Sixty years ago, Gen. Henry
H. Arnold, Commanding General of the Army Air Forces,
formed and began to lead a new numbered air force,
created to conduct B-29 operations against Japans
home islands. Hap Arnolds creation of Twentieth
Air Force to spearhead a strategic bombing offensive
in the Pacific not only led to Japans defeat
but also proved to be a landmark in the long struggle
of airmen to organize and operate an independent air
force.
Numerous studies have documented
the technical and engineering problems that had to
be overcome
in developing
the B-29. Less has been written about the critical
decision of how to command this long-range bomber
force. The answer was fundamental to prosecuting
the strategic
bombing offensive against Japan.
 |
| B-29s of Twentieth Air
Force crowd the flight line on Guams
North Field. |
The final decision, reached April 4, 1944, placed
Twentieth Air Force directly under Arnold. It was
an unprecedented
arrangement that would lead, in the Cold War era,
to placement of the newly formed Strategic Air Command
directly under the Joint Chiefs of Staff as a specified
command.
It was one of the most important events in the
history of the United States Air Force, said
retired Maj. Gen. Haywood S. Hansell Jr., a former
air planner and first chief of staff for the Twentieth,
in his memoirs.
Arnold was a visionary and, as Europe headed into
World War II, he saw the need for a four-engine strategic
bomber whose range, speed, and bomb load would be
far
superior to the B-17 and B-24. He initiated development
of the B-29 Superfortress in November 1939, two months
after Nazi Germanys invasion of Poland.
The Essential B-29
After Japans sneak attack on Pearl Harbor, Arnold
was determined to show that Japan could be driven
out of World War II without a land invasion of the
home
islands. He believed the B-29 was essential to that
outcome. Once the United States entered the war,
Arnold came under increasing pressure from President
Franklin
D. Roosevelt and Gen. George C. Marshall, Army Chief
of Staff, to have the AAFs long-range bomber
forces show results.
The B-29 was a greatly advanced bombing airplane,
with a pressurized cabin, intricate fire-control
system,
and powerful new Wright R-3350 engines. However,
the B-29 developed critical problems, which brought
the
entire program into question. If the nation had not
been at war, the extent of B-29 development difficulties
would have forced Arnold to stretch out testing and
production or even to halt it temporarily. Instead,
Arnold cut corners and ordered the bomber into production
before it had completed a rigorous testing program.
The Allies primary objective in World War II
was the defeat of Nazi Germany. Early AAF planning
had outlined potential B-29 operations in the European
Theater, but the bombers development problems
and the pace of Allied operations in Europe made
those plans moot.
By May 1943, the Allies decided to shift more attention
to defeating Japan. According to a 1943 Joint Chiefs
of Staff study on the conduct of the war, the Allies
agreed to maintain and extend unremitting pressure
against Japan with the purpose of continually reducing
her military power and attaining positions from which
her ultimate unconditional surrender can be forced.
 |
| Pictured above are the Superfortresses under
production. The B-29 brought a revolutionary capability.
The long-range bomber featured a pressurized cabin,
intricate fire-control system, and powerful new
engines. |
Roosevelt and high-level Administration officials,
outraged at Japans offensive against China,
increasingly emphasized the need to bomb Japans
home islands. At high-level Allied conferences in
1943 at Casablanca
and Quebec, Roosevelt advocated deploying B-29s to
the ChinaBurmaIndia Theater.
At Quebec in 1943, Arnold presented the Air
Plan for the Defeat of Japan, which called for
deployment of Superfortresses to central China. This
plan, prepared
by Brig. Gen. Kenneth B. Wolfe, emphasized that the
1,500-mile range of the B-29 would allow it to strike
Japans major industrial centers.
Arnold wanted to ensure the B-29s were used first
against Japan. In a May 1943 memo to Marshall, Arnold
wrote: If
B-29s are first employed against targets other than
against Japan, the surprise element will be lost. Arnold
maintained that Japan would take the necessary
actions to neutralize potential useable bases.
Challenging Arnold
In the summer of 1943, Lt. Gen. George C. Kenney,
commander of the Allied Air Forces in the Southwest
Pacific and
Fifth Air Force, challenged the plan put forth by
Arnold and his Air Staff. Kenney had been informed
by his
Washington sources that many viewed the B-29 as the
airplane that would win the war. Kenneys
idea, however, was to attack oil refineries in Sumatra
and Borneo, not industrial centers in Japan.
