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In the July 1943 invasion of Axis-held Sicily, the Allies made their
first large-scale use of airborne forcesparatroopers and glider-delivered
soldiers. It also was nearly the last use of such forces. Everything
that could go wrong did go wrong.
High winds on the first attempt made the flight from North Africa
difficult. Many units missed their drop and landing sites. On other
attempts, anti-aircraft gunners mistook friendly aircraft loaded
with paratroops for the enemy and shot them down.
Afterward, Army officials in Washington, D.C., wanted to scrap
the idea of mass airborne assaults and only use such troops in small
engagements. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Allied Commander
Europe, ordered an investigation. It concluded that the airborne
concept was sound, but it called for more training of the units,
better communications, and improved systems for identifying drop
and landing zones.
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| Gliders land with loads of
troops and equipment behind enemy lines in Holland during Operation
Market Garden in World War II. |
Airborne troops got their second chance in the September 1943 Allied
assault on mainland Italy. For this, the Army created small units
of paratroopers called pathfinders. It was their job
to jump in ahead of the main force and mark landing and drop zones
with colored lights, flares, panels, and smoke.
These pathfinders were equipped with a new type of radar unit,
called Eureka, which sent signals to a new receiver
type, called Rebecca, which was located in the lead
aircraft of a troop carrier armada. Eureka acted like a beacon and
guided the aircraft to the proper landing area.
The success of the Italian operations helped save the entire airborne
approach from oblivion.
Pathfinders Pave the Way
The use of these pathfinders continued throughout the war. They
made it possible for the gliders and paratroopers to operate successfully.
On D-Day, the Allies vast June 6, 1944, invasion of Nazi-held
France, airborne elements went in before the main force hit the
beaches in landing craft. Pathfinders preceded the other airborne
forces by 30 minutes to direct the jumps and glider landings.
The airborne forces were routed around the Allied naval forces
in the English Channel to avoid losses to friendly fire. On the
ground, the troopers wore small US flags on their uniforms and carried
small clickers or crickets to identify themselves to
each other. Other efforts were made to improve communications between
the individual aircraft carrying troops and towing gliders.
However, weather was marginal and visibility was poor. Pathfinder
teams from the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions that tried to drop
into France were hampered by cloud cover and heavy anti-aircraft
fire. In addition, many of the transport pilots were inexperienced.
Several pathfinder groups were dropped in the wrong places and some
of their equipment didnt work.
The result was that many of the paratroopers in the main force
landed miles from their intended zones, and many of those delivered
in gliders also turned up in the wrong places. Those who survived,
however, formed into small groups, did what damage they could, and
eventually worked their way back to their units.
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| Soldiers survey a glider that
cracked up during the operation, which was the largest airborne
assault in history. Pathfinders preceded these troops into the
area, fighting off German assaults, to aid the glider landings.
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Three months after Normandy, troopers of the 82nd Airborne Division
and the 101st Airborne Division jumped into Holland as part of Operation
Market Garden, the largest Allied airborne assault in history. Again,
the main forces were preceded by pathfinders. US paratroopers made
it to their targets, but British and Polish forces ran into trouble,
as did the overall operation.
Later that winter, airborne troopers went to relieve the American
troops pinned down by German forces in the Battle of the Bulge.
Though short of cold-weather gear and other equipment, they managed
to stop the German attack.
In the China-Burma-India Theater, paratroopers and gliders were
used less for large invasion operations and more for smaller strikes,
organized into newly formed air commando units. In Burma, for example,
Lt. Col. Philip G. Cochran helped form the 1st Air Commando Group,
which eventually had more than 300 aircraft, ranging from P-51s
to B-25 and from C-47s to CG-4 gliders.
In March 1944, Allied troop carrier units and an Army Air Forces
air commando group landed gliders behind enemy lines in central
Burma. They brought in 9,000 British raiders, 1,300 pack animals,
and 254 tons of supplies and airfield construction equipment.
If the early use of airborne forces had been largely experimental
and replete with mistakes, by 1944, it had become well defined.
That year, AAF: The Official Guide to the Army Air Forces was able
to describe how such operations were conducted or, at least, how
they should be.
