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In 1943, the World War II Allies launched Corkscrew,
a military operation whose aim was to seize the Mediterranean
island of Pantelleria. It was an armed action meant
to pave the way for an Allied invasion of Sicily and
then the Italian mainland, but it turned out to be
far more than that. By the time Corkscrew was finished,
it had become a case study in the devastating uses
of airpower and a major milestone in the exploits of
the famed Tuskegee Airmen.
The importance of Pantelleria Island itself stemmed
from its location--smack in the middle of the Mediterranean
Sea. Some 53 miles to the west was Tunisia. To the
northeast, 63 miles away, was Sicily. Thus, Pantelleria
lay astride the route from North Africa, where the
Allies earlier in 1943 had routed Axis forces, and
Italy, the next target for invasion.
Between May 8 and June 11 in 1943, Allied aircraft
flew 5,285 bombing sorties against targets on Pantelleria
and dropped 6,313 tons of bombs on Italian and German
forces ensconced there. The operation called for using
sustained aerial bombardment to crush enemy power on
the island and therefore reduce the number of Allied
ground forces needed to capture and hold it. The plan
succeeded--dramatically so. In fact, the aerial offensive
marked the first time in history that an enemy land
force was compelled to surrender in the absence of
an accompanying ground invasion. Saturation bombing,
plus limited shelling by the Royal Navy, broke the
enemy's defenses and will to resist.
For all that, it was an offensive that almost didn't
happen.
Road to Pantelleria
Allied leaders convened at Casablanca in January 1943
to draw up plans to take the offensive against the
Axis powers where they were most vulnerable--in the
south of Europe. In addition to approving an around-the-clock
strategic bombing offensive against Nazi Germany, Allied
leaders, including Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, decided
that they must conquer Sicily before pushing on to
Italy and that the Sicily campaign would have to wait
until the Allies had crushed German resistance in Tunisia.
The Allied Combined Chiefs of Staff concluded that
the Sicily operation, code-named Husky, would secure
the Mediterranean sea lanes and airspace and ease the
invasion of the main Italian peninsula.
This plan did not win universal support, however.
Other senior officers--most notably Gen. George C.
Marshall, the US Army Chief of Staff--didn't want to
wait. They argued for launching an attack on Sicily
even before the final defeat of Nazi forces in North
Africa. Marshall told Eisenhower that he was taking
an overly conservative approach to his planning and
that it lacked boldness and adaptability.
The final complication came from none other than Winston
Churchill himself. The British Prime Minister, eager
to carry the war to the enemy in Europe itself, argued
for bypassing Sicily altogether and mounting a direct
attack on the Italian mainland from Tunisia.
By February 1943, Marshall had come to realize that,
with North African combat still going on, the Navy
would not be in any position to provide aircraft carriers
in support of Operation Husky. He therefore recommended
to Eisenhower that the Allies first seize Pantelleria.
Marshall reasoned that Allied fighter aircraft based
at Marghana airfield on Pantelleria would then be in
good position to support the invasion of Sicily when
it did come.
Eisenhower's planners, however, concluded that attacking
Pantelleria would be too tough and advised their commander
not to take the chance. They wanted to postpone the
invasion until the Allies had on hand forces substantial
enough to defeat the Axis units in Sicily in full-scale
combat.
By May, however, Eisenhower had made up his mind.
He concluded that the advantages of occupying Pantelleria
outweighed the disadvantages of mounting the operation
under the existing circumstances. By seizing Pantelleria,
the Allies could provide air cover and remove a serious
Axis threat to the invasion of Sicily, he affirmed,
and on May 13, 1943, the CCS approved the Pantelleria
operation. Operation Corkscrew was born.

Primary responsibility for the bombing of Pantelleria fell to the Northwest
African Strategic Air Forces, commanded by Maj. Gen. Jimmy Doolittle--shown
here preparing to take off on a flight over Tunisia.
Concentrated Bombing
Perhaps thinking about Marshall's comment that he
lacked adaptability, Eisenhower decided the Allies
would take the island without a heavy investment in
ground power. He sought advice from Lt. Gen. Carl A. "Tooey" Spaatz,
commander of Northwest African Air Forces. His goal:
to make the reduction of Pantelleria "a sort of
laboratory to determine the effect of concentrated
heavy bombing on a defended coastline."
