|
Sixty years ago this month, the United States Army
created the Army Air Forces. With that critical June
1941 action came the establishment of the first American
Air Staff. That staff reported directly to a new AAF
Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen. Henry H. Arnold. All were
momentous steps in development of airpower.
Creation of the Air Staff stemmed from apprehension
about general wars in Europe and Asia-events that sparked
calls for an expansion of airpower and reorganization
of the Army air element. Particularly disturbing to
Arnold and President Roosevelt was the major role the
German air force played in the defeat of France in
1940. FDR declared, "Military aviation is increasing
at an unprecedented and alarming rate." Consequently,
he and Congress sought a huge increase in American
aircraft and pilots.
Even before the outbreak of war, Roosevelt was much
concerned about America's lack of preparedness. In
1938, he sent his confidante, Harry Hopkins, on an
inspection of US aircraft plants. Hopkins claimed Roosevelt "was
sure we were going to get into war, and he believed
that airpower would win it."
Shortly thereafter, an airplane crash claimed the
life of Maj. Gen. Oscar Westover, Chief of the Army
Air Corps. Hopkins, who had the ear of the President,
suggested he appoint Arnold to the post, which Roosevelt
did in September 1938.
Roosevelt believed that America's military had to
immediately gear up for war. In mid-November 1938,
he convened a meeting at the White House to consider
responses to the events unfolding in Europe and Asia.
Present were Arnold, Hopkins, Assistant Secretary of
War Louis Johnson, and Brig. Gen. George C. Marshall,
chief of the Army's War Plans Division. Roosevelt directed
increased aircraft production and by August 1940 the
Air Corps had completed an expansion plan, envisioning
production each year of 12,000 new pilots and 54 combat-ready
groups.

Principals in establishing the Air Staff, Maj. Gen. H.H. Arnold and Gen.
George C. Marshall are shown here at Randolph Field, Tex.
|
The Eye-Opener
Marshall, subsequently promoted to Army Chief of Staff,
shared Roosevelt's concern and, moreover, agreed with
Arnold that the Air Corps required a stronger ability
to plan for expansion. The Air Corps had found an invaluable
ally in the struggle for a more powerful air force.
In 1938, Maj. Gen. Frank M. Andrews, then commanding
General Headquarters Air Force, had taken Marshall
on a nine-day tour of air bases, inspecting units and
meeting senior Air Corps commanders as well as visiting
the Boeing plant in Seattle. Marshall and Andrews struck
a close relationship. Later, Marshall said this tour
had opened his eyes to what air forces could do and
what they required. He quickly determined that airmen
best knew how to run the Air Corps and make it work.
On this cross-country trip, Andrews had taken the
opportunity to make Marshall aware of conflicts between
the few airmen and the many ground officers assigned
to the General Staff. In later remarks, Marshall said
he realized that "air had almost no representation
on the General Staff," and most of the General
Staff types "had little interest in the air, mostly
antipathy, and it was quite marked." Indeed, Marshall
added, "I found everyone on the Staff hostile
to Air."
Marshall was greatly impressed with Andrews. In August
1939, he made the airman assistant chief of staff for
operations and training, the first airman ever to serve
in this position. Subsequently, when Marshall became
Army Chief of Staff, he named Andrews to positions
of theater command in the Caribbean and the Middle
East and as commanding general of US forces in the
European theater. Tragically, in May 1943, Andrews
was killed in an airplane crash in Iceland, cutting
short a brilliant career of one of the nation's most
distinguished airmen.

President Roosevelt--here at an airfield in Sicily talking with Arnold--believed
the US had to gear up for war. He sought a huge increase in military
aircraft and pilots. (USAF photo )
|
The Luftwaffe's performance in Europe in 1940 increased
Congressional pressure for the creation of a separate
Air Force, but Arnold was convinced that this was not
the right time to divide the air arm from the rest
of the Army. Marshall and Arnold needed a rapid, efficient
expansion of the Air Corps itself to prepare for the
possibility of war. Arnold emphasized in 1940 that "right
at this minute it looks to me as if it might be a serious
mistake to change the existing setup when we are all
using every facility available in order to take care
of the present expansion of the Air Corps." Any
serious organizational change now might actually impede
the buildup.
