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United States Army Air Forces
Army Air Forces Shoulder Sleeve Insignia
Active1941-1947
Disbanded18 September 1947
Country United States
Branch United States Army
TypeAir Forces
Size2.4 million members (March 1944)
79,908 aircraft (July 1944)
Part ofWar Department
Garrison/HQMunitions Building (1941-1942)
The Pentagon (1943-1947)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Henry H. Arnold, 1941–1946
Carl Spaatz, 1946–1947

The United States Army Air Forces (USAAF or AAF) was the military aviation service of the United States of America during and immediately after World War II, and the direct predecessor of the United States Air Force. The AAF was a component of the United States Army, which in 1942 was divided functionally by executive order into three autonomous forces: the Army Ground Forces, the Services of Supply (which in 1943 became the Army Service Forces), and the AAF. Each of these forces had a commanding general who reported directly to the Chief of Staff of the United States Army.

The AAF administered all parts of military aviation formerly distributed among the Army Air Corps, General Headquarters Air Force, and ground forces corps area commanders, and thus became the first air organization of the U.S. Army to control its own installations and support personnel. In practice, the AAF was virtually autonomous inside the Army. The peak size of the AAF was over 2.4 million men and women in service and nearly 80,000 aircraft in 1944, and 783 domestic bases in December 1943.[1] By VE Day it had 1.25 million men stationed overseas and operated from more than 1,600 airfields worldwide.[2]

The Air Corps became the Army Air Forces in June 1941 to provide the air arm a greater autonomy in which to expand more efficiently, and to provide a structure for the additional command echelons required by a vastly increased force. Although other nations already had separate air forces independent of the army or navy (such as the British Royal Air Force and the German Luftwaffe), the AAF remained a part of the United States Army until the independent United States Air Force came into being in September 1947.

However, in its expansion and conduct of the war, the AAF became more than just an arm of the greater organization. By the end of World War II the AAF had become virtually an independent service. By regulation and executive order, the AAF was a subordinate agency of the War Department tasked only with organizing, training, and equipping combat units, limited in responsibility to the continental United States, as were the Army Ground Forces and the Army Service Forces. In reality, Headquarters AAF controlled the conduct of all aspects of the air war in every part of the world, determining air policy and issuing orders without transmitting them through the Chief of Staff. This "contrast between theory and fact is...fundamental to an understanding of the AAF."[3]

Creation

Unity of command problems in the Air Corps

The roots of the AAF arose in the formulation of theories of strategic bombing at the Air Corps Tactical School that gave new impetus to arguments for an independent air force. Despite a perception of resistance and even obstruction by the War Department General Staff (WDGS), much of which was attributable to lack of funds, the Air Corps made great strides in the 1930s, both organizationally and in doctrine. A strategy stressing precision bombing of industrial targets by heavily armed, long-range bombers emerged, formulated by the men who would become its leaders.[4]

A major step toward a separate air force came in March 1935 when command of all combat air units within the Continental United States was centralized under a single headquarters called General Headquarters Air Force. Since 1920, control of aviation units had resided with commanders of the corps areas (a peacetime ground forces administrative echelon), following the model established by General John Pershing during World War I. In 1924 the General Staff planned for a wartime activation of an Army general headquarters (GHQ), similar to the American Expeditionary Forces model of World War I, with a GHQ air force as a subordinate component. Both were created in 1933 when war with Cuba seemed possible following a coup, but were not activated.

Activation of GHQ Air Force represented a compromise between strategic airpower advocates and ground force commanders who demanded that the Air Corps mission remain tied to that of the land forces. Airpower advocates achieved a centralized control of air units under an air commander, while the WDGS divided authority within the air arm and assured a continuing policy of support of ground operations as its primary role.[5] GHQ Air Force organized combat groups administratively into a strike force of three wings deployed to the Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf coasts. GHQ Air Force was small in comparison to European air forces. Lines of authority were difficult, at best, since GHQ Air Force controlled only operations of its combat units while the Air Corps was still responsible for doctrine, acquisition of aircraft, and training. The corps area commanders continued to control all airfields and the support personnel manning them. Between March 1935 and September 1938, the commanders of GHQ Air Force and the Air Corps, Major Generals Frank Andrews and Oscar Westover respectively, clashed philosophically over the direction in which the air arm was moving, exacerbating the difficulties.[6]

A division of the air defense of the United States into four geographical districts followed in 1940 that laid the foundation for the subsequent numbered air forces. In July, the War Department ordered that the Army General Headquarters (GHQ) be activated by November 1940 to plan and execute expanded training of ground forces. Army Chief of Staff George C. Marshall requested a reorganization study from the Air Corps, and on 5 October 1940, Chief of the Air Corps Maj. Gen. Henry H. Arnold submitted a proposal for creating an air staff, unifying the air arm under one commander, and giving it equality with the ground and supply forces. Arnold's proposal was immediately opposed by the General Staff in all respects, rehashing its traditional doctrinal argument that, in the event of war, the Air Corps would have no mission independent of support of the ground forces. Marshall implemented a compromise that the Air Corps found entirely inadequate, naming Arnold as acting "Deputy Chief of Staff for Air" but rejecting all organizational points of his proposal. GHQ Air Force instead was assigned to the control of GHQ, although the latter was a training and not an operational component.[7]

Army Air Forces created

General of the Army Henry H. Arnold

The likelihood of U.S. participation in World War II prompted the most radical reorganization of the aviation branch in its history, developing a structure that both unified command of all air elements and gave it total autonomy and equality with the ground forces by March 1942.

In the spring of 1941, the success in Europe of air operations conducted under centralized control made clear that the splintering of authority in the American air forces, deemed a "hydra-headed air authority" by one congressman,[n 1] had caused a disturbing lack of clear channels of command. Less than five months after the rejection of Arnold's reorganization proposal, ABC-1, a joint U.S.-British strategic planning agreement, refuted the General Staff's argument that the Air Corps had no wartime mission except to support ground forces.[8] A struggle with the General Staff over control of air defense of the United States had been won by airmen and vested in four command units called "numbered air forces", but the bureaucratic conflict threatened to renew the dormant struggle for an independent United States Air Force. Marshall had come to the view that the air forces needed a "simpler system" and a unified command. Working with Arnold and Robert A. Lovett, recently appointed to the long-vacant position of Assistant Secretary of War for Air, he reached a consensus that quasi-autonomy for the air forces was preferable to immediate separation.[9]

On 20 June 1941, to grant additional autonomy to the air forces and to avoid a legislative struggle in Congress, the War Department revised the army regulation governing the organization of Army aviation, AR 95-5.[9] Arnold assumed the title of Chief of the Army Air Forces, creating an echelon of command over all military aviation components that ended the dual status of the Air Corps and GHQ Air Force, which was renamed Air Force Combat Command. The AAF gained the formal "Air Staff" long opposed by the General Staff, and a single air commander,[9] but still did not have equal status with the Army ground forces, and air units continued to report through two chains of command.[10]

Arnold and Marshall agreed that the AAF would enjoy autonomy within the War Department until the end of the war, while its commanders would cease lobbying for independence. Marshall, a strong proponent of airpower, left understood that the Air Force would likely achieve its independence after the war. Soon after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, in recognition of importance of the role of the Army Air Forces, Arnold was given a seat on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the planning staff that served as the focal point of American strategic planning during the war, in order that the United States would have an air representative in staff talks with their British counterparts on the Combined Chiefs. In effect the head of the AAF gained equality with Marshall. While this step was never officially recognized by the United States Navy, and was bitterly disputed behind the scenes at every opportunity, it nevertheless succeeded as a pragmatic foundation for the future separation of the Air Force.[11]

USAAF recruitment poster.

The four geographical districts of the former GHQ Air Force were converted in January 1941 into numbered air forces, with a subordinate organization of 54 groups. Organizationally, the Army Air Forces was created as a higher command echelon encompassing both Air Force Combat Command and the Air Corps, thus bringing all of the air arm under the authority of one airman for the first time. Yet these reforms were only temporary, lasting just nine months. By November 1941, on the eve of U.S. entry into the war, the division of authority within the Army as a whole, caused by the activation of Army GHQ a year before, had led to a "battle of memos" between it and other agencies over administering the AAF, leading Marshall to state he had "the poorest command post in the Army." To streamline the AAF in preparation for war, with a goal of centralized planning and decentralized execution of operations, Arnold submitted to Marshall essentially the same reorganization plan rejected by the General Staff in October 1940.[9][10] Executive Order 9082 issued 28 February 42 changed Arnold's title to "Commanding General, Army Air Forces" effective 9 March 1942, making him co-equal with the commanding generals of the new Army Ground Forces and Services of Supply, the other two components of the Army of the United States. The War Department issued Circular No. 59 on 2 March that carried out the executive order,[12] intended as a wartime expedient to expire six months after the end of the war.[13] The three components replaced a multiplicity of branches and organizations, saw the General Staff greatly reduced in size, and proportionally increased the representation of the air forces members on it.

In addition to dissolving both Army General Headquarters and the chiefs of the combat arms, and assigning their training functions to the Army Ground Forces, War Department Circular 59 reorganized the Army Air Forces, disbanding both Air Force Combat Command and the Office of Chief of the Air Corps (as with Infantry, eliminating all its training and organizational functions), which eliminated an entire layer of authority.[14][n 2] Taking their former functions were eleven numbered air forces (later raised to sixteen) and six major commands (which became eight in January 1943: Flying Training, Technical Training, Troop Carrier, Air Transport, Materiel, Air Service, Proving Ground, and Anti-Submarine Commands). In July 1943, Flying Training and Technical Training Commands merged into a single AAF Training Command, and a year later Air Service Command and Materiel Command were reorganized as the AAF Technical Service Command.

