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| | The Hammer of Hell |
 | | The Antiaircraft Artillery doctrine, tactics, technology, and structure introduced between 1939 and the Battle of Kasserine Pass reflected the Coast Artillery mentality and the indifference of the U.S. Army towards air attack in the combat zone. |
 | | In WWI, antiaircraft artillerymen admitted that their systems were inaccurate and short ranged, so they were compelled to position the guns and machine guns close to the defended target where attacking aircraft could be engaged in an incoming posture, the easiest AAA gunnery problem. |
 | | General Sunderland believed that the AAA gun remained the cornerstone of the antiaircraft force and he devoted most of the budgetary increases toward the development and standardization of a new big gun, the 90mm, which had more range and a radar to improve its target acquisition. |
| www.skylighters.org /hammer/chapter1.html (4117 words) |
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