- 3 - British produced a considerable number of training planes. The French and British believe that the Germans can produce approximately fifteen hundred planes per month but can not go above that figure; and that the Germans are now producing one thousand planes a month. The French and British hope that their combined production of war planes will amount to approximately twelve hundred a month by next Spring. It is obvious to everyone that if France and England are to obtain, first, equality in the air, and then dominance in the air, the productive capacity of the United States must be called into play to a much larger degree than at present. The French realize that the production of motors by Pratt and Whitney, Curtiss Wright, and Allison will be in such large measure taken up by orders of the American Army that it will be necessary for the British and French to pay for enlargements of these plants so that their production may be trebled. The present plan is to send to the United States, as soon as the Neutrality Act shall have been changed, persons |