Between March 1942 and March 1943 the AAF operated under a complex division of administrative control performed by a policy staff, an operating staff, and the support commands. Field activities of many support commands operated under a "bureau" structure, with no separation of policy and operating functions. Staff officers often exercised command and policy authority without responsibility for results, a system remaining from the Air Corps years. The concept of an "operating staff," or directorates, resulted from a desire to place experts in various aspects of military aviation into key positions of implementation. However functions often overlapped, communication and coordination between the divisions failed or was ignored, policy prerogatives were usurped by the directorates, and they became overburdened with detail. Eventually more than thirty offices were authorized to issue orders in the name of the commanding general.[15]

The recruiting film Winning Your Wings (1942) helped enlist 100,000 pilots

The hierarchical "command" principle, in which a single commander has direct final accountability but delegates authority to staff, was adopted AAF-wide in a major reorganization and consolidation on 29 March 1943. The four main directorates and nineteen subordinate directorates (the "operating staff") were abolished as an unnecessary level of authority, and execution of policies was removed from the staffs to be assigned solely to field organizations along functional lines.[15] The policy functions of the directorates were reorganized and consolidated into offices regrouped under six assistant chiefs of air staff.[16]

Most personnel of the Army Air Forces remained members of the Air Corps. In May 1945, 88 per cent of officers serving in the Army Air Forces were commissioned in the Air Corps, while 82 per cent of enlisted members assigned to AAF units and bases had the Air Corps as their combat arm branch.[17] While officially the air arm was the Army Air Forces, the term Air Corps persisted colloquially among the public as well as veteran airmen; in addition, the singular Air Force often crept into popular and even official use, reflected by the designation Air Force Combat Command in 1941–42.[n 3] This misnomer was also used on official recruiting posters (see image, above right) and was important in promoting the idea of an "Air Force" as an independent service. Jimmy Stewart, an Air Corps officer and pilot, used the term interchangeably in his narration of the 1942 recruiting short Winning Your Wings. The term also appeared prominently in Frank Capra's 1945 War Department indoctrination film War Comes to America, of the Why We Fight series, as an animated map graphic of equal prominence to that of the Army and Navy.

Expansion

The Air Corps began a rapid expansion in the spring of 1939 at the direction of President Franklin D. Roosevelt to provide an adequate air force for defense of the Western Hemisphere. An initial "25-group program", developed in April 1939, called for 50,000 men. When war broke out in September 1939 the Air Corps still had only 800 first-line combat aircraft and 76 bases, including 21 major installations and depots.[18]

Following the successful German invasion of France and the Low Countries in May 1940, President Roosevelt asked Congress for a supplemental appropriation of nearly a billion dollars, a production program of 50,000 aircraft a year, and a military air force of 50,000 aircraft (of which 36,500 would be Army).[19][n 4] Accelerated programs followed in the Air Corps that repeatedly revised expansion goals, resulting in plans for 84 combat groups, 7,799 combat aircraft, and the annual addition to the force of 30,000 new pilots and 100,000 technical personnel.[20] The accelerated expansion programs resulted in a force of 156 airfields and 152,125 personnel at the time of the creation of the Army Air Forces.[21]

In its expansion during World War II, the AAF became the world's most powerful air force. From the Air Corps of 1939, with 20,000 men and 2,400 planes, to the nearly autonomous AAF of 1944, with almost 2.4 million personnel and 80,000 aircraft, was a remarkable expansion. Robert A. Lovett, the Assistant Secretary of War for Air, together with Arnold, presided over an increase greater than for either the ground Army or the Navy, while at the same time dispatching combat air forces to the battlefronts.

"The Evolution of the Department of the Air Force" – Air Force Historical Studies Office[22]

The German invasion of the Soviet Union, occurring only two days after the creation of the Army Air Forces, caused an immediate reassessment of U.S. defense strategy and policy. The need for an offensive strategy to defeat the Axis Powers required further enlargement and modernization of all the military services, including the new AAF. In addition, the invasion produced a new Lend lease partner in Russia, creating even greater demands on an already struggling American aircraft production.[23]

An offensive strategy required several types of urgent and sustained effort. In addition to the development and manufacture of aircraft in massive numbers, the Army Air Forces had to establish a global logistics network to supply, maintain, and repair the huge force; recruit and train personnel; and sustain the health, welfare, and morale of its troops. The process was driven by the pace of aircraft production, not the training program,[24] and was ably aided by the direction of Assistant War Department Secretary Robert A. Lovett, for all practical purposes, "Secretary of the Air Corps".[25][n 5]

A lawyer and a banker, Lovett had prior experience with the aviation industry that translated into realistic production goals and harmony in integrating the plans of the AAF with those of the Army as a whole.[26] Lovett initially believed that President Roosevelt's demand following the attack on Pearl Harbor for 60,000 airplanes in 1942 and 125,000 in 1943 was grossly ambitious. However, working closely with General Arnold and engaging the capacity of the American automotive industry brought about an effort that produced almost 100,000 aircraft in 1944.[27][n 6]

The logistical demands of this armada were met by the creation of the Air Service Command on 17 October 1941 to provide service units and maintain 250 depots in the United States; the elevation of the Materiel Division to full command status on 9 March 1942 to develop and procure aircraft, equipment, and parts; and the merger of these commands into the Air Technical Service Command on 31 August 1944.[28] In addition to carrying personnel and cargo, the Air Transport Command made deliveries of almost 270,000 aircraft worldwide while losing only 1,013 in the process.[29] The operation of the stateside depots was done largely by more than 300,000 civilian maintenance employees, many of them women, freeing a like number of Air Forces mechanics for overseas duty.[30]

Growth, aircraft

USAAF aircraft types by year[31]
Type of aircraft 31 December 1941 31 December 1942 31 December 1943 31 December 1944 31 August 1945 Date of maximum size
Grand total 12,297 33,304 64,232 72,726 63,715 July 1944 (79,908)
Combat aircraft 4,477 11,607 27,448 41,961 41,163 May 1945 (43,248)
Very heavy bombers - 3 91 977 2,865 August 1945 (2,865)
Heavy bombers 288 2,076 8,027 12,813 11,065 April 1945 (12,919)
Medium bombers 745 2,556 4,370 6,189 5,384 October 1944 (6,262)
Light bombers 799 1,201 2,371 2,980 3,079 September 1944 (3,338)
Fighters 2,170 5,303 11,875 17,198 16,799 May 1945 (17,725)
Reconnaissance 475 468 714 1,804 1,971 May 1945 (2,009)
Support aircraft 7,820 21,697 36,784 30,765 22,552 July 1944 (41,667)
Transports 254 1,857 6,466 10,456 9,561 December 1944 (10,456)
Trainers 7,340 17,044 26,051 17,060 9,558 May 1944 (27,923)
Communications 226 2,796 4,267 3,249 3,433 December 1943 (4,267)

Growth, personnel

Tuskegee Airmen War bonds poster

The huge increases in aircraft inventory resulted in a similar increase in personnel, and changed the personnel policies under which the Air Service and Air Corps had operated since the National Defense Act of 1920. No longer could pilots represent 90% of commissioned officers. The need for large numbers of specialists in administration and technical services resulted in the establishment of an Officer Candidate School in Miami Beach, Florida, and the direct commissioning of thousands of professionals.[32] Even so, 193,000 new pilots entered the AAF during World War II, while 124,000 other candidates failed at some point during training or were killed in accidents.[33]

The requirements for new pilots resulted in a massive expansion of the Aviation Cadet program, which had so many volunteers that the AAF created a reserve pool that held qualified pilot candidates until they could be called to active duty, rather than losing them in the draft. By 1944, this pool became surplus, and 24,000 were sent to the Army Ground Forces for retraining as infantry, and 6,000 to the Army Service Forces.[34] Pilot standards were changed to reduce the minimum age from 20 to 18, and eliminated the educational requirement of at least two years of college. One beneficiary of this change went on to become a general in the United States Air Force, Charles E. Yeager.[35]

1943 portrait of WAC air controller

Air crew needs resulted in the successful training of 43,000 bombardiers, 49,000 navigators, and 309,000 flexible gunners, many of whom also specialized in other aspects of air crew duties.[n 7] 7,800 men qualified as B-29 flight engineers and 1,000 more as radar operators in night fighters, all of whom received commissions. Almost 1.4 million men received technical training as aircraft mechanics, electronics specialists, and other technicians. Non-aircraft related support services were provided by airmen trained by the Army Service Forces, but the AAF increasingly exerted influence on the curricula of these courses in anticipation of future independence.[36][37]

African-Americans comprised approximately six per cent of this force (145,327 personnel in November 1943).[38] In 1940, pressured by Eleanor Roosevelt and some Northern members of Congress, General Arnold agreed to accept blacks for pilot training, albeit on a segregated basis. A flight training center was set up at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. Despite the handicap—caused by the segregation policy—of not having an experienced training cadre as with other AAF units, the Tuskegee Airmen distinguished themselves in combat with the 332nd Fighter Group. The Tuskegee training program produced 673 black fighter pilots, 253 B-26 Marauder pilots, and 132 navigators.[39]

The vast majority of African-American airmen, however, did not fare as well. Mainly draftees, most did not fly or maintain aircraft. Their largely menial duties, indifferent or hostile leadership, and poor morale led to serious dissatisfaction and several violent incidents.[40]

Women served more successfully as part of the war-time Army Air Forces. Nearly 40,000 served in the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps/Women's Army Corps as AAF personnel,[41][n 8] more than 1,000 as Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs), and 6,500 as nurses in the Army Air Forces, including 500 flight nurses.[42] 7,601 USAAF WACs served overseas in April 1945, and women performed in more than 200 job categories.[43]

The Air Corps Act of July 1926 increased the number of general officers authorized in the Army's air arm from two to four. The activation of GHQAF in March 1935 doubled that number and pre-war expansion of the Air Corps in October 1940 saw fifteen new general officer billets authorized.[44][n 9] By the end of World War II, 320 generals were authorized the wartime AAF.[45]

