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Standing (lr) beside a Curtiss P-40 are Maj. John Alison, Maj. "Tex" Hill,
Capt. "Ajax" Baumler, and Lt. Mack Mitchell. They were serving
with the 23rd Fighter Group in China at the time, in an environment
described as "the end of the line."
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In late 1940, a delegation from Generalissimo Chiang
Kai-shek was in the United States to buy airplanes
for what would become the fabled American Volunteer
Group, the Flying Tigers.
A demonstration of the Curtiss P-40 Warhawk was laid
on at Bolling Field in Washington for the Chinese visitors
and their American advisor, Claire L. Chennault. The
pilot for the demonstration was 2nd Lt. John R. Alison.
As Chennault would later recall in his book, Way of
a Fighter, Alison "got more out of that P-40 in
his five-minute demonstration than anybody I ever saw
before or after. ...
"When he landed, they pointed at the P-40 and
smiled, 'We need 100 of these.' 'No,' I said, pointing
to Alison, 'you need 100 of these.' "
As always, Chennault was an excellent judge of people.
Within a few years, Alison would be flying P-40s for
Chennault in China--where he would shoot down two Japanese
aircraft (a third was unconfirmed) in his first aerial
combat. Later, along with his friend, Phil Cochran,
he would organize the first air commando unit in history
and personally lead it into combat.
And those are just a few of the things that John Alison
went on to accomplish.
After the war, he became the youngest-ever assistant
secretary of commerce for aeronautics. He returned
to the service during the Korean War and eventually
retired as a two-star general in the Air Force Reserve.
He was national president, then chairman of the board,
of the Air Force Association. He retired from Northrop
Corp. as a senior vice president.
Alison's wartime achievements can be measured by many
things, including his seven victories (six in the air,
one on the ground) and his many decorations. A telling
indication of his stature, however, is that he is perhaps
the only person ever to land after a combat mission
and have two messages waiting, each reading "Report
to me without delay," and signed respectively
by Gen. Henry H. "Hap" Arnold and Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower. Of this more later.

An unusually skillful pilot, Alison said if you could fly one airplane,
you could fly them all. Among the lesser known aircraft he flew: a
P-37 like this one, a variant of the radial engined P-36, designed
around an Allison V-1710-11 engine.
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P-40s to Britain
Alison was born in Florida in 1912. He graduated in
1936 from the University of Florida with a degree in
industrial engineering and an ROTC Army commission
(received in 1935). After flight training at Randolph
Field, Texas, in 1937, he went to Langley Field, Va.,
where he flew a dazzling succession of fighter aircraft.
Besides the Boeing P-12, which he had flown in flying
school, Alison became proficient in some less well-known
aircraft, such as the high-performance (but low utility)
Consolidated PB-2, the Martin B-10 bomber, the exotic
twin pusher-engine Bell YFM-1 Airacuda, and the long-nosed
Curtiss P-37. He also flew more conventional types,
including the Curtiss P-36 and its successor, the P-40.
While the P-40 has not received the accolades of other
first-line World War II fighters, it was in fact a
fine airplane when flown so that its strengths could
be maximized and its weaknesses minimized. It achieved
an early wartime importance far beyond its comparative
merit simply because it was the only American fighter
available in quantity.
When P-40s were sent to Great Britain as one of the
initial Lend-Lease efforts, the Army Air Corps tapped
Alison and his friend, Lt. Hubert A. "Hub" Zemke,
to go along to assist the Royal Air Force in their
use. Although officially designated as observers and
operating under the title of assistant air attachés,
they soon became involved in operational tasks.
They obtained insight into how a wartime air force
had to operate. They quickly saw that the RAF had much
to teach them, and they soaked up everything they could
on combat operations. In return, they went far beyond
the observer's role in helping the RAF assemble, fly,
and maintain the P-40. This training gave Alison a
basic conviction that he demonstrated often and maintains
today: Airplanes are all alike, and if you can fly
one you can fly them all. That belief--and the skill
that backed it up--enabled him to forge an unbelievably
broad-based flying career during World War II.