Eisenhower directed Spaatz to concentrate everything
and then use his force to pound the island so that
its defenders would not be able to contest a landing.
The assault, Eisenhower emphasized, should be a "rather
simple affair." He thought of the effect of the
massive artillery pounding of Corregidor in the Philippines.
His objective, he said, was "to see whether the
air [forces] can do the same thing."
Under Corkscrew, Britain's 1st Infantry Division,
supported by naval forces, was to occupy the island.
The nearby Pelagian Islands of Lampedusa, Linosa, and
Lampione would also be blasted and occupied, giving
the Allies control of all the islands of the Sicilian
strait.
Earlier, in 1941, British leaders had actually considered
seizing Pantelleria--eight miles long and five miles
wide with sheer cliffs--so as to eliminate it as an
enemy base for aircraft and submarines interfering
with British air and sea traffic in the Mediterranean.
Churchill described Pantelleria as "a thorn in
our side."
The problem had been in the making since the mid-1920s.
Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, describing the Mediterranean
as "mare nostrum," or "our sea," set
Italians to building fortifications on the island.
By the mid-1930s, construction of naval and air bases
was well under way. As many as 100 Axis aircraft had
been kept at Marghana airfield during the Tunisian
campaign.
Although the Allied victory in North Africa greatly
diminished Pantelleria's value as an Axis staging point,
it still contained an underground hangar with large
repair and maintenance shops.
As Corkscrew began taking more definite shape, it
garnered additional opponents. At least one major player,
Air Vice Marshal Arthur Coningham, commander of the
Northwest African Tactical Air Force, did not share
the enthusiasm of Eisenhower and Spaatz for the operation.
Coningham found it difficult to take seriously the
planned massive bombardment of the island. In fact,
he made light of it, prompting Spaatz to recommend
bluntly that he correct his attitude.
No one doubted that taking Pantelleria by air would
be a significant challenge. Aerial reconnaissance over
the rocky 42-square-mile island revealed more than
100 gun emplacements, embedded in rock or concrete.
Additionally, pillboxes were scattered in the mountains
and in the sides of cliffs.
The strength of the garrison was estimated at 10,000.
This led Allied planners to worry that, if these troops
were skillful and disciplined, the Pantellerian defense
could be formidable. They took some comfort in the
fact that, during the Tunisian campaign, anti-aircraft
gunners on the island made a poor showing against Allied
air attacks.
Extensive aerial reconnaissance proved a critical
element throughout the operation.

The AAF's first African-American fighter pilots--later called the Tuskegee
Airmen--flew P-40 Warhawks in support of the operation. Members of
the 99th FS had arrived in North Africa from Tuskegee, Ala., in April
1943.
Daily Coverage
Beginning in late May, the Northwest African Photographic
Reconnaissance Wing made at least one and sometimes
two daily swings over the island. Coverage increased
during June. And on June 11, the day ground forces
landed, as many as five photographic missions were
flown.
The reconnaissance film was interpreted at NAAF headquarters,
where targets were assigned daily. Intelligence experts
were assisted by Solly Zuckerman, an Oxford scientist
on loan from the British Combined Operations Staff.
They analyzed the aerial photographs for each bombing
mission for the relation between effort and effect.
NAAF intelligence experts relied almost exclusively
on aerial reconnaissance, working closely with the
reconnaissance units to ensure immediate delivery of
prints, to make target assignments. "The maintenance
of a constant check through aerial reconnaissance of
this kind constituted an essential part of the operation," stated
the official Army Air Forces history.
The effect was sustained destruction of key targets,
specifically coastal batteries and gun emplacements.
Eisenhower and Spaatz were convinced that the Pantellerian
garrison could not hold up under such a concentrated
air bombardment. Their objective was to shatter the
morale of the troops and civilian population.
For the duration of Corkscrew, Eisenhower's air arm
was headed by Mediterranean Air Command. This was a
small planning headquarters commanded by British Air
Chief Marshal Arthur W. Tedder. MAC oversaw Northwest
African Air Forces headed by Spaatz and comprising
several operational units--Northwest African Strategic
Air Forces commanded by Maj. Gen. Jimmy Doolittle;
Northwest African Tactical Air Force headed by Coningham;
as well as coastal, service, and training commands.
Also under Tedder were the Royal Air Force Middle East,
with the US Ninth Air Force and the RAF Malta.
Eisenhower directed Spaatz to throw the full resources
of the Northwest African Air Forces into the task.