USAAC-USAAF personnel strength, 1939-1945[46]
Date Total USAAF Tot Officers Tot Enlisted # overseas Officers o/s Enlisted o/s
31 July 1939 24,724 2,636 22,088 3,991 272 3,719
31 December 1939 43,118 3,006 40,112 7,007 351 6,656
31 December 1940 101,227 6,437 94,790 16,070 612 15,458
31 December 1941 354,161 24,521 329,640 25,884 2,479 23,405
31 December 1942 1,597,049 127,267 1,469,782 242,021 26,792 215,229
31 December 1943 2,373,882 274,347 2,099,535 735,666 81,072 654,594
31 March 1944 (Peak size) 2,411,294 306,889 2,104,405 906,335 104,864 801,471
31 December 1944 2,359,456 375,973 1,983,483 1,164,136 153,545 1,010,591
30 April 1945 (Peak overseas) 2,329,534 388,278 1,941,256 1,224,006 163,886 1,060,120
31 August 1945 2,253,182 368,344 1,884,838 999,609 122,833 876,776
1939–1940 totals were U.S. Army Air Corps

Growth, installations

The Air Corps operated 156 airfields at the beginning of 1941. An airbase expansion program had been underway since 1939, attempting to keep pace with the increase in personnel, units, and aircraft, and using existing municipal and private facilities where possible. However the outbreak of war and the resulting accelerated expansion necessitated a wide variety of facilities for both operations and training within the Continental United States (CONUS).

In addition to the construction of new permanent bases and the building of numerous bombing and gunnery ranges, the AAF utilized civilian pilot schools, training courses conducted at college and factory sites, and officer training detachments at colleges. In early 1942, in a controversial move, the AAF Technical Training Command began leasing resort hotels and apartment buildings for large-scale training sites (accommodation for 90,000 existed in Miami Beach, Florida, alone).[47] The leases were negotiated for the AAF by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, often to the economic detriment of hotel owners in rental rates, wear and tear clauses, and short-notice to terminate leases.[48]

In December 1943, the AAF reached a war-time peak of 783 airfields in the Continental United States.[49]

Installations

CONUS Installations[50]
Type of facility 7 December 1941 31 December 1941 31 December 1942 31 December 1943 31 December 1944 VE Day VJ Day
Total all installations 181 197 1,270 1,419 1,506 1,473 1,377
Main bases 114 151 345 345 377 356 344
Satellite bases - - 71 116 37 56 57
Auxiliary fields - - 198 322 309 291 269
Total CONUS airfields 114 151 614 783 723 703 670
Bombing & gunnery ranges - - unk - 480 473 433
Hospitals & other owned facilities 67 46 29 32 44 30 30
Contract pilot schools unk unk 69 66 14 14 6
Rented office space - - unk unk 79 109 103
Leased hotels & apartment bldgs - - 464 216 75 75 75
Civilian & factory tech schools - - 66 47 21 17 16
College training detachments - - 16 234 2 1 1
Specialized storage depots - - 12 41 68 51 43
Overseas airfields[51]
Location 31 December 1941 31 December 1942 31 December 1943 31 December 1944 VE Day VJ Day
US possessions 19 60 70 89 130 128
North America 7 74 83 67 66 62
Atlantic islands 5 27 - 20 21 21
South America - 27 28 22 32 32
Africa - 73 94 45 31 21
Europe - 33 119 302 392 196
Australia - 20 35 10 7 3
Pacific islands - 21 65 100 57 56
Asia - 23 65 96 175 115
Total overseas 31 358 559 751 911 634

Organization and equipment

Command structure

By the end of World War II, the USAAF had created 16 numbered air forces (First through Fifteenth and Twentieth) distributed worldwide to prosecute the war, plus a general air force within the continental United States to support the whole and provide air defense.[52][n 10] The latter was formally organized as the Continental Air Forces and activated on 15 December 1944, although it did not formally take jurisdiction of its component air forces until the end of the war in Europe.[53][n 11]

Several air forces were created de novo as the service expanded during the war. Some grew out of earlier commands as the service expanded in size and hierarchy (for example, the VIII Bomber Command became the Eighth Air Force after an organizational change in February 1944), and higher echelons such as United States Strategic Air Forces (USSTAF) in Europe and U.S. Strategic Air Forces in the Pacific became necessary to control the whole. In August 1945, the U.S. Strategic Air Forces became the United States Air Forces in Europe (USAFE). A subordinate organizational tier, the command, was created to segregate units of similar functions (fighters and bombers) for administrative control.

Eight air divisions served as an additional layer of command and control for the vast organization, capable of acting independently if the need arose. Inclusive within the air forces and divisions were administrative headquarters called wings to control groups (operational units; see section below). As the number of groups increased, the number of wings needed to control them multiplied, with 91 ultimately activated, 69 of which were still active at the end of the war. As part of the Air Service and Air Corps, wings had been composite organizations, that is, composed of groups with different types of missions. Most of the wings of World War II, however, were composed of groups with like functions (denoted as bombardment, fighter, reconnaissance, training, antisubmarine, troop carrier, replacement, or composite).[54][n 12]

Several independent support organizations, called major commands, remained under the direct control of Headquarters Army Air Forces. These were created, or expanded from earlier Air Corps organizations, in 1941 and 1942 to support and supply the numbered air forces, to which the operational units (groups and squadrons) were assigned.[55][56]

AAF Training Command patch

These commands were:

Major commands active on 15 September 1945
AAF Training Command[n 13]
Air Technical Service Command[n 14]
Air Transport Command[n 15]
Army Air Forces Center[n 16]
AAF Personnel Distribution Command[n 17]
Discontinued or merged major commands
AAF Flying Training Command[n 18]
AAF Technical Training Command[n 19]
Air Service Command[n 20]
Materiel Command[n 21]
Proving Ground Command[n 22]
I Troop Carrier Command[n 23]
I Concentration Command[n 24]
Antisubmarine Command[n 25]
Flight Control Command[n 26]

Tactical organization

USAAF recruitment poster.

The primary combat unit of the Army Air Forces for both administrative and tactical purposes was the group, an organization of three or four flying squadrons and attached or organic ground support elements, which was the rough equivalent of a regiment of the Army Ground Forces.[57] The Army Air Forces fielded a total of 269 combat groups during World War II, and an operational peak of 243 combat groups in 1945.[58]

The Air Service and its successor the Air Corps had established 15 permanent combat groups between 1919 and 1937.[58] With the buildup of the combat force beginning 1 February 1940, the Air Corps expanded from 15 to 30 groups. By the time the United States entered World War II, the number had increased to 67 combat groups, but half were in the process of being organized and were unsuitable for combat.[59][n 27] Of the 67 groups formed or being organized, 26 were classified as bombardment: 13 Heavy Bomb groups (B-17 Flying Fortress and B-24 Liberator), and the rest Medium and Light groups (B-25 Mitchell, B-26 Marauder, and A-20 Havoc). The balance of the force in December 1941 included 26 Pursuit groups (renamed fighter group in May 1942), 9 Observation (renamed Reconnaissance) groups, and 6 Transport (renamed Troop Carrier or Combat Cargo) groups.[54][n 28] After the operational deployment of the B-29 Superfortress bomber, Very Heavy Bombardment units were added to the force array.

In the first half of 1942 the Army Air Forces expanded rapidly. The extant training establishment was inadequate in assets, organization, and pedagogy to train units wholesale. The ever increasing numbers of new groups being formed threatened to overwhelm the capacity of the old Air Corps groups to provide experienced cadre as the core of newly activated groups or to absorb graduates of the expanded training program to replace those transferred. The system in place since 1939 had reduced the overall level of experience in all combat groups, and when the demands of units in combat for replacements was factored in, the availability of experienced personnel necessary to form new units appeared headed for a downward spiral.[60]

USAAF insignia from July 1943 to the end of WW II

To avoid this probable crisis, an Operational Training Unit (OTU) system was adopted similar to the system used by the RAF. Under the OTU concept, certain groups were authorized as overstrength "parent" groups. Parent groups (OTU units) provided cadres to newly activated, or "satellite," groups essentially as before. New graduates of training schools fleshed out the satellite groups and restored the parent group to its overstrength size in a continuing pattern. By May 1942 the plan was in operation in all four continental air forces but not until early 1943 were most developmental problems resolved. Cadres detached from the parent group were provided with special instruction on their training responsibilities, initially by the responsible air forces, but after 9 October 1942, by the Army Air Force School of Applied Tactics (AAFSAT) to standardize this training.[60]

By the beginning of 1944, 269 groups had been constituted. 136 had deployed overseas, and of those still in the United States, 77 were also being organized and trained for overseas deployment. The remaining 56 served as OTUs, Replacement Training Units (RTUs) to train personnel replacements,[n 29] or as continental defense units.[58] Early in 1944, all training was assigned to "base units"[n 30] and the OTUs and RTUs were inactivated, reducing the number of active groups to 218. However, 25 additional groups were formed during 1944 to bring the AAF to its final wartime structure. Between the Invasion of Normandy in June 1944 and VE Day in 1945, 148 combat groups fought against Germany, while by August 1945, when all combat operations ended, 86 groups were deployed in the Pacific and Far East. The European force was then either performing occupation duties or re-deploying to the United States.[58]

In February 1945 the AAF fielded 243 combat groups:

  • 25 Very Heavy, 72 Heavy, 20 Medium, and 8 Light Bombardment groups;
  • 71 Fighter groups;[n 31]
  • 29 Troop Carrier and Combat Cargo groups;[n 32]
  • 13 Reconnaissance groups; and
  • 5 Composite groups.[54][n 33]

