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Bacp Case Study

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Bacp Case Study
The BCATP was not only significant but complex in its role as an organization, as fifty-one training schools were created between April 1940 and December 1941, along with an intake of almost 40,000 trainees. The full implications politically and economically were apparent as the war went on; the economic benefits of the BCATP following the Great Depression were great as surviving facilities adapted and new ones commenced, and Canada developed a prosperous aircraft construction industry. Before the war broke out, the RCAF had merely fifty aircraft that were mainly equipped for surveillance missions, counting only about 27,000 flying hours per year in comparison to the quadruple amount of flying hours each week during the summer of 1942. Recognized …show more content…
The 1st Canadian Division held a lot of the equipment, having a position of vital importance as the air effort battled against the Luftwaffe in the summer of 1940, and participated in the Luftwaffe’s last large daylight attack on September 27. Tarnishing their invasion plans, the Germans resorted to night bombing, and the attacks became less frequent. The benefit of Canada’s involvement in defending British airways added both strength and number to the British RAF, essentially preserving and saving British infrastructure and civilians. On every battlefront, even today, air superiority is key in winning a war, a proactive measure for which air forces must be trained for an unremitting and useful contribution to a land battle. Anglo-Canadian cooperation in the Battle of Britain also had many advantages, namely the way in which the combined material resources, intellectual assets, and troops were utilized, certainly in the air war. The German Luftwaffe, outnumbering the British air force by almost twofold, had intended to attack RAF bases, seaports, and then instigate their ground assault. With Canada as a close ally, however, the RCAF began assembling Hurricane fighters and were training pilots to defend Britain – in retaliation for a bombing in London, the Allies began bombing German cities, and the ever-growing number of German air losses forced Hitler to delay his campaign to invade Britain under Operation Sea Lion

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