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The Battle of Arras began on 9 April, 1917 and in support the RFC deployed 25 squadrons made up of 365 aircraft, about a third of which were fighters (scouts). There were initially only five German Jasta s (fighter squadrons) in the region and this rose to eight as the battle progressed. Since September 1916 the Germans had held the upper hand in the perpetual contest for air supremacy on the Western FrontSee Western Front (disambiguation) for other meanings. Western Front was a term used during the First and Second World Wars to describe the "contested armed frontier" between lands controlled by Germany to the East and the Allies to the West. A "contested with the Albatros D.II and D.III outclassing the British scouts.
Superior German aircraft, inexperienced British aircrew and the prevailing British offensive strategy resulted in a crushing German victory in the air. During April the British lost 245 aircraft, 211 aircrew killed or missing and 108 as prisoners of war. As a comparison, in the five months of 1916's Battle of the SommeThe Battle of the Somme was one of the largest battles of the First World War, with more than one million casualties. The British and French forces attempted to break through the German lines along a 25 mile (40 km) front north and south of the River Somm the RFC had suffered 576 casualties.
The Bristol F2A made its debut with No. 48 Squadron RFC during April and lost heavily with four out of six shot down on its very first patrol in an encounter with five Albatros D.IIIs of Jasta 11 , led by Manfred von Richtofen. Under Richtofen's leadership, Jasta 11 scored 89 victories during April, over a third of the British losses.
World War I aviation