The Us Eighth Air Force in World War II: IRA Eaker, Hap Arnold, and Building American Air Power, 1942-1943 Volume 8
When America entered World War II in 1941, it was first left to the Army Air Forces to take the fight to Germany. In January 1942 the US Eighth Air Force was created and ordered to England, even though it was without men, equipment, or airplanes. This is the story of Brigadier General Ira C. Eaker's two years with VIII Bomber Command, and later as commander of the Eighth, as he worked to grow it into a force capable of striking German targets from above twenty thousand feet.
Initially promised one hundred airplanes and the men to fly them, he soon discovered "his" bombers were often diverted to the North African and Pacific theaters. Along the way Eaker faced other critical issues, including atrocious weather, heavy casualties, and the absence of escort fighters. Meanwhile, the head of the Army Air Forces, General "Hap" Arnold, clashed with and criticized Eaker for not flying more missions with more airplanes. Ultimately, as the air war unfolded, the war of words behind the scenes continued until the generals reached a point of irreconcilable differences and Arnold relieved Eaker of command.
In spite of this, the "Mighty Eighth Air Force" continued to pummel the Germans. Not once, not even in the two absolute worst air battles of the war--the Schweinfurt missions of 1943, each of which cost one of every four bombers and six hundred- plus men for each mission--did the Eighth ever turn back before reaching their target. Not until after the first two years was there a fighter that could escort the heavy bombers, the B-17s and B-24s, even partway into Germany, much less to targets near the Vienna border, and return. The story of the first two years of the "Mighty Eighth Air Force" in many senses presents an even stronger case for heroism, dedication, and simple self-sacrifice than that depicting events in the final seventeen months.
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Become an affiliateWILLIAM J. DAUGHERTY was with the CIA and then a professor at Armstrong State University (now Georgia Southern University- Armstrong Campus). He spent eight years in Marine Corps aviation and served in Vietnam. Daugherty is the author of In the Shadow of the Ayatollah and Executive Secrets: Covert Action and the Presidency. He lives in Savannah, Georgia.
"[A] number of salient issues receive superb treatment. These include the very doctrine that the Bomber Mafia so ardently sought to prove: that high altitude, precision, daylight bombing could win wars. A good bit of the antagonism between Arnold and Eaker occurred because, in these early days, verification was slow in coming. Instead, issues the Bomber Mafia had not considered when developing the doctrine neutered the Eighth: miserable European weather, lack of intel and reconnaissance, and the inability of the bombers to defend themselves against a powerful, experienced, and lethal Luftwaffe. . . . This book is a superb account of this critical time in the history of air warfare, and especially of the eminently important Eighth Air Force. Daugherty covers a lot of ground cogently and convincingly and is ultimately successful in documenting Eaker's success as the first Eighth Air Force commander. Highly recommended for air power enthusiasts and serious air power scholars."--Journal of America's Military Past