For Corkscrew, a joint command directly responsible
to Eisenhower consisted of Spaatz; Rear Adm. R.R. McGrigor,
Royal Navy; and Maj. Gen. Walter E. Clutterbuck, commanding
the British 1st Infantry Division.
The US Twelfth Air Force and a number of groups from
Ninth Air Force also took part in Corkscrew. One of
the Twelfth units seeing its first action was the Tuskegee-trained
99th Fighter Squadron. The airmen of that unit--the
first African-American airmen to fly in combat for
the Army Air Forces--became known later as the Tuskegee
Airmen. The 99th, which had just arrived in North Africa
to reinforce the XII Air Support Command, flew P-40s
as part of Corkscrew.

B-17 Flying Fortresses (top) were among the Allied aircraft that flew
more than 5,000 sorties against Axis positions on Pantelleria, dropping
more than 6,000 tons of bombs. Here, an AAF photo gives a bird's-eye
view of a bombing raid on the island's airfield.
Doolittle's Command
However, the major responsibility for the attacks
fell to the Northwest African Strategic Air Forces,
flying from Tunisian bases, under Doolittle's command.
The NASAF comprised four groups of B-17 bombers (2nd
Bomb Group, 97th BG, 99th BG, and 301st BG); two groups
of B-25 bombers (310th BG and 321st BG); three groups
of B-26 bombers (17th BG, 319th BG, and 320th BG);
three groups of P-38 fighters (1st Fighter Group, 14th
FG, and 82nd FG); one group of P-40 fighters (325th
FG); and several wings of Wellingtons from the RAF
Middle East Command.
While primarily providing escort for the bombers,
fighter groups also conducted sweeps and dive-bombing
missions.
The mission of NAAF was basically tactical--the support
of land and amphibious operations. This support might
be delivered by airplanes of the NATAF or by long-range
bomber aircraft of the NASAF. (Except for several attacks
on Ploesti, Romania, and Wiener Neustadt, Austria,
in August and October 1943, Mediterranean-based aircraft
did not conduct strategic operations until after creation
of Fifteenth Air Force in November 1943.)
Although Doolittle's units were totally committed
to the operation, the NATAF, commanded by Coningham,
was only partially devoted to the air offensive. Only
units of the XII Air Support Command, based on the
east side of Tunisia's Cape Bon peninsula, and the
Tactical Bomber Force were available to Coningham.
The AAF, RAF, and South African Air Force began flying
scattered sorties against Pantelleria in early May.
In late May, in consultation with Tedder, both Spaatz
and Coningham decided that the air onslaught should
be conducted in two parts. From late May through June
6, the heavy bombing would be incrementally intensified.
In the second phase, from June 7 to June 11, Pantelleria
would be attacked around the clock, the weight of daily
attack increasing from 200 sorties to between 1,500
and 2,000 sorties on the 11th. At the same time, to
confuse the enemy, targets would also be bombed in
Sicily, Sardinia, and points on the mainland of Italy.
Simultaneously, a naval blockade of Pantelleria would
be carried out by British Adm. Andrew B. Cunningham's
forces.
The Corkscrew air offensive began May 18, led by 42
B-25s, 44 B-26s, and 91 P-38s and P-40s of Doolittle's
NASAF. Attacks were stepped up in late May against
little enemy fighter opposition. These attacks were
primarily directed against the airfield and the port
of Pantelleria. There were some reports of anti-aircraft
fire.
Reconnaissance in late May confirmed heavy damage
to the island's airfield. Craters were evident, the
main barracks and buildings near the underground hangar
were destroyed by direct hits, and supply dumps had
been heavily damaged. Moreover, damage to aircraft
on the ground had been considerable. Coastal batteries
and gun emplacements were continuously bombarded. Indications
were that the bombing had badly disrupted life on the
island.
On June 1, heavy bombers entered the fray, 19 B-17s,
together with Wellingtons, pounded the island. By June
6, daily sorties increased to 200 or more. The number
doubled or tripled over the next five days. Similarly,
bomb tonnage greatly increased, 231 tons being dropped
on June 5 and June 6 and intensifying with 600 tons
on June 7.
Also during the first week of June, British naval
vessels bombarded the harbor area of Pantelleria. On
June 8, a naval task force consisting of motor torpedo
boats, cruisers, and destroyers carried out a full-scale
bombardment of coastal batteries and the harbor's docks.
