The Fifteenth Air Force (15th AF) was established on 1 November 1943 in
Tunis,
Tunisia as part of the
United States Army Air Forces in the
Mediterranean Theater of Operations as a strategic air force. It commenced combat operations the day after it was formed. The first commander was General
Jimmy Doolittle. 15th AF resulted from a reorganization of American air forces in the Mediterranean in late 1943.
Lewis H. Brereton's
Ninth Air Force (9th AF) was moved to England, taking over the medium bomber units of
Eighth Air Force, while
Twelfth Air Force gave its strategic units to 15th AF, becoming the Americans' Mediterranean tactical air force. The new air force was activated with a strength of ninety
Consolidated B-24 Liberators and 210
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses, inherited from the Twelfth Air Force and Ninth Air Force. In December, new groups, most of which were equipped with B-24s soon started arriving from the United States. Thirteen new groups were added. It was hoped that the 15th AF – stationed in the
Mediterranean – would be able to operate when the Eighth Air Force (8th AF) in England was socked in by bad English weather. The 9th AF would later move to England to serve as a tactical unit to take part in the
invasion of Europe. Once
bases around Foggia in Italy became available, the 15th was able to reach targets in southern France, Germany,
Poland,
Czechoslovakia, and the
Balkans, some of which were difficult to reach from England.
Operational Units •
5th Bombardment Wing (B-17 Flying Fortress) "Y" Tail Code : Transferred from: Twelfth Air Force : Headquartered:
Foggia, Italy, 13 December 1943 – 2 November 1945 :
2d Bombardment Group "Circle-Y" :
97th Bombardment Group "Triangle-Y" :
99th Bombardment Group "Diamond-Y" :
301st Bombardment Group "Square-Y" (green) :
463d Bombardment Group "Wedge-Y" (yellow) :
483d Bombardment Group "Y-Star" (red) :: Transferred from
MacDill Field, Florida, 2 March 1944 : Attached:
68th Tactical Reconnaissance Group: :: November 1943 – April 1944 Airfields:
Amendola Airfield (2d BW),
Celone Airfield (463d BW),
Cerignola Airfield (97th BW), Foggia (2d BW, 463d BW),
Lucera Airfield (301st BW), Manduria, (68th RG), Maricianise (97th BW), Sterparone (483d BW), Tortorella (99th BW, 483d BW) •
47th Bombardment Wing (B-24 Liberator) "The Pyramidiers" "Triangle" Tail Code : Transferred from
Ninth Air Force : Headquartered:
Manduria, Italy, 11 November 1943 – May 1945 :
98th Bombardment Group Triangle (Yellow/Black Tail Stripe) :
376th Bombardment Group "Triangle Circle 2" :
449th Bombardment Group "Triangle Circle 3" :
450th Bombardment Group ("Cotton Tails" 1943–45) "Triangle Circle 5" Airfields:
Brindisi (98th BG),
Grottaglie (449th BG),
Lecce (98th BG),
Manduria (98th BG),
San Pancrazio (376th BG, 450th BG) •
49th Bombardment Wing (B-24 Liberator) "Red Tail" : Transferred from
Greenville AAB,
South Carolina 6 April 1944 : Headquartered:
Bari Airfield, Italy, 6 April 1944 – 16 October 1945 :
451st Bombardment Group "Red Tail Red Dot" :
461st Bombardment Group "Red Tail Red Dash" :
484th Bombardment Group "Red Tail Red Bow" Airfields: Gioia del Colle (451st BG), San Pancrazio (451st BG), Torretta (484th BG) •
55th Bombardment Wing (B-24 Liberator) "Yellow/Black Tail" : Transferred from:
MacDill Field, Florida : Headquartered:
Taranto, Italy, March 1944 – July 1945 :
460th Bombardment Group "Yellow/Black Tail Square Dot" :
464th Bombardment Group "Yellow/Black Tail Square l" :
465th Bombardment Group "Yellow/Black Tail" :
485th Bombardment Group "Yellow/Black Tail Square X" Airfields: Gioia (464th BG), Pantanella (465th BG),
Spinazzola Airfield (460th BG),
Venosa Airfield (485th BG) •
304th Bombardment Wing (B-24 Liberator) "Black Diamond" : Activated in Italy : Headquartered:
Cerignola Airfield, Italy, 29 December 1943 – September 1945 :
454th Bombardment Group "Black Diamond" :
455th Bombardment Group "Black Diamond Yellow Tail" :
456th Bombardment Group "Black Diamond Red Tail" :
459th Bombardment Group"Black Diamond Yellow/Black Check Tail" Airfields:
Giulia Airfield (455th BG),
San Giovanni Airfield (454th BG, 455th BG, 456th BG) •
305th Fighter Wing (Provisional) (
Lockheed P-38 Lightning) : Transferred from
Twelfth Air Force, 1943 : Headquartered: :: Foggia, 29 December 1943 – 19 January 1944 ::
Spinazzola Airfield, 19 January – 6 March 1944 ::
Bari Airfield, 6 March – December 1944 ::
Torremaggiore, December 1944 – 9 September 1945 :
1st Fighter Group :: 27FS (HV Red), 71st (LM Black), 94th (UN Yellow) :
14th Fighter Group :
82d Fighter Group Airfields:
Gioia del Colle Airfield (1st FG), Lesina (14th FG 82d FG), Salosa (1st FG),
Triolo Airfield (14th FG),
Vincenzo Airfield (82d FG) •
306th Fighter Wing (
Republic P-47 Thunderbolt)(
North American P-51 Mustang) : Activated in Italy : Headquartered: ::
Bari Airfield, Italy, 15–27 January 1944 :: Foggia, Italy, 27 January – 23 February 1944 ::
Lucera, Italy, 23 February – 8 March 1944 ::
Torremaggiore, Italy, 8 March – 3 September 1944 ::
Lesina Airfield, Italy, 3 September 1944 – 5 March 1945 ::
Fano, Italy, 5 March – 15 July 1945 :
31st Fighter Group :: Red diagonal tail stripes after conversion from Spitfires :: 307FS (MX), 308FS (HL), 309FS (WZ) :
52d Fighter Group :: Yellow Tails assigned 1 August 1944 :: 2FS (QP) 4FS (WD), 5FS (VF) :
325th Fighter Group :: Black / Yellow checkerboard Tails :: 317FS (10–39), 318FS (40–69), 319FS (70–99) :
332d Fighter Group :: Red Tails assigned 1 August 1944 :: 99FS (A00 – A39, Blue), 100FS (1–39, Black), 301FS (40–69, White), 302FS (70–99,01-09, Yellow) Airfields: Capodichino (332nd FG), Cattolica (332d FG),
Madna Airfield (52nd FG), Mondolfo (31st FG. 325th FG), Montecorvino (332nd FG), Piagiolino (52nd FG), Ramitelli (332nd FG), Rimini (325th FG),
Vincenzo Airfield (325th FG) .* Sent to Aghione,
Corsica from 10 to 21 August 1944 for
Operation Dragoon (Invasion of Southern France) •
15th Special Group (Provisional) : Reported directly to Fifteenth Air Force : Assigned to 15th Air Force in June 1944 :: Stationed at Brindisi :: Re-designated 2641st Special Group (Provisional) :: 859th BS flew Carpetbagger operations out of England until September 1944 before being moved to MTO :: 885th BS was initially known as 122nd BS assigned to 68th Reconnaissance Group operating B-17s in the MTO. Assigned to the 15th Special Group in January 1945. •
305th Bombardment Wing : Activated in Italy, 29 December 1943, No units assigned until 13 June 1945 : Headquarters:
Torremaggiore, December 1944 – September 1945 : 1st Fighter Group : 14th Fighter Group : 31st Fighter Group : 52nd Fighter Group : 82nd Fighter Group : 325th Fighter Group : 332d Fighter Group
Initial Operations The 15th Air Force began its operations on 1 November 1943, attacking the Rimini Marshalling yard with 28 B-25's assigned to the 321st BG (M). On 1 December 1943, the Headquarters was moved to
Bari Airfield, Italy. On 4 January 1944, the Fifteenth, along with
Twelfth Air Force, were organized into
Mediterranean Allied Air Forces, along with
No. 205 Group Royal Air Force. MAAF was the southern component of
U.S. Strategic Air Forces, Europe, the overall USAAF command and control organization in Europe. The first major operation carried out by Fifteenth Air Force was bombing missions in support of the
Anzio Landings in Italy,
Operation Shingle beginning on 22 January 1944. Strikes on German and fascist Italian targets were carried out and caused widespread damage to Axis forces.