The basic permanent organization of the AAF for both combat and support elements was the squadron.[57] 1,226 combat squadrons were active in the USAAF between 7 December 1941 and 1 September 1945.[61][n 34] In 1945 a total of 937 squadrons remained active, with 872 assigned to the various groups. 65 squadrons, mostly reconnaissance and night fighter, were not assigned to groups but as separate units under higher command echelons.[54]

Norms for AAF combat units[62]
February 1945
Type of unit Type of aircraft Number of aircraft Number of crews Men per crew Total personnel Officers Enlisted
Very heavy bombardment group B-29 45 60 11 2,078 462 1,816
Heavy bombardment group B-17, B-24 72 96 9 to 11 2,261 465 1,796
Medium bombardment group B-25, B-26 96 96 5 or 6 1,759 393 1,386
Light bombardment group A-20, A-26 96 96 3 or 4 1,304 211 1,093
Single-engine fighter group P-40, P-47
P-51
111 to 126 108 to 126 1 994 183 811
Twin-engine fighter group P-38 111 to 126 108 to 126 1 1,081 183 838
Troop carrier group C-47 80 - 110 128 4 or 5 1,837 514 1,323
Combat cargo group C-46, C-47 125 150 4 883 350 533
Night fighter squadron P-61, P-70 18 16 2 or 3 288 50 238
Tactical reconnaissance squadron F-6, P-40
L-4, L-5
27 23 1 233 39 194
Photo reconnaissance squadron F-5 24 21 1 347 50 297
Combat mapping squadron F-7, F-9 18 16 8 474 77 397

Aircraft

The United States Army Air Forces used a large variety of aircraft in accomplishing its various missions, including many obsolete aircraft left over from its time as the Air Corps, with fifteen designations of types.[63][n 35]

The following were the most numerous types in the USAAF inventory, or those that specifically saw combat. Variants, including all photo-reconnaissance ("F") variants, are listed and described under their separate articles. Many aircraft, particularly transports and trainers, had numerous designations resulting from differences in power plants.

Bomber

B-17G Fortresses of the 306th Bomb Group

Fighter

P-51 Mustangs of 361st Fighter Group, 1944
Taylorcraft L-2M

Observation

C-47 of the 438th Troop Carrier Group

Transport

Trainer

PT-19 primary trainer

Utility, rescue, and glider

UC-64 Norseman

Role in World War II

Strategic planning

Changing USAAF Bombing Priorities

On 13 August 1941, the Air War Plans Division of the USAAF produced its plan for a global air strategy, AWPD/1.[68] Formally known as "Annex 2, Air Requirements" to "The Victory Program," a plan of strategic estimates involving the entire U.S. military,[69] the plan was prepared in accordance with strategic policies drawn earlier that year in the ABC-1 agreement with the British Commonwealth and the U.S. war plan Rainbow 5. Its forecast figures, despite planning errors from lack of accurate information about weather and the German economic commitment to the war, were within 2 percent of the units and 5.5 percent of the personnel ultimately mobilized,[70] and it accurately predicted the time frame when the invasion of Europe by the Allies would take place.[71]

AWPD/1 called for an air defense of the Western hemisphere, a strategic defense against Japan in the Pacific, and strategic bombardment by 6,800 bombers against Germany, identifying 154 key targets of the German economic infrastructure it considered vulnerable to a sustained campaign.[72] A strategic bomber requirement of 7,500 aircraft, which included the intercontinental B-36[72] (then still in the design phase), was far too large for American industry to achieve to be practical, and an interim plan to attack Germany with 3,800 bombers was included in AWPD/1.[72]

AWPD/1 was approved by General Marshall and Secretary of War Henry Stimson in September 1941.[73] Although war began before the plan could be presented to Roosevelt, it became the foundation for establishing aircraft production and training requirements used during the war, and the concept of a strategic bomber offensive against Germany became policy of the U.S. government,[74] in accordance with United States strategic policy stated in Rainbow 5, as the only means available to the United States to take the war to Germany.[73]

In August 1942 Roosevelt called for a revision of proposed air requirements. AWPD/42 was presented on 6 September 1942, and although never accepted by the U.S. Navy, its revised estimates (which more than doubled production requirements to nearly 150,000 aircraft of all types, including those of the Navy and exports to allies) guided the Roosevelt Administration in 1943. The estimate was later reduced to 127,000, of which 80,000 were combat aircraft.

Like its predecessor, AWPD/42 laid out a strategic plan for the daylight bombing of Germany by unescorted heavy bombers, but also included a similar plan for attacks on Japan. Unfortunately the B-17 bomber command of the U.S. Eighth Air Force had only flown six relatively unopposed missions when AWPD/42 was drawn up, and the prior mistake in AWPD/1 of disregarding the need and feasibility of long-range fighter escorts was repeated.

Both plans called for the destruction of the German Air Force (GAF) as a necessary requirement before campaigns against priority economic targets. AWPD/1 established four target sets in order of priority: electrical power production, inland transportation, petroleum production, and Berlin;[64] while AWPD/42 revised the priorities, placing U-Boat facilities first, followed by transportation, electricity production, petroleum production, and rubber production.[65]

Operations summary

The Air Force Historical Studies Office summarizes the execution of USAAF strategy during World War II:[22]

"Arnold's staff made the first priority in the war to launch a strategic bombing offensive in support of the RAF against Germany. The Eighth Air Force, sent to England in 1942, took on that job. After a slow and often costly effort to bring the necessary strength to bear, joined in 1944 by the Fifteenth Air Force stationed in Italy, strategic bombing finally began to get results, and by the end of the war, the German economy had been dispersed and pounded to rubble.

"Tactical air forces supported the ground forces in the Mediterranean and European theaters, where the enemy found Allied air supremacy a constant frustration. In the war against Japan, General Douglas MacArthur made his advance along New Guinea by leap frogging his air forces forward and using amphibious forces to open up new bases. The AAF also supported Admiral Chester Nimitz's aircraft carriers in their island-hopping across the Central Pacific and assisted Allied forces in Burma and China.

"Arnold directly controlled the Twentieth Air Force, equipped with the new long-range B-29 Superfortresses used for bombing Japan's home islands, first from China and then from the Marianas. Devastated by fire-raids, Japan was so weakened by August 1945 that Arnold believed neither the atomic bomb nor the planned invasion would be necessary to win the war. The fact that AAF B-29s dropped the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, nevertheless, demonstrated what air power could do in the future. The Strategic Bombing Survey provided ammunition for the leaders of the AAF in the postwar debates over armed forces unification and national strategy."

USAAF statistical summary

The United States Army Air Forces incurred 12% of the Army's 936,000 battle casualties in World War II. 88,119 airmen died in service. 52,173 were battle casualty deaths: 45,520 killed in action, 1,140 died of wounds, 3,603 were missing in action and declared dead, and 1,910 were nonhostile battle deaths. Of the United States military and naval services, only the Army Ground Forces suffered more battle deaths. 35,946 non-battle deaths included 25,844 in aircraft accidents, more than half of which occurred within the Continental United States.[75] 63,209 members of the USAAF were other battle casualties. 18,364 were wounded in action and required medical evacuation, and 41,057 became prisoners-of-war.[75][76] Its casualties were 5.1% of its strength, compared to 10% for the rest of the Army.[77][n 38]

Total aircraft losses by the AAF from December 1941 to August 1945 were 65,164, with 43,581 lost overseas and 21,583 within the Continental United States.[78] Combat losses of aircraft totaled 22,948 world wide, with 18,418 lost in theaters fighting Germany and 4,530 lost in combat in the Pacific.[79] The AAF credited its own forces with destroying a total of 40,259 aircraft of opposing nations by all means, 29,916 against Germany and its allies and 10,343 in the Pacific.[80]

The cost of the war to the AAF was approximately $50 billion,[n 39] or about 30% of the cost to the War Department,[77] with cash expenditures from direct appropriations between July 1942 and August 1945 amounting to $35,185,548,000.[81]

Total sorties flown by the AAF during World War II were 2,352,800, with 1,693,565 flown in Europe-related areas and 669,235 flown in the Pacific and Far East.[82]

36 members of the Army Air Forces received the Medal of Honor for actions performed during air missions, 22 of them posthumously. Two additional awards were made, one posthumously, to AAF officers attached to the Western Task Force during Operation Torch.

Demobilization and independence

General Carl A. Spaatz

With the defeat of Japan, the entire United States military establishment immediately began a drastic demobilization, as it had at the end of World War I. The AAF was hit as hard or harder as the older services by demobilization. Officers and members were discharged, installations were closed, and aircraft were stored or sold. Between August 1945 and April 1946, its strength fell from 2.25 million men to just 485,000, and a year later to 304,000. Aircraft inventory dropped from 79,000 to less than 30,000, many of them in storage. Permanent installations were reduced from 783 to 177, just 21 more than pre-war.[83][84][n 40]

By July 1946, the Army Air Forces had only 2 combat-ready groups out of 52 that remained on the list of active units. A rebuilt air force of 70 groups, the authorized peacetime strength, was anticipated, with reserve and national guard forces to be available for active duty in an emergency. However considerable opposition to a large peacetime military establishment, and to the financial cost of such an establishment, resulted in planning cuts to 48 groups.

In February 1946, ill health forced the retirement of General Arnold before he could fulfill his goal of achieving independence of the Air Force as a service equal with the Army and Navy. General Carl A. Spaatz replaced Arnold as the only other commanding general of the USAAF, and he oversaw both the demobilization of the largest air force in military history and its rebirth as envisioned by Generals Billy Mitchell and Arnold.