Fortunately, Arnold and Marshall maintained confidence
in each other, with Arnold agreeing not to press for
independence. He would, instead, count on Marshall
to provide an appropriate degree of autonomy during
this period of national emergency. For his part, Marshall
was determined to see that the air arm got what it
required in organizational flexibility, as well as
equipment. This meant that he would have to present
a rationale to the War Department Staff and make organizational
changes that would have credibility with airmen.

Maj. Gen. Frank Andrews had the foresight to take Marshall, then chief
of the Army's War Plans Division, on a tour of air bases in 1938. Later,
Marshall said the tour opened his eyes to the capabilities of air and
its needs. (USAF photo)
|
The ABC Meetings
The airmen's drive to gain more freedom from the War
Department had been boosted early in 1941 when representatives
of Britain's armed services came to the US for strategy
discussions, which became known as American-British
Conversations (ABC-1). These ABC-1 meetings between
a US staff committee and the British delegation were
held in the period January-March 1941, and they ranged
over topics as varied as strategy, joint operations,
geographical responsibilities, and command arrangements.
Air Vice Marshal John C. Slessor represented the Royal
Air Force, and Col. Joseph T. McNarney sat in for the
Air Corps. The purpose of the conversations was to
determine the best means with which the US and British
might defeat Germany and her allies "should the
United States be compelled to resort to war."
The Anglo-American representatives agreed that, in
event of war in both Europe and the Pacific, the major
effort would first be made in Europe. This would include
a sustained air offensive against Nazi Germany. A strategic
defensive would be mounted in the Far East. Arnold
noted that, in early 1941, "We were planning for
war, even though we were not in it." In response
to the British request for American-produced aircraft,
he emphasized to Marshall and Roosevelt that "we
must first meet our own requirements" and then
should give allies "only such items as they could
use effectively."
These talks subsequently led to formal creation in
August 1941 of the Combined Chiefs of Staff representing
the British and US military forces-including Arnold,
representing American airpower. Arnold, of course,
was subordinate to Marshall, Army Chief of Staff. However,
it was necessary for Arnold to be present when the
Combined Chiefs formulated grand strategy. Thus, the
air forces' movement toward autonomy was aided by the
fact that the RAF had long ago gained independence
and its opposite American number needed to be at the
table.
"I often wondered," Arnold later noted, "how
I came to be included at Argentia [in Newfoundland,
site of the meeting that founded the CCS]. Prior to
that time, Air items on a higher level had been handled
by the Chief of Staff and by the General Staff. At
all conferences, even though an Air representative
sat in, the General Staff or the Chief of Staff did
the talking."
Subsequently, Arnold learned that Hopkins had insisted
on Arnold's attendance at the conference. Hopkins,
for his part, continued to press for an airpower buildup. "I
don't know why," he exclaimed "we are producing
600,000 automobiles for pleasure-seeking people, when
we need airplanes and engines!"
Bureaucratic Behemoth
The Air Corps continued to have difficulty prompting
meaningful action on air matters from the War Department
General Staff. Marshall knew that officers on the General
Staff failed properly to support the airmen. As a result,
air actions tended to be postponed and bottlenecks
appeared. The General Staff, Marshall said, had "lost
track of its purpose," becoming, in his view, "a
huge, bureaucratic, red tape-ridden operating agency." He
added, "It had slowed down everything."
In summer 1940, Marshall asked Arnold to provide his
views on reorganization. Marshall was concerned not
only about air matters; he believed that the War Department
had evolved into "the poorest command post in
the Army." Arnold responded by proposing the appointment
of three Army deputy chiefs of staff-for ground, air,
and service forces. However, the War Department Staff
opposed this step and remained committed to the idea
that the mission of the air arm was to support the
ground forces.
Still navigating between the War Department Staff
and the airmen, Marshall in October 1940 named Arnold
his acting deputy chief of staff for air-responsible
for coordinating all air matters-and Maj. Gen. George
H. Brett as acting chief of the Air Corps. However,
the GHQ Air Force was removed from the jurisdiction
of the Office of the Chief of Air Corps, assigned to
General Headquarters, and placed under the direct control
of the commander of Army field forces.
This setback was ameliorated in December 1940 when
the Secretary of War, Henry L. Stimson, named Robert
A. Lovett to be special assistant to the Secretary
of War (redesignated in April 1941 "assistant
secretary of war for air"). Lovett would make
the case for airpower directly to Stimson. A banker
well-informed on the subject of aircraft manufacturing,
Lovett surveyed the industry with an eye to substantially
increasing production. His main job was to improve
delivery of aircraft overseas while maintaining a balance
between the needs of foreign clients and those of the
Army air arm.
