also warned Safe Passage cannot be assured for Ships sailing away from its designated channels | Six Arab Gulf States call for Restoration of Freedom of Navigation in the strategic Strait | Iran warns: “Gulf States’ strategic survival at Mercy of Tehran’s Tolerance” | India, Switzerland to deepen Science and Tech Ties | Starmer resigns as UK Prime Minister amid mounting Labour Party pressure | US, Iran War Ends with a Binding Commitment from Iran to Never Produce Nuclear Weapons | Oil Starts Flowing Freely Through Strait of Hormuz | US and Iran both Allow Movement of Oil Tanker’s | ONGC to Invest $1.5 billion to Boost India’s Oil Storage by 33 % | Qatar Amir-gifted Boeing 747 is new US Air Force Presidential Jet | Meta and Reliance to set up a huge Global Digital Hub in Jamnagar | Modi, Trump meet warmly again, this time at G7 | Modi showers praise on Trump for his Middle East peace effort | Trump says We always had Tremendous Relationship with India | Trump praises Modi, jovially calling him ‘a killer’ for his negotiating skills at G7 | Modi said Freedom of Navigation in the Strait of Hormuz is A Must | Trump expressed condolences for the Indian sailors killed in US Navy attack in the Gulf | Trump said US and Iran will sign an MoU to end their war on Friday June 19 | All the G7 Leaders supported the Peace Effort | Modi, UAE President Shaikh Mohammed agree to work together on Middle East Peace, Security and Stability | Piyush Goyal discusses expanding partnership with Prince Albert II of Monaco
CIVIL AVIATIONDEFENCE INDUSTRY

Spitfires

By SHYAM BHATIA

London, August 7. A single Spitfire flying through blue skies over Farnborough on the final day of the airshow was an iconic reminder of a bygone era when Allied forces battled the German empire of Adolf Hitler.

Rolls Royce built the original Merlin and Griffin engines of the Spitfires, graciously providing this solo model for appreciative crowds cheering the plane at Farnborough. One of an estimated 70 still deemed to be airworthy, they represent a fraction of those built during the Second World War. As collector’s items, the value of any surviving Spitfire is currently estimated at £4 million.

During the war an overwhelming majority were piloted by young white English males educated at private boarding schools. Names like Charles, Douglas and George were popular among the Royal Air Force (RAF)pilots who flew the aircraft, using words like ‘spiffing’ (excellent), ‘giggle juice’ (whisky) and ‘kybosh’ (putting an end to something) in their daily verbal interactions.

FILE PHOTO

Their German counterparts who piloted the Messerschmitt fighters, such as the ME 109 and ME 110with whom the Spitfires were engaged in perpetual dog fights, had far less appealing names like Gunther, Adolph, Volkhard and Berndt. By all accounts, whenever cornered in the skies, they routinely used words and expressions like ‘achtung’ (attention), ‘sieg heil’ (hail victory) and ‘gott in himmel’ (God in Heaven)

When it came to slang expressions before and during combat, the English excelled at ridiculing the German ‘Huns’ and ‘Krauts’, or the derogatory “Boche’ as they were also known. Watching out for the ‘Hun in the sun’ was a favoured expression at RAF messes. So was the joke, ‘What do you do if cornered by a Boche and a snake ?” Answer: “Kill the Boche first, the snake is less treacherous.”

If English comic magazines of that era are to be believed, survivors of Spitfires spontaneously broke into ‘God Save the King’ British National Anthem when they were safely back at ground level. Their German counterparts apparently sang ‘Deutscheland, Deutschlande Uber Alles’ (Germany, Germany above all).

Not much is known about how German pilots rated ME 109s and ME110s, but RAF veterans always had superlative descriptions about their Spitfires.

“You can’t fly a Spitfire and forget about it, it stays with you forever”, one RAF pilot recalled in a recent World War 2 television documentary. “It’s like a dancing fairy, I can’t really explain it.” Another pilot commented, “You only had to blow at the central stick and it did all you wanted. It’s a brilliant machine, a weapon of war and you had to learn how to use it.”

Credit for the creation of the Spitfire is given to a brilliant aircraft designer, Reginald Joseph Mitchell, who worked at the Southampton factory of Supermarine, a subsidiary of Vickers Armstrong. Heading a massive design team, his ambition was to create an aeroplane that “flew like a bird.” Before his untimely death in 1937, his team had created a fighter aircraft that could climb to 30,000 feet and fly at speeds of upto 400mph.

Ironically, the Spitfire’s unique elliptical wing design that created its wing lift and manoueverability may have been based on a wing design smuggled out of Germany by a Canadian who worked at pre-war German aircraft factories.

The end result was the fastest and deadliest fighter aircraft of its time. During the epic Battle of Britain between July and October 1940, the Spitfires were outnumbered 4-1 by German aircraft, yet they still managed to hold their own and secure air supremacy in innumerable David vs Goliath encounters that prevented the Germans from obtaining a UK foothold. The last Spitfires deployed for active duty in the UK were used for weather forecasting and finally retired in 1957

“The Spitfire did all kinds of things that Mitchell did not anticipate”, says Second World War historian Dilip Sarkar. Kolkata-born Sarkar, who served as a UK policeman before retiring and writing a series of best selling books about war, adds, “It captured people’s imagination, represented British national pride. Today it personifies Britain’s role in history, capturing that defiant spirit. The pivotal moment of the Battle of Britain belongs to the Spitfire. Without the Spitfire, we couldn’t have won the Battle of Britain.”

Voluntary cash contributions from within the UK and the rest of the empire created a special fund of £14 million to make ever more Spitfires. The cost of manufacturing a single Spitfire was £9,000. By the time the war ended 22,500 aircraft had been built in 24 successive designs. Pilots gave their Spitfires individual names, including Indian names such as ‘City of Bombay’ and ‘Atchashikar’, as well as ‘Annie, Olga, Shuddering Shirley’ and ‘Tikkie’.

The most famous Spitfire pilot of all time was Group Captain Sir Douglas Bader, who lost both his legs before the war started but still managed to rejoin the RAF where he flew Spitfires with the help of prosthetic legs. Bader’s war time achievements before he was captured are recorded in the book and film, ‘Reach for the Sky’.

Related Articles

Back to top button