Arnold left the AAF with two important legacies, based on his experiences in World War II, which shaped the post-war USAAF and their independent successor. The first was a requirement that the command staff of the service must include staff officers of varying expertise besides pilots. The second was the belief that despite the unqualified success of training methods that had expanded the Air Forces, the United States would never again have the time to mobilize and train the reserve components as they had in 1940, necessitating that reservists and National Guardsmen be immediately ready for service in case of national emergency.[85]

For his part, Spaatz consulted closely with the new Army Chief of Staff, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, and reorganized the AAF into three major combat commands (Strategic Air Command, Tactical Air Command, and Air Defense Command)[n 41] that would not require a second restructuring once the Air Force became independent.[86] He also re-structured the reserve components to conform with Arnold's concepts, including creation of the Air National Guard in April 1946.[87]

In such a manner for the first time in the history of American aviation the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces definitely took a stand in favor of an independent military air arm. Though far from providing the initial impulse, the President's message of 19 December 1945 contributed considerable impetus to a series of developments within the executive and legislative branches of the government which led directly, if belatedly, to the adoption of the National Security Act of 1947. —R. Earl McClendon, Autonomy of the Air Arm[88]

On 11 April 1945, at the conclusion of a ten month study that took them to every major theater to interview 80 "key military and naval personnel," the Joint Chiefs of Staff Special Committee for the Reorganization of National Defense recommended that the armed forces of United States be organized into a single cabinet department, and that "three coordinate combat branches, Army, Navy, and Air," comprise the operational services. The committee reported that the statutory creation of a United States Air Force would merely recognize a situation that had evolved during World War II with the Army Air Forces, acknowledging that naval aviation and some aspects of army aviation would remain in place. The committee also reported that its recommendation was approved by "Generals of the Army Douglas MacArthur and Dwight D. Eisenhower, Fleet Admirals Chester W. Nimitz and William F. Halsey and numerous other leading military and naval personnel."[89]

The Navy Department remained opposed to a single department of defense and at the recommendation of the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Naval Affairs, created a panel using naval personnel to study the feasibility of a coordinating agency without executive powers as an alternative. The "Eberstadt report" made such a recommendation, but also endorsed the concept of an Air Force as a separate service. The Navy Department did not acknowledge its own findings and continued to oppose creation of a separate Air Force during hearings for unification bills introduced in October 1945. When the hearings failed to submit a report, President Harry S. Truman came out strongly on 19 December 1945, in support of an air force on a parity with ground and naval forces, reminding Congress that prior to the war independent Army and Navy Departments had often failed to work collectively or in coordination to the best interest of the nation. He asserted that wartime expedients that had overcome these defects proved to be the difference between victory and defeat.[89]

Congress, at the recommendation of President Truman, created the Department of the Air Force in 1947. This legislation created the United States Air Force, a completely separate branch of the U.S. military. The transfer of personnel and assets was effected by Transfer Order 1, Office of the Secretary of Defense, 26 September 1947, implementing reorganization provisions of the National Security Act of 1947 (61 Stat. 495), 26 July 1947, and the Army Air Forces abolished.[90]

The initial delineation of service roles, Executive Order 9877, was supplanted on 21 April 1948, by the approval by President Truman of the Key West Agreement, which outlined the air assets that each service would be permitted to maintain. The Air Force was assigned the bulk of strategic, tactical, and transport aircraft, but the issue remained divisive well into the 1950s.[91]

Legacy

The Army Air Forces in World War II, the official history of the AAF, summarized its significance as the final step to independence for the Air Force:

By the close of the war (the AAF) had emerged as virtually a third independent service. Officially, the AAF never became anything other than a subordinate agency of the War Department charged to organize, train, and equip air units for assignment to combat theaters. Its jurisdiction was wholly limited to the Zone of Interior, and it could communicate with air organizations in combat theaters only through channels extending up to the Chief of Staff, and then down through the theater commander to his subordinate air commander. The position of the AAF, in other words, was no different from that of the Army Ground Forces and the Army Service Forces, the other two of the three coordinate branches into which the Army had been divided. So, at any rate, read the regulations.

Actually, the Commanding General, Army Air Forces...functioned on a level parallel to that of the Chief of Staff...He moved at the very highest levels of command in the wartime coalition with Britain. He chose the commanders of the combat air forces...He communicated regularly (with the air commanders overseas)...He exerted a powerful influence on the development of strategy, tactics, and doctrine wherever AAF units fought...A world-wide system of air transport moved at his command through all theaters, (denying their) commanders their traditional prerogative of controlling everything within their area of responsibility. Throughout the war (he ran) the air war in whatever part of the world there seemed to be need for attention by Headquarters. The contrast between theory and fact is...fundamental to an understanding of the AAF.[3]

Culture

Uniforms

Service dress

Medal of Honor recipient Major Richard Bong in Officer's Service Dress

USAAF uniforms for all members consisted of a winter service uniform of olive drab wool worn in temperate weather and a tropical weather summer service uniform of khaki cotton the same as those of other U.S. Army forces. In addition to the service uniforms usually worn for dress purposes and on pass from posts there were a variety of fatigue and flying uniforms. Summer and winter service uniforms were both worn throughout the year in the continental U.S. During World War II the European theater of operations was considered a year round temperate uniform zone and the Pacific theater of operations a year round tropical uniform zone.[92]

The issue enlisted men's winter service uniform consisted of a four pocket coat and trousers in olive drab shade 33 (light shade) 16 oz wool serge. Shirts with two patch pockets and without shoulder straps were either 8.2 oz chino cotton khaki, a light tan, shade No. 1, or 10.5 oz olive drab wool light shade No. 33. Either shirt could be worn under the coat; however, the cotton shirt could not be worn as an outer garment with the wool trousers.[93] The wool necktie for the winter uniform was black and the summer necktie was khaki, cotton originally.[94] In February 1942 a universal mohair wool olive drab shade 3 necktie was authorized for both uniforms.[95] An overcoat of OD shade 33 Melton wool was worn in cold weather. The enlisted man's summer service uniform consisted of the same cotton khaki shade No. 1 uniform shirt with matching trousers; the coat for this uniform stopped being issued in the 1930s. Whenever the shirt was worn as an outer garment the necktie was tucked between the second and third button of the shirt.[96]

Awards ceremony at RAF Debden, April 1944, illustrating varying shades of olive drab and the M-1944 "Ike jacket". Light shade 33 on left, dark shade 51 on right. Trousers are shade 33, khaki shade 1, and drab shade 54. The three combinations at right are "pinks and greens".[n 42]

The male officer's winter service uniform consisted of a coat of finer wool fabric in olive drab shade No. 51 (dark-shade) with a fabric belt matching the coat, nicknamed "greens". Officers could wear trousers matching the color and fabric of the coat, or optionally they were allowed taupe colored, officially called "drab shade 54", trousers of the same material as the coat, nicknamed "pinks", leading to the nickname "pinks and greens" for the combination.[97] Officers were also authorized to use the harder-wearing olive drab shade 33 serge uniforms, except for the enlisted men's four pocket service coat, as long as they were not mixed with OD Shade 51 or Drab Shade 54 clothing.[98] An officer's OD overcoat and taupe rain coat were also authorized. Officers wore same cotton khaki shade No. 1 or olive drab wool light shade No. 33 shirts as enlisted men except with the addition of shoulder straps. Officers also had additional shirt color and fabric options, OD dark shade No. 50 or No. 51 and in 1944 drab shade No. 54.[93]

Officers wore black and khaki neckties until after February 1942 when neckties of wool cotton blend khaki shade 5 were authorized.[99] Male officer's summer service uniforms usually consisted of the wash and wear cotton khaki shade 1 uniforms like those of the enlisted men the main difference being that the shirts had shoulder straps. An OD wool shirt and cotton khaki trouser combination was also authorized. However for dress purposes they also had the option of purchasing a khaki shade 1 summer service uniform of tropical weight suiting fabric. This uniform was identical in cut to the winter officers uniform except for the color and cloth however the cloth belt of the winter coat was omitted.[100]

Personnel stationed in Europe, and after 1944 in the U.S., were authorized wear the wool waist length jacket, in either OD Shade 51 (for officers only) or OD Shade 33, nicknamed the "Ike jacket" and eventually standardized as the M-1944 Field Jacket, in lieu of the full-length tunic of the service dress uniform.[101]

Headgear for service uniforms consisted of two types, similar to those in use in the Army's ground forces, in olive drab for winter wear and khaki for summer. The garrison cap, commonly called the "flight cap" in the Air Forces, had been authorized for all ranks since 1926 to facilitate the wearing of radio headsets during flights. The "curtain" had piping for enlisted men in the USAAF branch colors of orange and ultramarine blue. Warrant Officers caps were piped with black and silver cord other officers had black and gold except for generals who had all gold cords.[102] The oval service cap was fitted with a spring stiffening device called a grommet, and prior to World War II uniform regulations authorized officers to remove the grommet to permit the use of headsets. This style became widely popular during World War II as a symbol of being a combat veteran, and was known as a "50-mission crush" cap.[103] The service cap however was no longer generally issued to enlisted men after 1942.[104]

Leather items, including shoes, were russet in color, and the AAF became known as the "Brown Shoe Air Force" after the United States Air Force became a separate service.[105][n 43]

Female service dress

At the AAF School of Air Evacuation at Bowman Field, Ky., student flight nurses learned how to handle patients with the aid of a mock-up fuselage of a Douglas C-47 transport.

Female USAAF uniforms were either the uniform of the Army Nurse Corps (ANC) or that of the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC) with appropriate USAAF branch insignia. Later, the Women's Army Corps (WAC) replaced the WAAC. Although female auxiliary organizations such as the Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron (WAFS) and Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) performed valuable service as pilots to the AAF, only the ANC and the WAC were official members of the U.S. Armed Forces.