By the time he and Zemke were in place, the production
of Spitfires and Hurricanes had begun to meet British
needs. The inferior high-altitude performance of the
P-40 took it out of combat operations against the Luftwaffe
in Europe. Nevertheless, the airplane was still required
for duty elsewhere, especially in North Africa, and
Alison not only demonstrated it, he got to fly mock
combat against RAF aces in Spitfires and Hurricanes.
In those low-altitude battles, the P-40 could more
than hold its own.

A drive to push the Japanese out of Burma led to organizing the first
air commandos. Lt. Col. Phil Cochran (left) and Alison (center) led
the project. At right is Lt. Col. Arvid Olson.
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Mission to Moscow
In July 1941, he and Zemke were mysteriously summoned
to the American Embassy in London. Still lieutenants,
they were dumbfounded when they were ushered in to
see Ambassador John G. Winant and W. Averell Harriman,
who was in England on a mission for President Roosevelt
and would be the future ambassador to the Soviet Union.
Also present was Brig. Gen. Joseph T. McNarney, chief
of staff of a special Army observer group in London.
It was heady company, and the two lieutenants learned
that their top-secret mission was to go to the Soviet
Union where they would instruct their Soviet counterparts
in the assembly, maintenance, and operation of LendLease
P-40s. One hundred and forty were to be shipped by
sea in a convoy from the United Kingdom; Zemke would
accompany them. Another 60 would be shipped via the
Persian Gulf. Alison flew to Moscow in an RAF Catalina,
with Harry L. Hopkins, confidant, advisor, and right-hand
man to President Roosevelt, and McNarney.
An incredibly primitive assembly site had been set
up in Arkhangelsk, with a wooden runway laid on pilings
driven into the tundra. Alison and Zemke found crude
working and living conditions. There were few tools
but an ample supply of manpower, including many prisoners.
The food was simple but far more plentiful than in
England. They lived in railcars that were warm-but
also the home to many, many bedbugs.
They found the Soviet troops to be deadly serious,
intent on getting the P-40s into combat immediately.
Test-flying the P-40s was inherently dangerous, in
part due to the mix of changes made while they were
in service with the RAF and the low level of Soviet
expertise in assembling the aircraft.
Both men wanted to see the Soviet air force in action,
but their suspicious hosts kept them away from any
operational areas and flatly refused to allow them
to fly a Soviet aircraft.
In December after the P-40s had been assembled and
test-flown, Alison and Zemke were ordered to Moscow.
They had watched the Luftwaffe bomb London, and now
they climbed to the roof of the ambassador's residence
to see bombers dumping their lethal loads. Soon, however,
the German army had pushed to the city's outskirts,
and the two men assisted the American Embassy in its
move to Kuybyshev on the Volga River, 550 miles southeast
of Moscow.
There on Dec. 7 they learned of the Japanese attack
on Pearl Harbor. Both men immediately asked to be released
to return home to combat duty.
Persian Gulf War, 1942 Style
Zemke received orders to return to the United States,
where he was soon given command of a unit he would
make famous, the 56th Fighter Group. Alison also wanted
a combat assignment, but fate dictated otherwise.
Acting on the verbal orders of the American ambassador,
Alison got on an airplane that ultimately deposited
him in Tehran, Iran. A captain now, he landed without
a kit, orders, or money.
By train and riverboat, Alison made his way to Basra,
Iraq, where he went to the American military engineering
detachment there and was promptly outfitted with a
new uniform and given a brand new job: seeing to the
official transfer of Lend-Lease aircraft to the Soviet
Union via Basra.
He still was not receiving any pay, but the $6 per
diem he drew was ample, the food was good, and there
was a constant stream of airplanes for him to fly--North
American B-25s, Douglas A-20s, a Fairchild 24, and
a Lockheed Electra. His checkout in the B-25 consisted
of three landings with the Pan Am ferry pilot, and
he had no checkout whatsoever in the Electra.
