That is not true. After the losses suffered on the Schweinfurt/Regensburg raids in 1943, daylight operations were dialed back and targets revaluated for several months. Arrival of the P-51B and subsequent models and retrofitting P-47 fighter groups with additional fuel hardpoints and four-blade paddle blade propellers, things started to change. Fast, well-armed escort fighters dramatically reduced losses to enemy fighter activity and rapidly cut into the number of experienced, veteran Luftwaffe pilots. Luftwaffe opposition to daytime raids diminished rapidly, to the point where the escort fighters were often cut loose after the bombing run to seek out and engage targets of opportunity.To some extent, but in the end they stopped the daylight slaughter flights.
The early air war in Europe was indeed a terrible thing. B-17 and B-24 losses were indeed unsustainable when the targets selected were in Germany or installations critical to the German war effort, like the Ploesti oil fields and refineries and the ball bearing manufacturing facilities of Schweinfurt and Regensburg. The Mustangs and the Thunderbolts changed everything. Shortly after escort capabilities reached full strength, the Thousand Bomber raids began, and persisted through the remainder of the war.
"Flying Forts" by Martin Caidin and "Thunderbolt!" by Capt. Robert S. Johnson are recommended reading, along with the official historical documents of the Mighty 8th. Some may recognize Robert S. Johnson as the 2nd highest scoring ace of the ETO and the first to surpass Eddie Rickenbacker's 26 victories in the First World War. He flew P-47s with the 56th Fighter Group, Zemke's Wolfpack, alongside the ETO's top scoring ace, Col. Francis Gabreski (31 victories). Almost all of the 56th's air-to-air victories were achieved in the bomber escort role.
Edited to add: Gabby Gabreski became a jet ace in Korea, adding 6 MiG-15s to his victory total, while flying F-86 Sabres.
One more edit: I would be remiss by not explicitly stating that every single American owes a great deal to the hundreds of thousands of bomber pilots, gunners, navigators, bombardiers, radio operators, fighter pilots and ground crewmen that demonstrated remarkable resolve, gallantry and courage during the air war of the ETO. "I knew the war was lost when I saw Mustangs over Berlin." - Hermann Goering, June 1945
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