Imperial Overlord

: Seventy-two for His Majesty the King



Goering is also very concerned about this issue, knowing that this intelligence officer has indeed provided him a lot of convenience.

Although it is uncertain, Goering knew that the "invisible force" of the Führer was not large in scale, and everyone was the elite of the elite.

At least, these people can snoop out the core secrets of the enemy, even the super secret that Libya has oil, which can change the course of the war.

Every loss of such a person is the heaviest loss to the empire. Goering considers himself the successor of the empire, and the loss of the empire is of course his own loss.

"The other party is strictly reviewing every person who has contacted these core intelligence. You must know that there are not many such people, so his intelligence is not good." Li Le said with a pretense.

His words made Goering and Kesselring nervous, and the expressions on their faces were not very good-looking.

"We shouldn't take action in such a hurry. Our protection for important intelligence personnel is too weak." Kesselring sighed bitterly.

He also knew that if the enemy's command system and radar stations and other facilities were not destroyed first, this air battle in Britain would never have been so easy.

But such an unreserved use of information does have a taste of exhaustion.

To say something rude, the Führer is simply betraying his intelligence personnel, telling the opponent that someone has infiltrated your interior.

"Indeed, our bombing is too targeted... Some, some rely too much on intelligence." Goering was also somewhat regretful.

Although the victory is refreshing, the loss of a spy who can provide the enemy's top-secret information at any time is also a huge loss.

Hearing these two people say that, Li Le felt that it was a sin for him to fool them, but he couldn't tell the truth to these two people, so he could only hold back his laughter.

He couldn't tell them that the so-called intelligence personnel didn't exist at all; he couldn't tell them that if the intelligence was not used now, it would be completely scrapped in two days.

"Actually, this patriotic intelligence officer has just sent back a message that the enemy's senior generals are under investigation. We should seize the opportunity to do something!" Li Le opened his mouth to stop Goering and Kesselring. Reflect.

"Last night, we attacked 14 targets in the UK at night, and these targets were all marked with important marks." Kesselring introduced the attack action last night.

The effect of the Luftwaffe's night attack was surprisingly good, because the British radar stations were all paralyzed, and the naked-eye observation station at night could not play a role, so the German aircraft did not encounter obstacles at all.

These planes drove straight in and bombed British cities including Liverpool, but because the bombing was at night, there was no way to guarantee the bombing progress.

Under the circumstance that there is almost no reference, the hit accuracy of air-dropped bombs can only rely on something illusory such as belief.

And today, Germany has taken off 800 sorties so far, hitting many targets.

Because the British response measures were implemented very slowly, the results of the Luftwaffe's air raids have been real until now.

The intelligence provided by Li Le is too accurate, and the Stuka dive bomber has not encountered the difficult interception of the British Air Force yet, so it can naturally provide a good precision strike.

Adding the two advantages together, the results achieved by the Luftwaffe at present are much greater than Li Le himself estimated.

For example, the British code-breaking work on Germany has now been completely interrupted. At the same time, the British fighter jet parts were out of stock, and the production capacity dropped to less than half of the original.

If Li Le can accurately know the results obtained by the Luftwaffe, he may have the heart to enforce the "Sea Lion Project".

Unfortunately, he didn't know about these huge results, and he didn't have any real intelligence personnel to send him the news confirming the results.

Everything can only be guessed by himself, and these guesses can't help him determine the advantage he has gained.

"Today we attacked 22 targets, of which 7 were repeated targets that had been destroyed last night..." Kesselring stopped here in embarrassment and looked at Li Le.

Li Le also realized that this introduction of the battle situation was too vague, so he opened his mouth and shouted to the door: "Bauman! Bring in the map!"

Soon, a huge map of England was laid out in front of the three of them. The map was about two square meters in size, and many targets were marked in detail on it.

Originally, these targets were "non-existent" to the Luftwaffe intelligence department, and most of them were supplemented by Li Le's so-called "invisible intelligence force".

"Now, our reconnaissance plane has other channels to confirm that there are 59 targets that have been destroyed, including 17 radar stations."