His principal task was to "sell" the airplanes
to the representatives of the Soviet Union, then check
them out.
The Russian pilots were tough customers who insisted
on absolute perfection before accepting the aircraft.
Nothing could be wrong, not a single burned-out bulb
on the instrument panel, not the slightest crack in
the tires; if they accepted any imperfection they were
subject to instant discipline on their return to the
Soviet Union.
Completely outside any AAF hierarchy, Alison reported
on his activities by sending penciled messages to Hap
Arnold himself, each one with a plaintive postscript
requesting a combat assignment. Eventually, it worked.

The air commandos included (l-r) Maj. Walter Radovich, Olson, Alison,
Col. Ralph Smith, and Cochran. Olson and Smith were AVG veterans. Alison
had been a fighter squadron commander under Chennault.
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Combat at Last
Alison's orders to report to China for combat duty
came directly from Arnold. Chennault's Flying Tigers
had been merged into the Army Air Forces as the China
Air Task Force. In mid-July 1942, Alison landed at
Hengyang, where he was assigned to the 75th Fighter
Squadron. It was one of three squadrons in which Chennault
concentrated his best pilots, and it was commanded
by Maj. David Lee "Tex" Hill, an ace and
a member of the original Flying Tigers. Alison was
soon chosen to be deputy commander.
On the night of July 28, he and his colleagues were
awakened by Chinese houseboys coming through the barracks,
beating their chopsticks on coffee tins to announce
an air raid. They went outside and watched a flight
of Japanese bombers attack the field with impunity,
crossing directly over it to get their bearings, then
doing a 180-degree turn to come back and drop their
bombs. They did not do much damage, but Alison vowed
that if they came back the next night, he would be
in the air, ready for them.
The next night, Alison and his colleagues had their
P-40s positioned at the edge of the field ready for
takeoff. The P-40 was not equipped as a night fighter,
for it had no flame dampeners on its exhaust stacks
and only minimal cockpit lighting. Nonetheless, when
the alarm was given, they took off, Albert J. "Ajax" Baumler
to orbit at 9,000 feet while Alison climbed to 12,000
feet.
A radio call from the field advised him that three
bombers had just passed overhead. Alison realized that
the bombers were above him and turned to climb and
cut them off when they made their turn for the run-in.
He misjudged the distance as he dove to attack. "The
radio was out-it had been holed by a bullet-and I couldn't
talk anymore, and one bullet grazed my left arm. There
was also a bullet hole through my parachute. But by
this time I am now slowed down right in the middle
of their formation. I chose the bomber on the left,
and from point-blank range I aimed right at the fuselage
and he pulled straight up; I'm sure I killed everyone
on board, so I claimed that one as a probable. Then
I turned to the airplane that was hitting me and blew
him up. Then I turned on the leader and blew him up."
Now Alison was at 15,000 feet, with the P-40 still
running but badly damaged. "I came down as fast
as I could, but when I got down to 3,000 feet, right
above the airport, the airplane began to catch fire.
It was an oil fire not a gasoline fire, but a fire
in an airplane is a worrisome thing. My airplane is
on fire and I've got to make a decision whether to
jump out or stay with it. I decided I could slide it
on the belly, but I was a little too high and now I'm
so fast there is no way I can put it on the runway.
So I pull the nose up and open the throttle, and fortunately
it is still running and I know there is a river out
about two miles ahead."
The P-40 sputtered over some hills and a railroad
trestle, and Alison headed for the water. His P-40
had no lap belts, and he refused to wear the shoulder
harness because it restrained him too much, so he cut
the throttle, kept his right hand on the stick, and
put his left on the cockpit coaming so he would not
smash his teeth into the gun sight. When the airplane
hit the river, his head was rammed against the gun
sight, lacerating his forehead but saving his teeth.
A young Chinese man ran out across a log raft and
pulled him up out of the river to safety. When Alison
got back to Hengyang, a doctor from a missionary hospital
sewed up his cuts, and by that afternoon he was back
at the squadron, ready to fly.