In a cable to Arnold, Kenney said: If you want
the B-29 used efficiently and effectively where it
will do the most good in the shortest time, the Southwest
Pacific area is the place and the Fifth Air Force
can do the job. Japan may easily collapse back to
her original
empire by that time (1944), due to her oil shortage
alone.
Kenney, however, had no real chance to get the B-29s.
Arnold never wavered in his conviction that the Superfortresses
should be used to strike at the heart of Japan.
At the Cairo conference in late 1943, Roosevelt approved
the plan to base B-29s in India and China. Maj. Gen.
Laurence S. Kuter, assistant chief of Air Staff for
plans, informed Kenney in March 1944 that Roosevelt
wanted the B-29s in place by May 1944. The plan was
to base B-29s in India and stage them through China
for initial B-29 attacks against Japan, then, once
the Allies had taken the Marianas, launch B-29 raids
from there.
 |
| Gen. Hap Arnold, Commanding
General of the Army Air Forces, and Gen. George
Kenney,
commander of
Allied Air Forces in the Southwest Pacific, sparred
over initial use of the B-29. Arnolds plan
to strike Japans home islands prevailed. |
Kenney did not take this news well. He described
attacks against Japan from the Marianas as nuisance
raids.
Before deploying the B-29s, Arnold moved to make
sure that he had operational control over them. The
official
history of the Army Air Forces in World War II speculates
that Arnold wanted to command Twentieth because he
had not previously commanded combat units. In his
memoirs, Arnold said that he was reluctant to make
this decision,
but a lack of unity of command in the Pacific forced
him to command the B-29 force himself.
As was the case in the European Theater, long-range
bombing operations raised unique organizational and
command and control problems. Arnold did not want
the B-29s under the control of theater commandersGen.
Douglas MacArthur (Kenneys boss), Adm. Chester
W. Nimitz, or Gen. Joseph W. Stilwellwho would
employ them as they saw fit.
Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, who commanded the B-29 force
in the Pacific Theater, explained Arnolds decision
this way: Arnold did this so we would have
a command in the Pacific where we were free to fly
over
anybodys theater, to do an overall job. Naturally,
Admiral Nimitz wanted everything he could get his
hands on; General MacArthur wanted everything he
could get
his hands on; and General Stilwell wasnt behindhand
in wanting everything as well. And we were flying
over all three of their theaters. We simply had to
have
central coordination on this deal.
The Control Issue
During 1943, Arnold and his Air Staff in Washington
had weighed the advantages and disadvantages of organizing
strategic air forces outside the control of a theater
commander. Arnold saw more advantages than disadvantages.
According to the official US Army history, the Air
Staff developed a concept that was a radical
departure from the [existing] chain of command. Under
the new concept, Arnold would command Twentieth as
executive agent of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff.
In January 1944, a somewhat similar arrangement emerged
with the creation of the US Strategic Air Forces
(USSTAF) in Europe. It was commanded by Gen. Carl
A. Tooey Spaatz,
who directed Eighth Air Forces long-range bombing
offensive from the United Kingdom and Fifteenth Air
Forces strategic bombing strikes from Italy.
The Combined Chiefs of Staff (CCS) exercised control
over USSTAF through their executive agent, Air Chief
Marshal Charles Peter Portal, Royal Air
Force Chief of Air Staff.
 |
| Above, a B-29 on Saipan is framed by the wreckage
of a Japanese blockhouse. The capture of the Marianas
was critical to the American war effort, as it
brought the B-29s within range of Japan. |
The conflict in the Pacific, however, was primarily
in the hands of the Americans, and Arnold wanted
to retain US control over the long-range bomber force.
The problem was how to convince Marshall and the
Chief
of Naval Operations, Adm. Ernest J. King.
Historically, unity of command over Army forces resided
with a theater commander, who held operational authority
within a geographic area. Fleet units of the US Navy
ultimately were commanded by the Chief of Naval Operations,
who was commander of the US fleet and who reported
to the JCS.
Britain proposed that Twentieth Air Forceand,
subsequently, a British bomber forceshould
report to the Combined Chiefs of Staff, as in the
European
Theater. The US Joint Chiefs opposed this concept,
which Britain quickly dropped. Marshall and King,
according to Hansell, had been persuaded that the
B-29 campaign
required unity of command from Washingtonfree
from the control of theater commanders. Marshall
accepted Arnolds position almost immediately,
but why King acceded so readily remains unclear.
On April 4, 1944, the Joint Chiefs activated Twentieth
Air Force. The War Department directive to Arnold
authorized him to implement and execute major
decisions of the Joint Chiefs of Staff relative to
deployment
and missions, including objectives of the Twentieth
Air Force. The unprecedented command arrangement
had the effect of placing the Army Air Forces on
an equal footing with the Army and Navy in the Pacific.