The B-17s, along with medium, light, and fighter bombers,
dropped almost 700 tons of bombs on June 8, followed
the next day by more than 822 tons. Meanwhile, surrender
leaflets were also dropped on the island.
Enemy fighter opposition, extremely light at first,
picked up during the June 5-7 period when Me-109s and
FW-190s appeared along with Italian fighter aircraft.
Again, on the 10th and 11th, Sicily-based enemy aircraft
appeared but failed to impede the Allied air offensive.
Of several hundred enemy airplanes seen in June, 57
were definitely destroyed and 10 probably destroyed.

Allied bombing of Pantelleria was an effective demonstration of what
airpower could achieve. It set the pattern for a strategy of increasingly
intensive air and naval bombardment to pave the way for land forces.
The Crescendo
On June 10, the air offensive reached a crescendo.
The Army Air Forces official history described how "wave
after wave of bombers swept over former Tunisian battlefields
and out across the Mediterranean." It went on
to note that observers were "struck by the power
of the aerial weapon which the Allies had forged."
The onslaught continued day and night, except for
a three-hour lull during which another surrender call
was made by the Allies. By the close of the day, more
than 1,760 sorties had been flown by heavy, medium,
light, and fighter bombers. On June 10 alone, 1,571
tons were released. It was one of the heaviest air
attacks of the war up to that time.
With the failure of the second surrender call to meet
with a response, the British 1st Infantry Division
embarked on the night of June 10-11 to assault and
capture Pantelleria.
As landing craft headed toward the island, B-17s delivered
a final pounding to the Pantelleria harbor area. During
the next 12 minutes, the Fortresses dropped tons of
bombs, resulting in "simultaneous flashes and
a great roar," stated the AAF official history. "Suddenly
the whole harbor area appeared to rise and hang in
midair, while smoke and dust billowed high, dwarfing
Montagna Grande, Pantelleria's tallest peak."
At about 11 a.m. on June 11, Allied airplanes spotted
a white cross on the airfield. Shortly thereafter,
the first British assault wave hit the beach. The commander
of the landing force contacted Pantelleria's military
governor, Vice Adm. Gino Pavesi, who surrendered the
island and the garrison of 78 Germans and 11,121 Italians.
A small number of captured German technicians maintained
that German soldiers and anti-aircraft gunners would
have made a much better showing than the island's garrison.
On the other hand, the sheer intensity of bombing and
its increasing weight, according to the testimony of
prisoners of war, made it doubtful that the outcome
would have been different.
The harbor facilities at Pantelleria had been badly
damaged; the town itself had been practically destroyed;
communications were a shambles; roads had been obliterated;
electric power had been destroyed; and water mains
were broken.
At Marghana airdrome, the airfield was cratered. Although
the underground hangar had withstood a number of direct
hits, except for two aircraft, all of the 80-plus enemy
airplanes had been either destroyed or damaged.
The 1943 Pantellerian experience pointed the way toward
the Allies' future strategy: Intensive air bombardment,
increasing in tempo, and naval bombardment would precede
landing operations. As the AAF official history noted: "The
pattern set here was probably one that would be followed
in other island operations and perhaps in the invasion
of the continent itself."
Churchill hailed the Pantellerian triumph, and Gen.
Henry H. "Hap" Arnold, Commanding General,
AAF, emphasized "the tremendous amount of bombs
dropped and the negligible losses of airplanes, which
speak well for planning, preparations, and execution."
The official AAF history noted, "The surrender
of the Italian-held islands furnished a spectacular
illustration of the intense and violent force that
the Allies could bring to bear upon the enemy. The
reduction of the islands furnished the first proof
of the power of such bombardments to induce surrender."
The fact was that Eisenhower's laboratory concept
had paid off. Pantelleria had been conquered primarily
by airpower. An invasion had not been necessary.
In a letter to Marshall, Eisenhower pointed out that
many had opposed Corkscrew, noting, "I am particularly
pleased that the operation turned out as it did because
I personally had to make the decision for its capture
in the face of much contrary advice, but I predicted
that the garrison would surrender before any infantry
soldier got ashore."
The Allies now intensified preparations for the assault
on Sicily in July 1943. Allied airplanes operating
from Pantelleria would play a critical role in that
assault operation.
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, "The
Genius of George Kenney," appeared in the
April 2002 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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