Nurses attached to the AAF wore Army hospital whites, or prior to 1943, the ANC winter service uniform consisting of the ANC pattern dark blue cap or garrison cap with maroon piping, suit jacket with maroon cuff braid and gold army buttons, light blue or white shirt, black tie and light blue skirt, shoes were black or white. The ANC summer service uniform consisted of a similar suit in beige with maroon shoulder strap piping and cuff braid, beige ANC cap or beige garrison cap with maroon piping, white shirt, and black four-in-hand tie. During World War II the first flight nurses uniform consisted of a blue wool battle dress jacket, blue wool trousers and a blue wool men's style maroon piped garrison cap. The uniform was worn with either the ANC light blue or white shirt and black tie.[106]

Women's service dress in OD shades 33 and 51.

After 1943 the ANC adopted service uniforms similar to the newly formed WAAC. In the AAF they became unofficially known as "Air WACs". The WAAC (later WAC) service uniforms went through an evolution of patterns over the course of the war years, however throughout the period the service uniforms both summer and winter generally consisted of the WAC pattern hat or women's garrison cap, suit coat (winter only for enlisted women), shirtwaist, four-in-hand tie, skirt, russet leather women's service shoes and hand bag. The women's olive drab wool "Ike jacket" was also worn as were women's service trousers. The colors essentially mirrored those of their male counterparts of corresponding rank in the equivalent service uniform although fabrics differed. There were also special off duty dresses of summer beige and winter tan. The new olive drab ANC uniforms were the same as those for WAC officers except for the ANC pattern hat and the ANC pattern handbag. The off duty dress was a separate ANC pattern in olive drab shade 51 or beige. The ANC beige summer service uniform with maroon trim was retained except that the tie was changed to maroon.[107] Sage green fatigue uniforms of herringbone cotton twill for women, along with women's combat boots, field jackets and flight clothing, were manufactured by the U.S. Army during World War II. However, when women's versions of these items were not available, as was often the case during the war, men's issue items were used instead.

Flight clothing

USAAF flight crew

Flight clothing varied widely by theater of operation and type of mission. Innovative aviation flight suits, boots, leather helmets, goggles, and gloves were issued as early as 1928 to the Air Corps, and at least one style, the Type A-3 flight suit, continued in service until 1944.[103] However, A-2 flight jackets, made standard issue in 1931, became one of the best known symbols of the AAF. Made of seal brown leather with a beige spun silk lining, the jackets featured an officer's stand-up collar, shoulder straps, knit waistbands and cuffs, a zipper closing, and unit insignia.[108] Heavy, sheepskin-lined B-3 and B-6 flight jackets, A-3 winter flying trousers, and B-2 "gunner's" caps, all in seal brown shearling, proved insufficient for the extreme cold temperatures of high altitude missions in unpressurized aircraft, and were supplemented by a variety of one-piece electrically heated flying suits manufactured by General Electric. In addition to men's flight clothing, flight nurses wore specially manufactured women's lightweight and intermediate weight flight jackets and pants.[109] Flight clothing such as the A-2 jacket was not authorized to be worn off the camp or post unless required for flight duty.[110] The same sage green fatigue uniforms of herringbone cotton twill, and wind-resistant poplin field jackets used by Army ground troops, were also used by AAF troops depending on duty assignment.[111]

AAF uniforms were subject to Army Regulations, specifically AR 600-35 and AR 600-40, authorizing the wearing of emblems, badges, and insignia on the uniform. The vast size of the service saw the wearing of many custom-made variants of authorized emblems, badges, and insignia, and numerous examples of unauthorized insignia and emblems appeared throughout the forces, particularly in combat units overseas.

Badges

To denote the special training and qualifications required for air crew in the USAAF, the following military badges (known colloquially but ubiquitously throughout the service as "wings") were authorized for wear by members of the Army Air Forces during World War II:[112]

File:AerialGunnerBadge.jpg
Aerial Gunner Badge (enlisted)
Bombardier Badge (officer)
Flight Engineer Badge (enlisted)
Navigator Badge (officer)

These aviation qualification badges were typically worn in full three-inch (76 mm) size on service or dress uniforms, but two-inch versions (nicknamed "sweetheart wings") were also authorized for less-formal shirt wear. Most aviation badges were made of sterling silver or were given a silver finish, and various devices were used to attach them to uniforms. These included the traditional pin and safety catch and, later, clutch-back fasteners. Most USAAF badges of World War II became obsolete, having been superseded by later designs, and were not authorized for wear on the uniform after 1955.

Ranks and grades

The rank structure and insignia of the U.S. Army Air Forces was that of the United States Army of World War II.

Officer

11th Grade 10th Grade 9th Grade 8th Grade 7th Grade 6th Grade 5th Grade 4th Grade 3rd Grade 2nd Grade 1st Grade
General of the Army General Lieutenant General Major General Brigadier General Colonel Lieutenant Colonel Major Captain First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant
GA GEN LTG MG BG COL LTC MAJ CPT 1LT 2LT

Warrant

2nd Grade 1st Grade
Chief Warrant Officer Junior Warrant Officer Flight Officer
W2 W1 FO

Enlisted

1st Grade 2nd Grade 3rd Grade 4th Grade 5th Grade 6th Grade 7th Grade
No Insignia
Master Sergeant First Sergeant Technical Sergeant Staff Sergeant Technician Third Grade Sergeant Technician Fourth Grade Corporal Technician Fifth Grade Private First Class Private
M/Sgt. 1st Sgt. T/Sgt. S/Sgt. T/3. Sgt. T/4. Cpl. T/5. Pfc. Pvt.

Emblems

The first shoulder sleeve insignia authorized for Air Corps wear was that of the General Headquarters Air Force, approved 20 July 1937.[113] This sleeve insignia, which consisted of a blue triskelion superimposed on a gold circle, was retained after GHQ Air Force became Air Force Combat Command on 20 June 1941. The triskelion represented a stylized propeller that symbolized the three combat wings of GHQ Air Force.[114] On 23 February 1942, the GHQ AF patch was discontinued and the service-wide AAF sleeve insignia ("Hap Arnold Emblem") approved. The patch was designed by a member of Gen. Arnold's staff, James T. Rawls, and was based on the V-for-Victory sign popularized by Winston Churchill.[115]

The wearing of sleeve insignia was authorized for members of numbered air forces based overseas on 2 March 1943, and for air forces in the United States on 25 June 1943. From that date forward, the "Hap Arnold Emblem" was worn only by personnel of units not assigned to a numbered air force. AR 600-40, "Wearing of the Service Uniform," subsequently limited sleeve insignia to the 16 air forces and the AAF patch. The Quartermaster Corps, responsible for the design and supply of all authorized insignia, resisted further designs for the AAF until 28 July 1945, when command arcs (arc-shaped tabs, see example above in Command structure) were authorized for wear above the AAF insignia by members of the various commands.

