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How U.S. Marine PBJ-1D Bombers Dominated the Night War Against Japan During WWII
Summary by World War Wings
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How U.S. Marine PBJ-1D Bombers Dominated the Night War Against Japan During WWII
Turning the Night into a Battlefield In the later years of World War II, the night skies over the Pacific became the stage for a new kind of warfare. The U.S. Marine Corps took to the air in PBJ-1D bombers—modified versions of the Army’s B-25 Mitchell—to strike Japanese targets under cover of darkness. These aircraft were fitted with a revolutionary tool: airborne radar. What had once been a quiet, moonlit shield for Japanese convoys soon turned…
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