Big Week "Big Week" was the name of an intense Eighth and Fifteenth Air Forces series of attacks on Germany in a series of co-ordinated raids on the German aircraft industry. The plan, code-named "Operation Argument," was to use both American strategic air forces in Europe, with support by the
Royal Air Force with night bombing raids to destroy or seriously cripple the German ability to produce combat aircraft. The Americans were facing strong
Luftwaffe fighter opposition to their daylight bombing raids over Nazi-occupied Europe, and it was planned to initiate Operation Argument at the earliest possible date. On 22 February 1944, Fifteenth Air Force made its first attack on Germany, with an attack on
Regensburg. The Fifteenth dispatched a force of 183 bombers to the Oberstraubing Messerschmidt assembly plant. Some 118 bombed with good results but fourteen were shot down. The next day the 15th sent 102 bombers to the
Steyr ball-bearing works in
Austria where they destroyed twenty percent of the plant. On 24 February, over 180 Liberators inflicted considerable damage to the
Messerschmitt Bf 110 assembly plant at
Gotha, losing 28 aircraft in the process. On 25 February 114 B-17s and B-24s were dispatched to Steyr again, but the force became separated and the Liberators bombed the
Fiume oil refinery instead. Seventeen bombers were lost. Despite these losses, it was believed that the USSTAF had dealt the German aircraft industry a severe blow.
Oil industry targets in
Bratislava,
Slovakia, 16 June 1944 In April,
General Eisenhower ordered the USSTAF to attack German fuel production centers by striking both the oil refineries and the factories producing synthetic fuels. The 15th started the offensive on 5 April when it dispatched 235 B-17s and B-24s from Italy to transportation targets in the vicinity of the
Ploiești oilfields in
Romania. The refineries were attacked again on 15 and 24 April, inflicting additional damage. Attacks on oil targets had assumed top priority by October and vast fleets of heavy bombers, escorted by
P-38 Lightning and
P-51 Mustang fighters, attacked refineries in Germany,
Reichsgau Sudetenland,
Slovakia and Romania. The P-51 escorts were able to establish an environment of air superiority, enabling the bombers to roam widely across southern and eastern Europe, attacking targets at
Brüx in
Reichsgau Sudetenland,
Bratislava in
Slovakia,
Budapest,
Komárom,
Győr, and
Pétfürdő in Hungary,
Belgrade and other cities in
Yugoslavia, and
Trieste in north-eastern Italy.
Soviet support By June 1944, the 15th Air Force was bombing railway networks in southeast Europe in support of Soviet military operations in
Romania. Throughout the summer of 1944,
Austrian aircraft manufacturing centers at
Wiener Neustadt were bombed and oil producing centers were attacked. On 2 June, the 15th Air Force flew its first "shuttle" mission when 130 B-17s and P-51 escorts landed in Russian controlled territory after a raid in Hungary. Two more shuttle missions followed.
Operation Anvil In August, the 15th began attacking targets in Southern France in preparation for
Operation Anvil, the invasion of Southern France.
Marseilles,
Lyon,
Grenoble, and
Toulon were all attacked by B-24s and B-17s.
Operation Reunion After the
1944 Romanian coup d'état, the 15th Air Force bombed the German-occupied airports of
Băneasa and
Otopeni. Between 31 August and 3 September 1944, aircraft from the 15th AF carried out
Operation Reunion by
airlifting the released Allied prisoners from Romania.
The end of the Third Reich The only 15th AF mission to
Berlin was on 24 March 1945 when 666 bombers struck the capital,
Munich, and other German targets, as well as
Czechoslovakia. The Berlin force was attacked by Me 262 jets that inflicted losses (one bombers and five fighters) while the Mustangs claimed eight jets downed – actual Luftwaffe records show only three Me 262's lost in this engagement. The 47th BW and 55th BW attacked Fliegerhorst Neuburg damaging or destroying 54 Me 262A-1's from III./KG (J) 54, 304th BW attacked Fliegerhorst Münich-Riem destroying 13 Me 262's. The NASM's Me 262 shows a claim credit for a B-17 shot down this date. The last major effort came on 25 April when 467 bombers struck rail targets in Austria, severing communications into Czechoslovakia. The 15th's final bombing mission was flown 1 May when 27 B-17s escorted by 51 P38's of the 14th FG attacked Salzburg rail targets. With the German surrender in Italy, 15th Air Force aircraft began dropping supplies over Yugoslavia and evacuating Allied prisoners of war. It performing its last mission on 16 May 1945. A total of around 2,110 bombers were lost on operations by its 15 B-24 and six B-17
bombardment groups, while its seven fighter groups claimed a total of 1,836 enemy aircraft destroyed. The Fifteenth was inactivated in Italy 15 September 1945. ==Postwar era in late 1940s==