See also

Lineage of the United States Air Force

Notes

Footnotes
  1. ^ Rep. James G. Scrugham (D-Nev). (Craven and Cate Vol. 6, p. 24)
  2. ^ The Air Corps was a statutory organization and could not be legally discontinued except by act of Congress.
  3. ^ The term "air force" had appeared officially as early as 1923, when Training Regulation TR 440-15 and Army Regulation 95-10 used "air force aviation" to denote combat air units in contrast to "air service aviation" (auxiliary units to support ground forces). (Futrell, Historical Study 139, p. 40) In a letter of farewell to all members of the Air Corps on 27 February 1933, outgoing Assistant Secretary of War (Air) F. Trubee Davison wrote: "Ours may not be the biggest air force in the world, but, my gracious, it is one of the best!" (Air Corps News Letter 24 February 1933, Vol. XVII No. 2)
  4. ^ Roosevelt's address to Congress took place on 16 May 1940. Less than two weeks later Congress passed a supplemental appropriation of more than a half billion dollars greater than requested. (Tate, p. 172)
  5. ^ The assistant secretary position had been vacant for eight years, since Roosevelt's inauguration in March 1933. Lovett had been elevated Assistant Secretary for Air to resolve the unity of command organizational problems of the Air Corps and had fashioned the compromise that had resulted in creation of the AAF. (Tate, p. 179)
  6. ^ In all, the United States produced nearly 300,000 aircraft in the years 1941–1945 inclusive. (Nalty, p. 235)
  7. ^ The exact reported figures were 193,440 pilots; 43,051 bombardiers and bombardier-navigators; 48,870 navigators in all three disciplines (celestial, dead reckoning, and radar); and 309,236 flexible gunners. (AIR FORCE Magazine, June 1995, pp. 260-263)
  8. ^ 39,323 WACs were assigned to the AAF in January 1945. Approximately 1,100 were African-American women assigned to ten segregated AAF units. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 7, p. 514)
  9. ^ The 15 new slots consisted of a lieutenant general, four major generals, and ten brigadier generals. (Official Register 1941)
  10. ^ The Twentieth Air Force was numbered beyond sequence to be symbolic of a global strategic air force not subordinate to any theater command. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 5, pp. 37-38; "Proud to be Back")
  11. ^ The Continental Air Forces coordinated the First through Fourth Air Forces and the I Troop Carrier Command, and its primary activity became redeployment of the air forces in Europe. In 1946 its mission changed and it became the Strategic Air Command. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 1, p. 75)
  12. ^ The three "composite" wings all had fighter groups assigned. The 24th Wing served in Iceland between December 1942 and June 1944, when it was disbanded. The 68th and 69th Wings were activated in China in September 1943 and redesignated "composite wings" in December. The 69th also had a troop carrier group assigned. Both served in combat through the end of the war. (Maurer, Combat Units, pp. 388 and 404)
  13. ^ Created 7 July 1943 from the merger of the AAF Flying Training Command and the AAF Technical Training Command. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 63-64)
  14. ^ Established 31 August 1944 as the AAF Technical Service Command to replace both Air Materiel and Air Service Commands, and renamed Air Technical Service Command in July 1945.
  15. ^ Created 10 June 1942 from an expanded Air Corps Ferrying Command established 19 May 1941. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 66-67)
  16. ^ Created 1 June 1945 from a merger of the AAF Tactical Center (AAFTAC), Proving Ground Command, and the AAF Board. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 64)
  17. ^ Created 1 June 1944 from AAF Redistribution Center. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 64)
  18. ^ Established 23 January 1941 and merged into AAF Training Command on 7 July 1943. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 63-64)
  19. ^ Established 26 March 1941 and merged into AAF Training Command on 7 July 1943. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 64-64)
  20. ^ Established 17 October 1941 under the Office of the Chief of Air Corps (OCAC) from the Air Corps Maintenance Command established 15 March 1941. When OCAC was abolished on 9 March 1942, ASC continued as a major command under Headquarters AAF. In July 1944 it was placed with Materiel Command under an umbrella service that was soon reorganized as the AAF Technical Service Command. ASC was abolished on 31 August 1944. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 65)
  21. ^ Established 9 March 1942 from the Materiel Division of the OCAC, with responsibilities for aircraft procurement and R&D, and abolished 31 August 1944. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 65)
  22. ^ Created 1 April 1942 from the Air Corps Proving Ground established 15 May 1941 and merged into AAF Center on 1 June 1945. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 64, 68)
  23. ^ Created 30 April 1942 as a specialized training organization called Air Transport Command, renamed I TCC on 20 June 1942 to allow the ATC designation to be applied to the successor of Ferrying Command, and became a subordinate organization of Continental Air Forces on 16 April 1945. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 66-77)
  24. ^ Created 1 July 1942 as the Foreign Service Concentration Command, it oversaw the preparation for overseas movement (POM) of AAF combat units. It was redesignated I Concentration Command on 14 August 1942 and disbanded on 5 December 1942 when its functions were redistributed to the numbered air forces. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 70)
  25. ^ Created 15 October 1942 from I Bomber Command and discontinued 31 August 1943 as the result of doctrinal disputes with the U.S. Navy over tactics and jurisdiction of long-range, land-based air striking forces. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 64)
  26. ^ Established 29 March 1943 to supervise the weather and communications services of the discontinued Directorate of Technical Services, it was abolished 1 October 1943. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 69-70)
  27. ^ Spaatz calculated combat-ready groups at 43.5 at the end of January 1942.
  28. ^ In May 1942 "transport" became the designation for non-combat groups that were part of Air Transport Command.
  29. ^ Begun in May 1943, RTUs were overstrength groups similar to OTUs in that they received new air crew graduates of training schools and instructed them in transition and team training. RTUs distributed trained personnel as individual replacements or replacement crews to combat units, receiving fresh graduates to train, and thereby obviated having such replacements drawn from organized units or training staffs in the United States, as was done for infantry replacements. Some RTUs were formed as provisional groups under an OTU unit, then dissolved into replacement pools when their training was completed. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 602-603)
  30. ^ Base units were non-standard administrative organizations combining all units at a particular airfield under a single headquarters, commonly seen in designations as "AAF Base Units."
  31. ^ 10 of the fighter groups in 1945 were classified as "twin-engine". (Rickard)
  32. ^ The four combat cargo groups, numbered 1–4, served in the CBI and 5AF in 1944–45. Two were later redesignated troop carrier groups and became part of the USAF.
  33. ^ The five composite groups were the 509th CG (B-29/C-54), 28th CG (B-24/B-25), and the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Air Commando Groups. The air commando groups were created for service in the CBI and 5AF with one cargo and 2 fighter squadrons each. A medium bomb group, the 477th BG, converted to a P-47/B-25 composite group in June 1945.
  34. ^ The 1226 figure is for combat-coded squadrons only. Not included in the total of flying squadrons are more than 100 Air Transport Command, advanced flight training, and flexible squadrons of AAF Base Units between 1 August 1944 and the end of the war.
  35. ^ The types were: A — Attack; AT — Advanced Trainer; B — Bomber; BT — Basic Trainer; C — Cargo/Transport; CG — Cargo Glider; F — Reconnaissance; L — Liaison; O — Observation; OA — Observation-Amphibian; P — Pursuit; PT — Primary Trainer; R — Rotary wing (helicopter); TG — Trainer Glider; and UC — Utility. (Bowman, p. 113)
  36. ^ Spitfire Mk.Vs equipped the 4th Fighter Group until early 1943; Mk.Vs and Mk.IXs were the primary fighter of the 31st and 52nd FGs until 1944. (Maurer Combat Units, pp. 35, 84, and 114).
  37. ^ Approximately 100 Beaufighters partially equipped four night fighter squadrons of the 12th AF between 1943 and 1945. (Maurer Combat Squadrons, pp. 507-508, 512, and 551)
  38. ^ The 115,000 total AAF battle casualties represented 19% of the 603,000 aircrew trained during the war.
  39. ^ Approximately $640 billion in 2012 dollars, calculated from 1945. US Inflation Calculator
  40. ^ Installations closed because of demobilization included main bases, sub (satellite) bases, and auxiliary airfields.
  41. ^ The remainder of the AAF was reorganized into the Air Materiel, Air Training, Air Transport, Air Proving Ground, and Air University Commands. (Craven and Cate, Vol. 7, p. 576)
  42. ^ The commanders L-R are Brig. Gen. Jesse Auton, 65th FW; Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, SHAEF; Lt. Gen. Carl A. Spaatz, USSTAFE; Lt. Gen. James H. Doolittle, 8th AF; Brig. Gen. William Kepner, VIII FC; and Col. Donald Blakeslee, 4th FG.
  43. ^ By extension "brown shoe" refers to any practice or idea that harks back to the Army Air Forces era. (Daly-Benarek, p. 27)
  44. ^ The Air Corps became a subordinate component of the Army Air Forces on 20 June 1941, and was abolished as an administrative organization on 9 March 1942. It continued to exist as one of the combat arms of the Army (along with infantry, armor, and artillery) until abolished by reorganization provisions of the National Security Act of 1947 (61 Stat. 495), 26 July 1947.[90]
  45. ^ The Army Air Forces were abolished by Transfer Order 1, Office of the Secretary of Defense, 26 September 1947, implementing the same provisions. Transfer Order 1 was the first of 200 Army-Air Force transfer agreements drawn up in June and July 1947, and ordered the transfer of all military and civilian personnel of the Army Air Forces to the Department of the Air Force and the USAF.[90]
Citations
  1. ^ Nalty (1997), pp. 176 and 378. Also, see growth tables above.
  2. ^ AAF Statistical Digest, Table 215 Airfields in CONUS 1941–1945; Table 217 Airfields outside CONUS 1941–1945.
  3. ^ a b Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 28-29
  4. ^ Nalty (1997), p. 112-113.
  5. ^ Nalty (1997), p.130.
  6. ^ Nalty (1997), p. 131-133.
  7. ^ Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 17–18.
  8. ^ Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 20
  9. ^ a b c d Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 293
  10. ^ a b Nalty (1997), p.181.
  11. ^ Nalty (1997), p. 179-181.
  12. ^ McClendon (1996), pp. 132-141. The three documents referenced, AR 95-5, EO 9082, and WD Circular 59, are reproduced in their entirety.
  13. ^ Correll, "GHQ Air Force", p.68.
  14. ^ Cline (1990), p. 92.
  15. ^ a b Mooney (1956), pp. 29, 33, 40, 41, 43, and 68.
  16. ^ Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 43-44.
  17. ^ Correll, "But What About the Air Corps?", pp. 64-65.
  18. ^ Futrell, Historical Study 69, pp. 2–7.
  19. ^ Tate (1998), p. 172.
  20. ^ Craven and Cate, Vol. 1, pp. 105-106.
  21. ^ AAF Statistical Digest, Table 3: Strength of the AAF 1912–1945
  22. ^ a b "The Evolution of the Department of the Air Force". Air Force Historical Studies Office. Retrieved 11 October 2012. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  23. ^ Nalty (1997), p.173.
  24. ^ Nalty (1997), p.231.
  25. ^ Tate (1998), p. 189.
  26. ^ Nalty (1997), p.235.
  27. ^ Nalty (1997), pp.233–235.
  28. ^ Nalty (1997), pp.246–248.
  29. ^ AAF Statistical Digest, Table 206: AAF Ferrying Operations Jan 42 to Aug 45
  30. ^ Nalty (1997), pp.248–249.
  31. ^ AAF Statistical Digest, Table 84 - Airplanes on Hand in the AAF, by Type and Principal Model
  32. ^ Nalty (1997), p.250.
  33. ^ Nalty (1997), p.259.
  34. ^ Nalty (1997), p.325.
  35. ^ Nalty (1997), p.255.
  36. ^ Nalty (1997), pp. 260–263.
  37. ^ Correll, "The US Army Air Forces at War", p.36.
  38. ^ Bowman (1997), p.160.
  39. ^ Bowman (1997), p.161.
  40. ^ Nalty (1997), pp.251–252.
  41. ^ Craven and Cate, Vol. 7, p.514.
  42. ^ Nalty (1997), pp.253–254.
  43. ^ Bowman (1997), p.158.
  44. ^ Official Register of the United States 1941, Volume I, U.S. Civil Service Commission publication, p. 48.
  45. ^ Finney (1955), p. 25.
  46. ^ AAF Statistical Digest, Table 4 - Military Personnel in Continental U.S. and Overseas, By Type of Personnel.
  47. ^ Futrell, Historical Study 69, p.112.
  48. ^ Futrell, Historical Study 69, p.167.
  49. ^ Futrell, Historical Study 69, p.156.
  50. ^ Futrell, Historical Study 69, Chart I, p. 169.
  51. ^ AAF Statistical Digest, Table 217, Airfields outside CONUS 1941–1945.
  52. ^ Bowman (1997), p.16.
  53. ^ Craven and Cate, Vol. 1, p. 75.
  54. ^ a b c d Maurer, Combat Units, p. 8.
  55. ^ Bowman (1997), p.17-18.
  56. ^ Reither (1944), p. 10 (organizational chart)]
  57. ^ a b Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 58.
  58. ^ a b c d Maurer, Combat Units, p. 7.
  59. ^ Spaatz, "Strategic Airpower in the European War".
  60. ^ a b Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, pp. 600-602.
  61. ^ Maurer Combat Squadrons, v.
  62. ^ Craven and Cate, Vol. 6, p. 59.
  63. ^ Bowman (1997), p. 113.
  64. ^ a b Griffith (1999), pp. 67.
  65. ^ a b Griffith (1999), pp. 96–97.
  66. ^ Kreis (1996), p. 241
  67. ^ Irving (1989), p. 666
  68. ^ Bowman (1997), p.19.
  69. ^ Griffith (1999), p. 66.
  70. ^ Griffith (1999), p.78.
  71. ^ Griffith (1999), p.77.
  72. ^ a b c Nalty (1997), p.188.
  73. ^ a b Nalty (1997), p.190.
  74. ^ Bowman (1997), pp.19–20.
  75. ^ a b "Battle casualties" Army Battle Casualties Final Report, pp. 76-77
  76. ^ AAF Statistical Digest, Table 34 – Battle Casualties in All Overseas Theaters, By Type of Casualty and Type of Personnel
  77. ^ a b Nalty (1997), p.268.
  78. ^ AAF Statistical Digest, Table 99 - Airplane Losses in Continental US and Overseas, By Type of Airplane
  79. ^ Correll, "The US Army Air Forces at War", p.34.
  80. ^ Correll, "The US Army Air Forces at war", p.33.
  81. ^ AAF Statistical Digest Table 203 - Expenditures by Direct Appropriations, By Major Project
  82. ^ Correll, "The US Army Air Forces at War", p.32.
  83. ^ Nalty (1997, p. 378.
  84. ^ Futrell, Historical Study 69, p. 156.
  85. ^ Nalty (1997), p. 374.
  86. ^ Nalty (1997), p. 375.
  87. ^ Nalty (1997), p. 377.
  88. ^ McClendon (1996), p. 108
  89. ^ a b McClendon (1996), pp. 104-108
  90. ^ a b c "Records of the Army Air Forces (AAF)". National Archives.gov. Retrieved 22 November 2010. Cite error: The named reference "natarc" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  91. ^ Nalty (1997), pp. 418–424.
  92. ^ Table of Equipment No. 21 1 September 1945 Part II (theater clothing zones).
  93. ^ a b AR 600-35 31 March 1944 (Section I, para. 2; Section II, para. 18).
  94. ^ AR 600-35 10 November 1941
  95. ^ Risch and Pitkin, p. 47.
  96. ^ AR 600-40 (Section 3, para. 39).
  97. ^ AR 600-35 31 March 1944 (Section I, para. 2; Section II, para. 9, 19).
  98. ^ Army Officers Guide 1942, pp. 132.
  99. ^ AR 600-35 (Section I, para. 2a3).
  100. ^ AR 600-35 (Section I, para. 2a2).
  101. ^ War Department Cir. No. 391 30 September 1944 Sec. VII.
  102. ^ AR 600-35 (para. 12).
  103. ^ a b Bowman (1997), p. 171.
  104. ^ Risch and Pitkin, p. 80,81.
  105. ^ Daly-Benarek (1995), p. 27.
  106. ^ Smith (2001), p. 241.
  107. ^ AR 600-37 16 April 1945
  108. ^ Bowman (1997), p. 172.
  109. ^ Smith (2001), pp. 244–246.
  110. ^ AR 600-40 (Section IId, para. 9)
  111. ^ Risch and Pitkin, p. .
  112. ^ Bowman (1997), p. 156. Reproduction of relevant page from The Officer's Guide, July 1943.
  113. ^ Up from Kittyhawk Chronology 1903-1979. airforce-magazine.com. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  114. ^ Rottman (1998), p. 54.
  115. ^ "How did Air Force shoulder sleeve insignia develop?". Air Force Historical Studies Office. Retrieved 11 October 2012. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)

