Aviation History

WHY BETTY BOMBED

WE CALLED HER BETTY. THE AMERICAN SYSTEM OF NICKNAMING WORLD WAR II JAPANESE AIRCRAFT GAVE FEMALE NAMES TO BOMBERS, MALE NAMES TO FIGHTERS.

Betty was actually a waitress in Pennsylvania. A member of the three-man intelligence team that picked the names thus immortalized a one-night stand.

The Japanese might have thought that amusing, but they called the Mitsubishi G4M Rikko, truncating their phrase for “land-based attack bomber.” (The G4M’s predecessor, the Mitsubishi G3M “Nell,” was also called Rikko.)

The Rikko was Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto’s idea, abetted by the young, air-minded naval officers in his orbit. Yamamoto was a smart guy, even though he only got a C+ for his two years of English studies at Harvard from 1919 to 1921. Rather than pull all-nighters, he spent a lot of time in Cambridge playing poker. He beat his affluent opponents like borrowed mules, then used his considerable winnings to finance a summer of travel around the United States, learning as much as he could about the overconfident gunslinger he would outdraw at Pearl Harbor two decades later.

The old-timers in the Imperial Japanese Navy were battleship queens, and it was thanks to them that Japan constructed two expensive but supremely useless super-battleships, Yamato and Musashi, both sunk before their crews even knew the way to the wardroom. Yamamoto’s idea, however, was not to build more ships—you could buy a thousand airplanes for the cost of a warship, he once said—but to build a land-based bomber with huge range and great speed that could quickly fly far out to sea and fight naval battles, either defending the fleet’s capital ships or attacking the enemy.

In 1936 Japan renounced the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Aviation History

Aviation History12 min read
Engines Not Required
“Commandos on Wings” ran the headline of the article in Washington’s Evening Star on November 1, 1942. The sub-head read, “They are Uncle Sam’s glider troops, who drop silently out of the sky, seize airfields, blow up bridges and ammunition dumps.” T
Aviation History2 min read
Remembering Jack
I was glad to see the article on the late Jack Broughton’s run-in with the brass (“The Turkestan Incident,” Winter 2024). The story should be a cautionary tale for policymakers and senior military officers, though I believe the lessons have been regr
Aviation History1 min read
Mystery Ship
Can you match the motor with the airplane affected by its flaws? 1. Aichi AE1 Atsuta 2. Hispano-Suiza 8B 3. Siemens-Halske Sh.III 4. Daimler-Benz DB 610 5. Gnome Monosoupape 6. Wright R-3350-23 Duplex-Cyclone 7. Walter HWK 109-509 8. Kawasaki Ha40 9.

Related Books & Audiobooks