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At the start of the Second World War, bomber survival followed a simple and widely accepted logic. Armor, defensive guns, large crews, and endurance were supposed to keep aircraft alive. The de Havilland Mosquito rejected almost all of those assumptions. This video examines why that decision was considered risky, how it was tested in practice, and why it worked only within a very narrow set of conditions. It explores the Mosquito’s design philosophy, its British origins, the discipline required to operate it, and the essential role Canada played in its production and service. This is not a story about a miracle aircraft. It is a story about execution, limits, and why speed made the Mosquito conditionally survivable, not invulnerable. If careful military history matters to you, this channel exists to tell these stories with precision and respect for the facts. 🔔 SUBSCRIBE for more Canadian military history: / @canadianfrontarchives 📜 MUSIC CREDITS Music: “Crusade” by Kevin MacLeod Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/... #WWII #Mosquito #CanadianHistory #RCAF #RAF #MilitaryHistory #AviationHistory #SecondWorldWar #CanadaWWII #AircraftDesign #DeHavillandMosquito