References

  • Army Air Forces Statistical Digest, World War II. Office of Statistical Control, Headquarters AAF. Washington, D.C. December 1945
Tables 1-73, Combat Groups, Personnel, Training, and Crews
Tables 74-117 Aircraft and Equipment
Tables 118-218 Operations and Miscellaneous
  • "Battle casualties by type of casualty and disposition, and duty branch: 7 December 1941 -31 December 1946" (PDF). Army Battle Casualties and Non-battle Deaths in World War II: Final Report. Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. 1953. Retrieved 8 October 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Bowman, Martin W. (1997). USAAF Handbook 1939–1945. Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania: Stackpole Books, ISBN 0-8117-1822-0
  • Cline, Ray S.(1990). Washington Command Post: The Operations Division. United States Army in World War II: The War Department (series), United States Army Center of Military History
  • Correll, John T. (1995). "The US Army Air Forces at war: a statistical portrait of USAAF in World War II". AIR FORCE Magazine, Journal of the Air Force Association. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  • Correll, John T. (2008). "GHQ Air Force". AIR FORCE Magazine, Journal of the Air Force Association. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  • Correll, John T. (2009). "But What About the Air Corps?". AIR FORCE Magazine, Journal of the Air Force Association. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  • Craven, Wesley Frank, and Cate, James Lea, editors (1983). The Army Air Forces In World War II, Air Force Historical Studies Office, ISBN 0-912799-03-X (Vol. 1).
(1948). Volume One - Plans and Early Operations: January 1939-August 1942
(1949). Volume Two - Europe: Torch to Pointblank: August 1942-December 1943
(1951). Volume Three - Europe: Argument to V-E Day: January 1944-May 1945
(1950). Volume Four - The Pacific: Guadalcanal to Saipan: August 1942-July 1944
(1953). Volume Five - The Pacific: Matterhorn to Nagasaki: June 1944-August1945
(1955). Volume Six - Men and Planes
(1958). Volume Seven - Services Around the World
  • Daly-Benarek, Janet R. (1995). The Enlisted Experience: A Conversation With the Chief Master Sergeants of the Air Force. Darby, Pennsylvania: Diane Publishing Company. ISBN 0-7881-2824-8.
  • Finney, Robert T. (1955). USAF Historical Study No. 100: History of the Air Corps Tactical School, Center for Air Force History, March 1955 edition
  • Futrell, Robert F. (1951). USAF Historical Study No. 69: Development of AAF Base Facilities in the United States, 1939–1945, Air Force Historical Research Agency
  • Futrell, Robert F. (1971). USAF Historical Study No. 139: Ideas, Concepts, Doctrine: A History of Basic Thinking in the United States Air Force, 1907-1964, Air Force Historical Research Agency
  • Griffith, Charles (1999). The Quest: Haywood Hansell and American Strategic Bombing in World War II. Maxwell Air Force Base, AL: Air University Press ISBN 1-58566-069-8
  • Kreis, John F., editor (1996). Piercing the Fog: Intelligence and Army Air Forces Operations in World War II. Washington, D.C.: Air Force Historical Studies Office. ISBN 978-1-4289-1405-6. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Maurer, Maurer (1983). Air Force Combat Units of World War II. Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-912799-02-1
  • Maurer, Maurer (1982). Combat Squadrons of the Air Force World War II. Albert F. Simpson Historical Research Center, Office of Air Force History, Headquarters United States Air Force
  • McClendon, R. Earl (1996). Autonomy of the Air Arm (PDF). Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama: Air University. ISBN 0-16-045510-3. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  • Mooney, Chase C. (1956). USAF Historical Study No. 10: Organization of the Army Air Arm, 1935–1945, Air Force Historical Research Agency
  • Nalty, Bernard C., editor (1997). Winged Shield, Winged Sword: A History of the United States Air Force, Vol. I. Air Force History and Museums Program, USAF. ISBN 0-16-049009-X
  • Reither, Joseph (1944). USAF Historical Study 13: The Development of Tactical Doctrines at AAFSAT and AAFTAC, Air Force Historical Research Agency
  • Rickard, J (30 May 2007), Lockheed P-38 Lightning Fighter Groups
  • Risch, Ema and Pitkin, Thomas M. (1946), QMC Historical Studies No. 16: Clothing the Soldier of World War II, United States Army Quartermaster Corps, Historical Section
  • Rottman, Gordon L (1998). U.S. Army Air Force – 1. Oxford, U.K.: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-85532-295-1
  • Smith, Jill H. (2001). Dressed for Duty: America's Women in Uniform 1898–1973. San Jose, California: R. James Bender Publishing, ISBN 0-912138-81-5
  • Spaatz, Carl A. (1946). "Strategic Airpower in the European War". Foreign Affairs. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  • Tate, Dr. James P. (1998). The Army and its Air Corps: Army Policy Toward Aviation 1919–1941. Maxwell Air Force Base, AL: Air University Press. ISBN 0-16-061379-5.
  • Watson, Mark Skinner (1991). Chief of Staff: Pre-war Plans and Preparations. United States Army in World War II: The War Department (series), United States Army Center of Military History
  • The Officer's Guide, 9th Edition (July 1943). Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: The Military Service Publishing Co. ASIN B0027W7SU4
  • War Department. Army Regulations No. 600-35 "Personnel, Prescribed Service Uniform" (10 November 1941)
  • War Department. Army Regulations No. 600-40 "Personnel, Wearing of the Service Uniform" (28 August 1941)
  • War Department. Army Regulations No. 600-35 "Personnel, Prescribed Service Uniform" (31 March 1944)
  • War Department. Army Regulations No. 600-40 "Personnel, Wearing of the Service Uniform" (31 March 1944)
  • War Department Circular No. 391, "Adoption of M-1944 Field Jacket" (30 September 1944), Sec. VII
Preceded by United States Army Air Forces
1941–1947
Succeeded by