The new organization reflected Arnolds strategic
concept: The great range of the air arm makes it
possible to strike far from the battlefield and attack
the sources
of enemy military power. The AAF commander wanted
to demonstrate the independent power of the air arm.
The
importance of airpowers role in the war already
had been reflected in Arnolds position on the
JCS and the CCS. The Army Air Forces, he
noted in a memo, are being directly controlled
by the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Combined Chiefs
of Staff more and more each day. Consequently, AAF
representation in the joint and combined planning
staffs has become a position of paramount importance
to me.
In addition to naming Arnold to head Twentieth, the
Joint Chiefs also directed theater commanders to coordinate
B-29 operations with other air operations in their
theaters, to construct and defend B-29 bases, and
to provide logistical support and common administrative
control of B-29 forces. The Chiefs said that, should
strategic or tactical emergencies arise requiring
the use of B-29 forces for purposes other than the
missions
assigned to them by the Joint Chiefs, theater commanders
are authorized to use the B-29 forces, immediately
informing the Joint Chiefs of such action.
 |
| Pictured shortly before the peak of the 1945
bomber offensive against Japan are then-Maj. Gen.
Curtis LeMay (left) and Brig. Gen. Roger Ramey.
LeMay commanded XXI Bomber Command. Ramey later
led XX Bomber Command. |
Acting upon decisions made at the Cairo conference,
Arnold in November 1943 had established XX Bomber
Command to oversee B-29 training in the US. He placed
Wolfe
in command. In December 1943, advance AAF personnel
arrived in India to oversee construction of airfields
in India and China. By April 1944, there were eight
fields ready to receive the B-29s.
Striking Japan
Arnold designated XX Bomber Command to be an operational
unit under Twentieth Air Force, and Wolfe led the
unit to India. Under the plan known as Operation
Matterhorn,
Wolfe, on June 5, 1944, began B-29 operations against
Japanese railroad facilities in Thailand. The first
direct strike on Japans home islands came on
June 15, when B-29s struck the Imperial Iron and
Steel Works on Kyushu. Of the 68 bombers in the strike
force,
only 47 bombed the primary target. Ten had mechanical
problems, four crashed, and seven bombed secondary
targets.
The operation suffered from maintenance and logistical
problems, which delayed the next strike by almost
a monthby which time, Arnold had decided to
replace Wolfe with LeMay, who had led Eighth Air
Forces
305th Bomb Group, and achieved success testing new
concepts and tactics. At the time, Arnold said, With
all due respect to Wolfe, ... LeMays operations
make Wolfes very amateurish.
LeMay improved XX Bomber Commands record, but
the operation still suffered from supply difficulties.
Supplies had to fly the Humpthey
had to come in over the Himalayas, the worlds
highest mountain range. Distance from China to targets
in Japan proved a major obstacle, too. Tokyo was
more than 2,000 miles from the B-29 staging bases
in China.
That exceeded the range of the bombers.
Arnold never expected to deal Japan a crushing blow
using bases in China. In October 1944, XXI Bomber
Command (a second subunit of the Twentieth activated
in August
1944) was getting set up in the newly captured Mariana
Islands, which lay 1,500 miles from Tokyo. Use of
the Marianas not only put most of Japan within the
B-29s
striking range but also made it possible to supply
and sustain hundreds of B-29s at once.
Arnold named Hansell commander of XXI Bomber Command.
On Nov. 24, Hansell launched his first strike against
the home islands.
 |
| Heavy B-29 attacks devastated Japan even before
the atomic bombs were dropped. Here, Superfortresses
unload fire bombs on Yokohama in May 1945. |
Dubbed San Antonio I, the mission sent 111 B-29s,
led by Brig. Gen. Emmett ODonnell Jr., to bomb
an aircraft engine plant on the outskirts of Tokyo.
Flying
in bad weather, only 24 B-29s struck the plant. Bombs
from 64 others fell on docks and urban areas. Some
125 Japanese fighters managed to down one B-29.
Though the bombing results were not particularly
good, the psychological impact was significant.
Between October 1944 and January 1945, the Superforts
struck Japans aircraft engine, component, and
assembly plants. However, bad weather and mechanical
difficulties continued to limit their success. Arnold,
under enormous pressure in Washington and determined
to show results with the B-29 force, once again called
on LeMay. In January 1945, LeMay replaced Hansell,
who had been LeMays commander in England.
