He earned his pilot wings just as
World War II was ending and did not see any combat during the war. After completing gunnery training and
P-47 Thunderbolt training, he was assigned to the
1st Fighter Squadron of the
413th Fighter Group on
Okinawa from March to October 1946, and then with the
25th Fighter Squadron of the
51st Fighter Group, also on Okinawa, until March 1948. During this time, Blesse transitioned to the
F-80 Shooting Star jet fighter. His next assignment was with the
63d Fighter Squadron of the
56th Fighter Group at
Selfridge Air Force Base, where he served from March 1948 to November 1950.
Korean War Blesse was assigned to the
67th Fighter-Bomber Squadron of the
18th Fighter-Bomber Group in Korea from November 1950 to February 1951, and then with the
7th Fighter-Bomber Squadron of the
49th Fighter-Bomber Group. He flew
F-80 Shooting Stars and
P-51 Mustangs, during his first tour of duty in Korea. He returned to the U.S. in June 1951. Blesse then served with the
94th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron at
George Air Force Base until April 1952, when he returned to Korea for a second tour, this time with the
334th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron, returning to the U.S. in October 1952, where he flew
F-86 Sabres and was credited in destroying nine
MiG-15s and one
La-9 in aerial combat plus 1 probable and 3 more damaged. Overall, he flew 223 combat missions in the F-51 Mustang, F-80 Shooting Star, and F-86 Sabre fighters.
Post Korean War From December 1952 to February 1956, he served as a gunnery instructor and squadron commander at
Nellis Air Force Base and he was on the Air Training Command Fighter Gunnery Team in 1954 and 1955. During this time, he wrote the book "No Guts, No Glory", which has been used as a basis for fighter combat operations for many of the world's air forces, such as
Royal Air Force, the
U.S. Marine Corps, Chinese Nationalist,
Korean Air Force, and
U.S. Air Force since 1955. As recently as 1973, 3,000 copies were reproduced and sent to tactical units in the field. During the 1955 Air Force Worldwide Gunnery Championship, he won all six trophies offered for individual performance, a feat never equaled. He transferred to Randolph Air Force Base in February 1956, and served as chief of the Fighter Division of Crew Training until April 1958, when he was assigned to the
32nd Fighter Interceptor Squadron at
Soesterberg Air Base, the
Netherlands serving as commander of the squadron before returning to the United States in August 1961. He served as base and squadron commander of the
F-100 Super Sabre and
F-102 organization. He returned to the United States in August 1961 as a member of the
Air Staff with the inspector general,
Norton Air Force Base,
California, where he served until August 1965. Col Blesse next attended
National War College in Washington, D.C. During this assignment he attended night school and earned a
master's degree in
international relations at
The George Washington University. He then attended
F-4 Phantom II Combat Crew Training.
Vietnam War During the
Vietnam War, Blesse was assigned as Director of Operations for the
366th Tactical Fighter Wing at
Da Nang Air Base in the
Republic of Vietnam from April 1967 to April 1968. During this one-year tour of duty, he flew 108 combat missions over
North Vietnam and another 46 in
Laos and
South Vietnam. He was decorated for valor for helping unload the bombs from a burning F-4 Phantom II aircraft during a rocket attack. While on his first tour in 1967–1968, he flew in total 156 combat missions. Blesse next served as Director of Operations for the
474th Tactical Fighter Wing, U.S. Air Force's first
General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark wing at Nellis Air Force Base, from May 1968 until becoming the Wing's commander in June 1969. He was made Commander of the
831st Air Division at
George Air Force Base in June 1970. During his second tour in Vietnam, he served as Assistant Director of Operations for
7th Air Force at
Tan Son Nhut Air Base in the Republic of Vietnam from January to July 1971. In May 1968 he again was assigned to Nellis Air Force Base, this time as director of operations of the
474th Tactical Fighter Wing, and in June 1969 became commander. In July 1970 General Blesse became commander of the 831st Air Division at
George Air Force Base, California, and then was selected for another tour of duty in the Republic of Vietnam as assistant director of operations for
Seventh Air Force,
Tan Son Nhut Air Base. Blesse then became Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations followed by Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations at Headquarters
Pacific Air Forces at
Hickam Air Force Base, where he served from July 1971 to November 1973. From November 1973 to August 1974, he served as senior Air Force member on the
Weapons Systems Evaluation Group in the Office of the
Secretary of Defense, followed by service as Deputy Inspector General of the
U.S. Air Force, where he served from August 1974 until April 1, 1975. He retired from the USAF on April 1, 1975, with more than 6,500 flying hours in fighter-type aircraft and more than 650 hours combat time to his credit. ==Later life==