While introducing, Kesselring introduced to Li Le the results achieved by the Luftwaffe in less than two days.

"The results claimed by the fighter unit are still being verified, and there are 93 enemy planes that have been confirmed." Goering said to Li Le very proudly.

Li Le is obviously not as optimistic as Goering, because anything like shooting down an enemy aircraft in an air battle involves moisture.

He claimed to have shot down 93 enemy planes, but Li Le felt that the most he could believe was about 60 combat results.

However, there are many results of destroying ground planes, and no actual statistics have been confirmed. In the past two days, Li Le believes that the number of British planes actually destroyed by the German army should be at least 150.

In fact, Li Le was still too conservative. At this time, the Germans had actually defeated the British 11th Aviation Group and wiped out part of the 13th Aviation Group.

At this time, there were no more than 550 fighter jets capable of fighting in the UK, which had dropped by as much as 170 fighters from the beginning of the war.

"Next, we still have a lot to do." Li Le said after listening to the results achieved by the Luftwaffe in the past two days.

He pointed to several targets on the map: "First of all, we must continue to destroy the enemy's fighter jet production factories and force them to move to the north."

Li Le knew that it was impossible to completely destroy the British fighter production line. The attack radius of the German aircraft was too short to cover the entire UK.

But he was able to get the British to relocate the factory to the north. This relocation would affect the production capacity for at least a month. This period of time was the chance for the Luftwaffe to win.

"On the other hand." After Li Le finished talking about his plan to continue to stare at the British Air Force's attack, he raised his head and looked at Goering.

"I can't rely too much on my own intelligence. If the intelligence department of the Air Force cannot act more actively, sooner or later we will lose the war because the intelligence source is too single." This is what Li Le is most worried about.

His information is too accurate, and sometimes it can indeed achieve twice the result with half the effort, but it is also easy for people to become dependent.

At least for now, the role of the intelligence services of the Luftwaffe has not been reflected, and they have always played the role of soy sauce in this crucial British air battle.

"Yes, my Führer! I will make them take active action as soon as possible." Goering also felt that relying solely on the Führer's intelligence was not very safe.

Kesselring agrees with this statement even more. Now that the advantage of the Luftwaffe is large enough, it would be a joke to pin the victory on one person.

"It's good to use intelligence personnel as much as possible, even to confirm some of the results of our bombing." Li Le said.

Kesselring nodded and agreed, "I also think that even providing some confirmation and other information would be of great help to us."

On the other side, the British lost 33 fighter jets to the British 13 Air Forces, almost lost one-eighth of their troops in a battle, and suddenly fell into crisis~www.wuxiaspot.com~ But these heroic The air force still obeyed the order in the next battle and bravely intercepted the German bomber group.

Two consecutive battles brought their number of downed fighters to 50, and by this time the number of fighters Britain could fight had dropped to around 500.

The good news is that Dawding took over the command again at this time. He ordered the 13th Air Force to stop its meaningless sorties, as it did on the first afternoon, to give up air supremacy in southeastern England.

"I can't let these precious pilots lose like this. Unless the Germans show signs of landing, I will refuse to take off fighter jets!" Dawding said to Churchill, holding the phone in his hand.

He unwaveringly insisted on his point of view: "Unless you can provide me with 50 or more new fighter jets every day, the fighter force will collapse because of too many losses."

Churchill was also very helpless. When Dawding was isolated, his air defense forces were in a mess, and it was impossible to form an effective counterattack.

Now that Daoding is back, if he doesn't listen to Daoding's advice, what's the point of letting Daoding back?

The British Army has not recovered from the fiasco two months ago. If there is another problem with the British Air Force at this time, then if the Germans land, the United Kingdom will be completely over.

Therefore, Dawding brought up the reason to prevent the enemy from landing, and Churchill could only accept it reluctantly.

"The Air Force will be handed over to you. We can't lose any more battles. For His Majesty the King, we must fight to the end!" Churchill said helplessly on the phone.

Dooding held the phone and nodded helplessly: "For His Majesty the King! I will do my best to defeat the Luftwaffe!"


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