Marshall wanted all air matters handled by Arnold,
unencumbered by General Staff objections and delaying
tactics. The Army Chief of Staff emphasized: "I
want this procedure put in force without delay. The
Air Corps has a tremendous procurement program tied
in with new developments and now has a tremendous personnel
problem. ... They will be turning out pilots initially
at the rate of 7,000 a year. We have to operate on
a simpler basis than our present system. I desire to
proceed on a basis of evolution and general understanding
between all."
In early 1941, Marshall and Lovett met with Stimson,
impressing on him the need for more freedom and flexibility
for Army airmen who were being asked to build up the
air forces as rapidly as possible. Although Lovett
favored an independent Air Force, he emphasized to
Stimson a need for a reorganization that would provide
tactical independence in a time of crisis.

In October 1940, Maj. Gen. George Brett became acting Chief of the Air
Corps when Marshall named Arnold his acting deputy chief of staff for
air. In June 1941, Arnold became Chief of the new Army Air Forces,
which included the Army Air Corps and Air Force Combat Command. (USAF
photo)
|
Auxiliary No More
Stimson evidently found Lovett's case to be compelling.
He stated, "Air warfare involves not merely a
new auxiliary weapon for the ground troops. ... [I]t
is becoming clear now that it involves independent
action quite divorced from land and sea. The difficulty
is finding just how far to go in freeing them, but
it seems to be my job now to try to solve that. It
is a very big one." Stimson truly believed that "the
moment has now come" to develop a strong American
Air Force.
The issue was how to give the Army Air Corps sufficient
autonomy while keeping it part of the Army. Brig. Gen.
Carl A. Spaatz, chief of Arnold's Plans Division, had
been working on this problem even as Lovett's staff
struggled with this issue. Spaatz and Lovett agreed
that the solution lay in revising Army Regulation 95-5,
which described the position of the Air Corps in the
Army. Lovett and Spaatz briefed Arnold, who in turn,
took the idea to Marshall. Stimson meanwhile, was bearing
down on the problem, emphasizing that staff work required
decentralization, "to permit Air Force autonomy
in the degree needed." The Air Corps, he said,
should be "as modern as the instrument it uses."
This confluence of thought proved decisive because
Stimson was under heavy pressure from Congress to grant
more freedom to the Air Corps. In May 1941, Marshall
stepped in and informed Stimson that a revision of
Army Regulation 95-5 was ready for implementation. "It
thus gave me something with which to meet the threat
of an independent Air Corps created by (Congressional)
legislation," said Stimson.
A leading proponent of independence was Hugh J. Knerr,
who served as Andrews's chief of staff at GHQ Air Force
in the late 1930s. Knerr subsequently had been relieved
and ostracized for beating the independence theme and
in late 1938 had left the Air Corps. On the outside,
he continued to agitate for independence.
Another proponent was Andrews, who in early 1941 was
commanding general, Panama Canal Air Force. He maintained
that the Army's air arm could not be properly developed "under
an organization which considers it an adjunct of surface
forces, even with a man as broad-minded and farseeing
as Marshall at the head of the Army." He added, "No
matter how progressive Marshall may be himself, the
rank and file of the Army has not changed materially."
Andrews, who did not always see eye-to-eye with Arnold,
nonetheless considered him "a good politician" and
was confident that Arnold could handle this issue.

Secretary of War Henry Stimson (right) with Marshall. Stimson recognized
that the Air Corps needed autonomy and believed "the moment has
now come." (USAF photo)
|
Taking the Step
Having gotten a green light from Stimson, Marshall
on June 20, 1941, put into effect revised Army Regulation
95-5--redefining the organization and functions of
the Air Corps--and officially established the Army
Air Forces. It gave Arnold the title of Chief, AAF
(he continued to be deputy chief of staff for air),
responsible to the Army Chief of Staff and the Secretary
of War. Under 95-5, Arnold had the authority to coordinate
the Office of the Chief of the Air Corps (Maj. Gen.
George Brett) and Air Force Combat Command (Lt. Gen.