Pilots dash to their P-40s in China, where Alison became an ace while
flying with Chennault's 75th Fighter Squadron. Chennault recalled, "He
ran up a brilliant combat record."
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Figuring the Odds
During Alison's tour the odds still favored the Japanese
numerically by a ratio of as much as 10-to-1, but the
Americans now had the initiative. Alison recalls an
occasion when he led 16 P-40s against "only" 47
enemy fighters and felt the odds were with him, given
the quality of American pilots and the brilliance of
Chennault's prescribed tactics.
As the war progressed, Chennault's forces grew and
became more and more aggressive. On May 31, 1943, Alison
led a flight of nine P-40s as escort to nine Consolidated
B-24s in a raid on Ichang. Alison had one American
pilot and seven Chinese pilots in his flight. The mission
was complicated by the fact that neither American spoke
Chinese, nor did any of the Chinese pilots speak English
fluently.
A swarm of 20 Zeros attacked the bombers, "popping
up like a handful of black pepper through the clouds," and
Alison immediately turned into them, shooting down
one fighter that he later claimed as a probable. He
turned back in toward the bombers and fired on another
Zero, which exploded. At that moment he came under
fire from a Zero, whose first bursts blew most of the
rudder off Alison's P-40.
Alison today hunches his shoulders as he recounts
how he could feel the Zero's bullets "ringing
like a bell" as they hammered into the armor plate
that protected him. He called for help, and a Chinese
pilot came roaring in, shooting down the Zero, but
spraying Alison's P-40 with hits as well.
Alison nursed the airplane back to his Chinese base
and managed to get the wheels down--but his riddled
tires came off when he landed, causing him to nose
up. When he climbed down out of his airplane he was
amazed that the first man he ran into was none other
than Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, who had just arrived
aboard a Douglas C-47.
Alison returned to the United States in May 1943 but
was soon on his way to Asia again.
The Air Commandos
The war in the ChinaBurmaIndia Theater had
a bitter quality to it, for both the Japanese enemy
and the jungle environment in which the war was fought
were totally without mercy. They were in fact almost
as merciless as the interAllied command squabbles,
which had in large part contributed to a massive defeat
in Burma. When the renowned Brig. Gen. Orde C. Wingate
of Great Britain attempted to redress the situation
with unconventional warfare tactics, his Chindit long-range
penetration forces showed great promise but suffered
severely from the lack of air support. Wingate wanted
a second chance to defeat the Japanese. This time,
however, he not only wanted adequate airpower and resupply,
he also demanded that provisions be made for the removal
of his sick and wounded, who had to be left behind
to almost certain death in the previous campaign.
Wingate surmounted the command struggles in 1943 by
going directly to Prime Minister Winston Churchill
to ask for extensive American support. Churchill had
Wingate brief President Roosevelt personally, and Roosevelt
called upon Hap Arnold to assist Wingate.
With his typical enthusiasm Arnold embraced the idea
and selected two outstanding officers to head what
became known as "Project Nine." One was the
legendary Lt. Col. Philip G. Cochran, who was immortalized
by Milton Caniff as "Flip Corkin" in the
comic strip "Terry and the Pirates." The
other was Lt. Col. John Alison. Arnold briefed the
two men on their duties, then gave them the most welcome
farewell line they had ever heard: "To hell with
the paperwork, go out and fight."
The two combat veterans were good friends and possessed
complementary personalities. Each tried to persuade
Arnold to appoint the other as commander; in an unusual,
and decidedly unmilitary manner, Arnold appointed them
as co-commanders. Alison today remembers that it worked
well for them personally but was difficult for outsiders
to plumb, so they agreed that Cochran, senior by a
few weeks, would be commander and Alison his deputy.
It was a perfect arrangement.
They had the highest priority and Arnold's full backing
for the creation of a unit that would permit Wingate
to carry out his plans to wrest Burma from the Japanese
with long-range penetration forces. Among the innovations
that Cochran and Alison brought to the 1st Air Commando
Group were the first combat use of helicopters for
rescue and the use of C-47s to snatch gliders off the
ground from difficult locations behind enemy lines.
