Why one B-17 tail gunner ignored every training manual during WW2 — and shot down 17 German fighters while everyone said his method was suicide. This World War 2 story reveals what happened when one man decided the experts were wrong.
July 30, 1943. Staff Sergeant Michael Arooth, tail gunner on B-17 "Tondelayo," flew toward Kassel with 186 bombers facing over 300 German fighters. When Messerschmitts attacked, Arooth opened fire at 700 yards — more than double the regulation distance. Every training manual said wait until 300 yards. Instructors, officers, and fellow gunners called it a waste of ammunition.
They were all wrong.
What Arooth discovered that morning wasn't about hitting targets at long range. It was about something the Army Air Forces had never considered — something that contradicted everything they taught about aerial gunnery. The question wasn't whether his technique worked. The question was whether anyone would listen before more crews died.
Wounded twice. Ditched in the English Channel. And still not finished. What happened to Arooth and his "crazy" method will change everything you thought you knew about bomber defense in World War 2.
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