Delos C. Emmons), redesignated from the GHQ Air Force
and which previously had reported directly to Marshall.
Combat Command would develop air doctrine and plans
for operational training. The Chief of the Air Corps
would supervise research and development, supply, and
maintenance.
Most important was the fact that the revised regulation
provided Arnold with an Air Staff to formulate policy
and plans. As one historian noted, the Air Staff--a
title borrowed from the British--was created "to
encourage more intelligent planning for the future." Arnold
named Spaatz to be chief of the Air Staff and Lt. Col.
Harold L. George as head of the new Air War Plans Division.
Additionally, the Air Staff included assistant chiefs
of staff for personnel, intelligence, and materiel,
maintenance, and distribution. The Air Staff also included
an air inspector and air adjutant general.
It was a major step in the institutionalization of
the nation's airpower, but it wasn't a cure-all. Formation
of the Air Staff failed to break Arnold of one of one
of his bad habits-his addiction to calling informally
on trusted individuals to carry out various assignments.
He subsequently created a group of close personal advisors
to review current policies and to undertake specific
tasks.
Thus, Arnold's advisory council became his own personal
group of "idea men." In World War II, this
council at various times included Colonels Jacob E.
Smart, Fred M. Dean, Emmett O'Donnell Jr., Charles
P. Cabell, and Lauris Norstad.
Smart recalled that Arnold had directed him to spend
all of his time "thinking" rather than dealing
with mundane staff matters. However, Arnold on one
occasion had failed to convince Marshall of something
or other, and he admonished Smart: "From now on,
you spend 30 percent of your time thinking and 70 percent
on how to sell an idea."
As it happened, the new Air Staff barely had caught
its breath before being faced with a large challenge.
The German war machine had major spectacular victories
in Europe, Britain's plight grew desperate, and the
Roosevelt Administration continued to prepare for war.
The ABC-1 discussions and the subsequent Rainbow No.
5 war plan stipulated that for the United States the
European theater would be decisive.
Following establishment of the AAF with its Air Staff,
Arnold directed expansion of the Staff's Air War Plans
Division. He named George to organize and enlarge the
division "to develop overall plans for the Army
Air Forces."
The Barbarossa Factor
The war took a new turn when Hitler, on June 22, 1941,
launched Operation Barbarossa-a massive, full-scale
invasion of the Soviet Union. In early July 1941, Roosevelt--having
stressed the importance of air expansion-ordered the
War Department to develop an estimate "of the
overall production requirements required to defeat
our potential enemies." The President wanted prompt
action. The War Plans Division of the War Department
prepared to respond.
However, at the insistence of Spaatz and George, Arnold
recommended to the War Department that the Air War
Plans Division of the Air Staff prepare the air requirements
as directed by Roosevelt. Brig. Gen. Leonard T. Gerow,
head of the War Department's War Plans Division agreed,
and as a result, the now-famous AWPD-1 air war plan
was born. Written by George, Lt. Col. Kenneth N. Walker,
Maj. Laurence S. Kuter, and Maj. Haywood S. Hansell
Jr., it described requirements for wartime victory
in the air.
The creation of the Army Air Forces and its Air Staff
did not, of course, solve all problems of air coordination.
Marshall demonstrated an understanding of the need
for improved efficiency and coordination between airmen
and others on the War Department General Staff. His
close relationship with Arnold prefigured the sound
partnership between the two during the war. Marshall
and Arnold, in their own ways, had carried on a campaign
designed to gain more freedom and flexibility for Army
airmen.
Nonetheless, the War Department's War Plans Division
still blocked the AAF from a clear, sustained role
in overall strategic planning. Even greater freedom
with complete autonomy would have to wait until early
1942 when the AAF would become coequal with Army Ground
Forces and Services of Supply.
By that time, Arnold's Air Staff had made its mark
and would continue to do so throughout the war. It
shaped Army Air Forces plans, strategy, and resources.
Moreover, with great foresight, the expanded Air Staff
(at Arnold's direction) created detailed plans to organize
an independent Air Force once the war was over.
Herman S. Wolk is senior historian in the Air Force History
Support Office. He is the author of The Struggle for
Air Force Independence, 1943-1947 (1997), and a coauthor
of Winged Shield, Winged Sword: A History of the United
States Air Force (1997). His most recent article for
Air Force Magazine,
"Truman's
War," appeared in the November 2000 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
|