In Arnolds mind, he was racing against time.
The Joint Chiefs had acceded to his desire to command
the very long-range force from Washington. Roosevelt
and Marshall expected significant results. Arnold
realized that, if B-29 operations failed to accomplish
something
decisive, Allied forces would have to launch a ground
invasion of Japan.
LeMay Changes Tactics
LeMay had Arnolds confidence, but he realized
he was on the spot. The turkey was around my
neck, he recalled. We were still going
in too high, still running into those big jet-stream
winds upstairs. Weather was almost always bad. LeMay
figured he had only five or six good bombing days
per month. Brig. Gen. Lauris Norstad, who had replaced
Hansell as Twentieth Air Force chief of staff, informed
LeMay that Arnold wanted an incendiary campaign.
Time
was running out.
In his memoirs, LeMay wrote that Arnold, fully
committed to the B-29 program all along, had crawled
out on a dozen limbs about a thousand times, in order
to achieve physical resources and sufficient funds
to build those airplanes and get them into combat.
... So he finds theyre not doing too well.
... General Arnold was absolutely determined to get
results
out of this weapons system.
LeMay, after discussions with his wing commanders,
decided to scrap high-altitude daylight bombing missions
and shift to low-level night incendiary attacks,
as advocated by Arnold and Norstad. LeMays
XXI Bomber Command would launch a maximum effort
in preparation
for the Allied assault on Okinawa.
On the night of March 9-10, 1945, LeMay sent 334
B-29s to strike Tokyo. They dropped 2,000 tons of
bombsperhaps
the most destructive raid in history, to that pointand
burned out a significant portion of the city. The
raid resulted in more than 80,000 deaths and left
one million
homeless.
Air planners had for some time emphasized the vulnerability
of Japans cities to fire. Moreover, they considered
urban areas important military targets as they contained
heavy, dispersed industries that were a major part
of the war economy.
Thus began five months of strategic bombing that
decimated Japans urban areas. In July 1945,
Arnold transferred the headquarters for Twentieth
Air Force from Washington
to Guam. Spaatz took command of the US Army Strategic
Air Forces in the Pacific, which encompassed the
Twentieth. However, strategic control of the B-29s
remained with
Arnold and the Joint Chiefs. The campaign culminated
in August 1945 with the atomic bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, which ended the war in the Pacific.
It would be difficult to overestimate the importance
of Twentieth Air Force. In June 1945, Marshall had
advised President Truman: Airpower alone was
not sufficient to put the Japanese out of the war.
It was unable alone to put the Germans out. In
June, Truman directed that planning proceed for a
two-stage invasion of Japanthe invasion of
Kyushu in November 1945 (Operation Olympic) and an
invasion
of Honshu
in March 1946 (Operation Coronet).
Truman, however, was gravely concerned about the
potential loss of American lives. He wanted to prevent an
Okinawa from one end of Japan to the other. Thus,
he ordered employment of the atomic bomb.
After the war, Arnold emphasized that Japan surrendered because
air attacks, both actual and potential, had made
possible the destruction of their capability and will
for further
resistance. These air attacks, he continued, had
as a primary objective the defeat of Japan without
invasion. Arnold did not believe that the atomic
bombs, by themselves, brought about the defeat of
Japan but were only one factor in Japans decision
to surrender. The atomic bomb, Arnold said, allowed
the
emperor a way out to save face. Arnolds
view is, to say the least, debatable.
 |
| Five Twentieth Air Force
B-29s fly over the coast of Japan. In the late
stages of the
Pacific campaign,
raids by up to 800 bombers helped bring Japans
military and industrial capabilities to a standstill. |
The B-29 campaign in the Pacific fulfilled President
Roosevelts directive to Marshall and the Joint
Chiefs to end the war as quickly as possible with
the least loss of American lives. Placing control
of Twentieth
Air Force under Arnold was central to that achievement.
The official US Army history of World War II stated
that the command arrangement in the Pacific helped
US leaders arrive at a clear-cut definition
of the functions and status of the Air Forces in
relation
to both the Navy and the rest of the Army.
The experience of Twentieth Air Force in World War
II proved to be a landmark in demonstrating the
independent use of airpower. It made the case for
the postwar
establishment of the United States Air Force.
Herman S. Wolk is senior
historian in the Air Force Historical Research Agencys
Washington, D.C., operating location. He is the author
of The Struggle for Air Force Independence, 19431947
(1997) and Fulcrum of Power (2003). His most recent
article for Air Force Magazine, The New
Look, appeared in the August 2003 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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