Jointness
The World War II airborne warfare operations provided an early
example of close joint cooperation between air and ground
forces. Troop carrier and glider pilots belonged to the Army Air
Forces. Their customers, the troops who jumped or glided into combat,
were the Army ground forces or, in some cases, members of the British
or other Allied forces. The components cooperated toward a common
end.
As the operations became more clearly defined, the training of
airborne forces also became standardized. Such was the case with
glider pilots.
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| Members of the 1st Air Commando
Group in India gather for a photo before taking off on a glider
mission in Burma. Among well-known commandos was actor Jackie
Coogan, kneeling at right with a gun on his left arm.
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Unlike those who trained to be fighter and bomber pilots, those
destined to fly gliders trained as enlisted men. They had to be
males between the ages of 18 and 26. The other main requirement
listed in The Official Guide to the Army Air Forces was for 125
hours flying either in a glider or power aircraft.
The flying-time requirement was not as stringent as it sounds today.
Many young men had time in recreational gliders and private airplanes
or even in pilot training. The six-month-long glider course began
with ground training. This phase began with a month of commando-type
schooling in personal combat and weapons. If the trainees were not
already aware of it, this should have alerted them to the fact that,
once landed, they were expected to fight.
Another month covered glider repair and maintenance. Then followed
a month devoted to flying light powered aircraft, including instruction
in making power-off dead-stick landings. It was not until the fourth
month that students began to fly actual training gliders. At the
same time, they studied meteorology, navigation, and selected academic
subjects. The final month covered advanced glider flying, the trainees
building proficiency in tactical uses of the aircraft.
Early in the war, enlisted men with no flying experience at all
had been trained in whatever rank they held at the time and graduated
as staff sergeants. Later, newly minted glider pilots were appointed
flight officers or commissioned second lieutenants and sent to troop
carrier units for training as team members.
At first, the AAF was critically short of training gliders. To
fill the gap, aircraft builders removed the engines from light,
two-seat powered airplanes called Grasshoppers and converted
them into three-place gliders. The Aeronca L-3, for example, acquired
a bulbous nose and became the TG-5 trainer. The TaylorCraft L-2
and the Piper L-4 underwent similar surgery and emerged as the TG-6
and TG-8, respectively.
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| During World War II, troops
at Ft. Benning, Ga., load a 155 mm howitzer in the back of a
CG-14, the Army Air Forces largest glider. Pathfinders
and gliders, carrying equipment, supplies, or troops, became
key Allied tools in the war. |
With time, the Army acquired some Frankfort and Schweizer models
purpose-built as gliders. It experimented with a number of other
models but bought only a few copies.
Typical of the paratroop-glider forces, the 101st Airborne Division
was made up of three major elements: the 502nd Parachute Infantry
Regiment and the 327th and 401st Glider Infantry Regiments. Some
months after its founding, the division gained a second parachute
infantry regiment, the 506th. It also had three artillery battalions,
the 377th Parachute Field Artillery and the 321st and 907th Glider
Field Artillery.
Land and Fight
In October 1942, the 101st Airborne Division, known as the Screaming
Eagles, reported for training in how to jump out of airplanes
and fight a war when you land. The soldiers first had to learn basic
infantry skills and then the techniques of getting into battle by
unconventional means.
For a time, parachute troops and glider troops trained separately,
but, by early 1943, they were training as a division. By September
1943, they were on their way to England.
The 82nd Airborne Division went through a similar training process.
In April 1943, the 82nd went to North Africa as the first US airborne
division to go overseas.
In addition to training basic airborne troops, the 82nd picked
and trained the pathfinders, who needed not only parachuting and
infantry skills but the added communications and operational skills
to be the first troops to reach the battle.
Early on, the Army was able to recruit airline pilots already familiar
with the C-47 as a transport, but, as the war wore on, it had to
train its own.
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| An L-1A tows three gliders
at once during training. Glider pilots underwent the same training
as other transport and bomber pilots, then picked up their glider
skills with their units. |
The pilots who carried paratroopers and towed gliders underwent
the same undergraduate training as other transport and bomber pilots.
