Raways Airfield (Dobodura No. 1) Raways Airfield was completed by late 1943 by the US Army for the usage of liaison planes and light aircraft.
Dobodura No. 2 Dobodura No. 3 Horanda 4 (Dobodura No. 4) The Horanda No. 4 Strip had two runways. On January 1944, there was a camp consisting of a mess hall and tents located two miles from the strip, which the 22nd Bomb Group was stationed in before. After they left, the 501st unit had moved in, reoccupying facilities and using the No. 4 strip which was within walking distance.
Dobodura No. 5 Dobodura No. 6 Kenney Airfield (Dobodura No. 7) Between late 1942 and early 1943, Kenney Airfield was constructed, named in honor of in honor of Fifth Air Force Commander General George Kenney. It was also known as No. 7, West 7, or Horanda No. 7 Airstrip or West 7, however it was more commonly known as Kenney Airfield. It was the only airfield that was not abandoned after the war, and is known as
Girua Airport today. ; Major USAAF units assigned •
3d Bombardment Group (May 20, 1943 – February 3, 1944) :: Headquarters,
13th,
89th,
90th Bomb Squadrons,
North American B-25 Mitchell •
22d Bombardment Group (October 9, 1943 – January 13, 1944) :: Headquarters,
2d,
19th,
408th Bomb Squadrons,
Martin B-26 Marauder •
43d Bombardment Group (December 10, 1943 – March 4, 1944) :: Headquarters,
63d,
64th,
65th,
403d Bomb Squadrons,
Consolidated B-24 Liberator •
90th Bombardment Group (December 1943 – February 23, 1944) :: Headquarters,
319th,
320th,
321st,
400th Bomb Squadrons, B-24 Liberator •
345th Bombardment Group (January 18 – February 16, 1944) :: Headquarters,
498th,
499th,
500th,
501st Bomb Squadrons, B-25 Mitchell •
417th Bombardment Group (February 7 – April 8, 1944), (Headquarters) ::
672d,
673d,
673d,
675th Bomb Squadrons,
Douglas A-20 Havoc •
49th Fighter Group (March – November 20, 1943) :: Headquarters,
7th,
8th Fighter Squadrons,
Curtiss P-40,
9th Fighter Squadron,
Lockheed P-38 Lightning and
Republic P-47 Thunderbolt •
58th Fighter Group (December 28, 1943 – April 3, 1944) :: Headquarters,
69th,
310th,
311th Fighter Squadrons, P-47 Thunderbolt •
475th Fighter Group (August 14, 1943 – March 24, 1944) (Headquarters) ::
432d Fighter Squadron,
P-38 Lightning, (May 15 – July 12, 1944), (North Borio Airfield, Dobodura No. 15) ::
433rd Fighter Squadron,
P-38 Lightning, (August 14 – October 3, 1943), (Borio Airfield, Dobodura No. 11) •
418th Night Fighter Squadron (
V Fighter Command) (November 22, 1943 – March 28, 1944),
Northrop P-61 Black Widow •
80th Fighter Squadron, (
8th Fighter Group), (December 11, 1943 – February 28, 1944), P-38 Lightning •
375th Troop Carrier Group, (August 19 – December 19, 1943) (HQ Echelon)
Dobodura No. 8 Dobodura No. 9 Borio Airfield No. 10 (Dobodura No. 10) Borio Airfield No. 11 (Dobodura No. 11) On July 1943, the construction of Borio Airfield No. 11 was proposed. Between late 1943 and early 1944, the airfield was built by the US Army with taxiways connecting to North Borio Airfield and North Embi Airfield. It was used as a USAAF fighter base, and had a compound with US Army nurses and personnel stationed. After the Pacific War, it was abandoned, however it was listed as Embi Landing Ground in the 1970s.
Units: •
475th Fighter Group,
433rd Fighter Squadron, equipped with P-38s, arrives from Amberley on August 14, 1943
Embi Airfield North Embi Airfield (Dobodura No. 12) Dobodura No. 13 Dobodura No. 14 North Borio Airfield (Dobodura No. 15) == Allied Units ==