From Phil Baker's biography of Dennis Wheatley:
"The RFC [Royal Flying Corps] was still in its infancy, having only just got past the stage of using hand-held revolvers in aeroplanes, but it was now rapidly expanding. In May 1915 it comprised only 166 planes in total, but within eighteen months it was losing fifty planes a week. Parachutes were not issued; senior Army staff believed pilots would try harder without them." (p.100)
"The man who commanded Wheatley's division, General Sir Oliver Nugent, had boasted that a double decker London omnibus would hold all the men he intended to bring home alive." (p.139)
Lest we forget.
2 comments:
What's wrong with people like that? Can't they just fight each other?
Or at least send their sons into the most dangerous part of the front line, repeatedly.
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