Typically, such men trained as aviation cadets, going through 10
weeks of preflight, taking another 10 weeks of primary flight training
in a contract civilian school and 10 weeks of basic flight training
under a military instructor. In advanced training, another 10 weeks,
some students went to single-engine (fighter) schools and others
to twin-engine (bomber-transport) training.
After graduation, pilots went through a month of transition training
in combat type aircraft and then to units, where they learned skills
such as low-altitude flying, glider towing, and parachute landings
of both men and equipment.
Glider pilots wore wings like those of fixed-wing pilots but overlaid
with the letter G. Parachutists also had a distinctive badge and,
like glider pilots, received hazardous duty pay.
Hazardous
Troops that rode gliders had a badge similar to that of the paratroopers
but, early in the war, were not paid extra for it. After a few operations,
however, it became apparent that riding in gliders was often more
hazardous than jumping from aircraft because of their fragile nature
and lack of control in bad weather. Glider troops began to receive
additional money, although it was less than the paratroopers received.
In 1941, the Army let contracts for two types of experimental troop-carrying
gliders. The first called for an eight- or nine-seat transport.
The second was a larger, 15-seat aircraft. Four companies were to
make prototypes.
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| During the Vietnam War, a Combat
Control Team member directs air traffic from his jeep at an
isolated strip. CCTs were among the first US troops sent in,
performing as either ground or airborne forward air controllers.
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In the end, Waco Aircraft Co., of Troy, Ohio, won both competitions.
It went into production first with the nine-seat CG-3. Relatively
few were made and these were used largely as a trainer.
Wacos larger model, the CG-4, became a workhorse for combat
operations. It was made of wood and metal with fabric covering.
It had a high wing and a hinged nose section that swung upward to
allow direct loading of jeeps, small trucks, or howitzers. The gross
weight was as much as 9,000 pounds.
More than 12,000 CG-4s were produced by more than a dozen companies.
Because of its relatively simple construction, it could be assembled
by a variety of plants. Among the builders were Cessna, Ford, Gibson
Refrigerator, and Ward Furniture Co. Waco refined the glider as
the CG-15 and delivered more than 400 of these.
Late in the war, one CG-15 was fitted with two radial engines and
tested for use as a low-cost troop or cargo carrier, but it did
not go into production. This was the reverse of an earlier experiment
in which the engines were removed from a C-47 and it was tested
as a glider. It had the flattest glide of any glider that had been
tested at the time, but it, too, did not go into production.
The airplanes that delivered paratroopers and towed gliders most
often were the durable C-47, derived from the DC-3 commercial airliner.
A second troop carrier, the C-46, was added later, a few going to
Europe but most to the Pacific.
Modern Pathfinders
After World War II, the Army faced a severe drawdown and decided
to disband most of its own pathfinder units. That was OK with the
Air Force, which wanted only airmen to serve as forward air traffic
controllers. With the establishment of an independent Air Force
in 1947, USAF decided to build its own version of these specialized
forces. However, it would be October 1952 before USAF sent its first
10 pathfinders to jump school. In 1953, the Air Force officially
designated a Combat Control Team, or CCT.
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| Combat controllers set up operations
after a jump during an exercise near Hurlburt Field, Fla. Todays
CCTs continue the World War II pathfinder tradition of being
first there. (Staff photo by Guy Aceto)
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Initially, CCTs received formal training only for the technical
apsects of their workair traffic control and radio maintenanceand
attended jump school. Their specialized combat-related skills were
picked up on the job or from experienced controllers.
Combat controllers have fought in conflicts from the Korean War
to Operation Iraqi Freedom. Today, they work in what are called
Special Tactics Teams with other Air Force special operations elementspararescue
jumpers and combat weathermen.
While the glider and glider pilot are long gone from todays
combat force, the spirit of the pathfinders lives on.
Bruce D. Callander is a contributing editor of Air Force Magazine. He served tours of active duty during World War II and the Korean War and was editor of Air Force Times from 1972 to 1986. His most recent article for Air Force Magazine, “Suicide in the Ranks,” appeared in the January issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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