Whereas the Bomber Command in the RAF was a single organisation, reporting directly to the
Chief of the Air Staff, there were many American Bomber Commands. They were subordinate formations, reporting in general to various numbered Air Forces around the world. Out of those organisations, four were tasked with strategic bombing of Germany and Japan.
VIII Bomber Command,
IX Bomber Command,
XX Bomber Command and
XXI Bomber Command.
VIII Bomber Command VIII Bomber Command was the UK-based strategic bomber arm of the
Eighth Air Force and contributed a substantial part of
Operation Pointblank, the day-night bombing campaign by the RAF and USAAF to eliminate the
Luftwaffe in preparation for the invasion of Europe. Two aircraft, the
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, and the
Consolidated B-24 Liberator, were the mainstays of this command. The B-17 was more highly regarded, but the Liberator had a greater range and a larger bomb load. VIII Bomber Command, known as "
Pinetree", began strategic operations in Europe on 17 August 1942, with daylight missions on the precept that daylight attacks were more accurate than night attacks. The RAF and the Luftwaffe had both tried daylight bombing early in the war and abandoned it in the face of serious losses. Until June, 1943, VIII Bomber Command could not mount missions of more than 100 aircraft and consequently limited targets to those in
Occupied France and the
Low Countries, and to shallow penetrations of Germany. Attempts to attack the German aircraft industry during the summer and fall of 1943, beyond the range of escort fighters, resulted in critical losses of aircrew. Daylight bombing became effective when long range escort fighters such as the
North American P-51 Mustang became available in sizeable numbers. In January 1944, VIII Bomber Command was re-designated the 8th Air Force when the
United States Strategic Air Forces came into being to coordinate the combined efforts of the 8th and the
15th Air Force in
Italy.
IX Bomber Command IX Bomber Command was part of the
Ninth Air Force and had started life as the heavy bomber unit contingent of the
U.S. Army Forces in the Middle East (USAFIME) fighting in the
Egypt-Libya Campaign during 1942. When in 1943, the
Ninth Air Force moved from the
Mediterranean Theater of Operations to the
United Kingdom to become a tactical air force in the
European Theater of Operations, the B-24s transferred to Twelfth Air Force, then to the newly created Fifteenth. IX Bomber Command equipped with Martin B-26 medium bombers and Douglas A-20 light bombers in preparation for the Normandy Invasion.
XX Bomber Command XX Bomber Command was part of the
Twentieth Air Force and flew missions from China against mainland Japan in
Operation Matterhorn. The forward airbases in China were supplied out of India by the flying supplies over
the Hump from
India. The key development for bombing Japan was the
Boeing B-29, with an operational range of 1,500 miles (2,400 km); almost 90% of the bombs dropped on Japan's Home Islands (147,000 tons) were delivered by B-29s. The first mission from China was on June 15, 1944, from
Chengdu, over 1,500 miles away. This first attack was not particularly damaging to Japan. Forty-seven of the sixty-eight B–29s airborne hit the target area in Tokyo. Four aborted with mechanical problems, four crashed, six jettisoned their bombs because of mechanical difficulties. Others bombed secondary targets or targets of opportunity. One B–29 was lost to enemy aircraft. Bombing from China was never a satisfactory arrangement because not only were the Chinese forward airbases difficult to supply via "The Hump" (as the Himalayas' foothills were called), but the B-29s operating from them could only reach Japan if they substituted some of the bomb load for extra fuel tanks in the bomb-bays. When Admiral
Chester Nimitz's
island-hopping campaign captured islands close enough to Japan to be within the range of B-29s,
XXI Bomber Command commanded Twentieth Air Force units flying from the islands in a much more effective bombing campaign of the Japanese home islands.
XXI Bomber Command In the Pacific, XXI Bomber Command was also part of the
Twentieth Air Force. It was the main instrument of destruction used against
Japan. Its
B-29 Superfortresses, operating from the
Marianas, were the longest range and most modern bomber in service in the world at the time, although not developed until almost the end of the war. As in Europe, the USAAF tried daylight precision bombing. It proved inconclusive because of poor weather conditions, jet stream over Japan that severely affected both aircraft and bomb drops, and inadequately trained crews. Twentieth Air Force commander and AAF Commanding General
Henry H. Arnold grew impatient with a lack of discernible results, and replaced General
Haywood S. Hansell with General
Curtis LeMay as commander of XXI Bomber Command on January 21, 1945. After six weeks of further attempts at precision bombing, LeMay acceded to command pressures for
area bombing and switched in March to mass
firebombing attacks by night from low level. The Japanese economy was uniquely vulnerable to this sort of attack, the cities being closely packed and largely built of wood, and manufacturing being 90%
cottage industry. The air attacks on Japan included the most devastating single air raid in history. It was not, as some might think, the result of dropping the
atomic bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It was a
firebombing of Tokyo on the night of 9–10 March 1945, which created a
conflagration and killed 100,000 people and destroyed 16 square miles of the city, far more damage and deaths than either the atomic bombing of
Hiroshima or of
Nagasaki. ==References==