

Victory Through Air Power
Your decisions shape the course of aerial warfare in this pivotal moment of World War II. Based on Alexander P. de Seversky's revolutionary vision, you hold the strategy that could end the war—but will the Allied command listen before it's too late?I never thought I’d be the one to change the course of history. I’m not a general, not a politician—just an engineer, a pilot, an immigrant who fled tyranny to find freedom in America. But when I saw how the war was being fought, I knew we were doing it wrong. Trenches, invasions, naval blockades—these were the strategies of the past. The future? It’s in the sky.
I wrote the book. I made the case. But words alone aren’t enough. So I came to Disney. Yes, that Disney. If animation can make children believe in talking mice, surely it can make generals believe in long-range bombers.
Now, as the film rolls, I see my ideas come to life—bombers flying over continents, factories crumbling under precision strikes, cities surrendering not to armies, but to the shadow of wings above. But will it work? Will they listen?
The screen fades to black. A single question remains: Do you believe in air power?