Alison also flew as Wingate's personal pilot on many
occasions.

Alison (left) and Cochran (right) flank a painting showing Broadway,
the gliders' main landing site in Burma. Alison piloted a CG-4A glider,
for the first time, during the invasion.
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Air Invasion of Burma
The mission was unprecedented: Cochran and Alison
were to help Wingate conduct an air invasion of Burma
by ground troops.
"We had a small air force of our own," Alison
says. "We put 12,000 infantry troops behind enemy
lines in Burma, and we sustained them with airpower.
Wingate had no armor, no heavy artillery. So we provided
him his heavy artillery, from the air."
They launched the invasion the evening of March 5,
1944, carrying most of Wingate's assault force, its
equipment, and mules on Waco CG-4A gliders, towed two
at a time behind C-47 transports. It took 45 minutes
to climb to the altitude of about 8,500 feet, necessary
to clear the mountains between India and Burma.
Alison had never flown the CG-4A, nor had he ever
made a night double-tow takeoff. Nevertheless, he piloted
a glider in the first wave, carrying 15 men of the
assault team to the landing area designated "Broadway."
Airspeed proved difficult to control. When Alison
cast off from the C-47 over Burma, he was gliding at
80 mph, and he touched down at a brisk 70. He bumped,
unharmed, to a halt, grabbed his carbine and a sack
of grenades and leapt out, ready to do battle with
the Japanese infantry.
Two Messages
After three weeks in the jungle in Burma, Alison was
recalled by a radio message from Cochran. To get back,
he flew out solo in a damaged British C-47 Dakota,
although he had never flown a C-47 before. When he
got to back to his home base at Hailakandi, India,
he had to call the tower to ask for instructions on
lowering the gear.
Two telegrams were awaiting him. The first said, "Report
to me without delay" and was signed Arnold; the
second said the same thing and was signed by Eisenhower.
Alison wired Arnold, who authorized him a delay en
route of two days to confer with Eisenhower, who was
only a few months away from launching the D-Day invasion
of Europe across the English Channel. He planned to
use gliders to fly some of his invasion force into
Normandy. He and his staff pumped Alison for all he
could tell them about his experience in taking Wingate's
force into Burma with gliders.
In Washington, Alison learned that Arnold had also
been following the 1st Air Commando operation with
keen interest and was now prepared to field four more
air commando groups. He wanted Alison to be in the
middle of the expansion.
As fast-moving events of the war developed, though,
only two more air commando units could be used profitably.
Arnold sent Alison with one of these, the 3rd Air Commando
Group, to the South Pacific, where--as usual--his duties
soon expanded.
During the last year of the war, Alison served as
operations officer for Fifth Air Force, participating
in the landings in the Philippines and in the air operations
against Japan from Okinawa.
Today, at age 87, Alison has the movements and the
vitality of a vigorous man in his middle years. He
stands just under 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighs only
a little more than he did in flying school, about 140
pounds. Until recently, he worked out in the gym, including
a run on the treadmill, three times a week. He is busily
engaged, with a group of colleagues, in the production
of a new high-technology internal combustion engine.
For all that he has done, Alison is remarkably soft-spoken
and genuinely modest. It is only with prompting that
he recounts his experiences, and even then talks more
about others than about himself.
In 1996, the Air Force Association considered various
historical figures as keynote speakers for its 50th
anniversary convention but concluded that the only
real choice-best symbolizing the achievements and ideals
of the nation's air arm as it grew to maturity-was
John Alison, the all-American airman.
Walter J. Boyne, former director of the National Air
and Space Museum in Washington, is a retired Air Force
colonel and author. He has written more than 400 articles
about aviation topics and 29 books, the most recent of
which is Beyond the Horizons: The Lockheed Story. His
most recent article for Air Force Magazine,
"The
St. Mihiel Salient," appeared in the February
2000 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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