In March 1946, White deployed to Europe as the A-3 (staff officer responsible for operations) on the staff of the
United States Air Forces in Europe (USAFE). In June 1948, he became the Director of Plans of the US and British Combined Airlift Task Force, which carried out the
Berlin Airlift. He transferred to the newly formed
United States Air Force (USAF) with the rank of lieutenant colonel on 1 July 1948. White returned to the United States in August 1949, and attended the
Air War College at
Maxwell Air Force Base in
Alabama, where he was promoted to colonel again on 19 October 1949. From 1950 to 1953 he was the base commander at
Mather Air Force Base in
California. He attended the
National War College in
Washington, D.C., from August 1953 to June 1954. He then spent a year as the deputy chief of the Policy Division in the Air Force Plans Directorate, and as a member of the Joint Strategic Plans Group in the Office of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff. Promoted to the rank of
brigadier general in July 1955, he became commander of the
Iceland Defense Force. For this, he was awarded the
Order of the Falcon by the government of Iceland in 1957, and an
oak leaf cluster to his Legion of Merit. His citation read: White's subsequent career was with
nuclear weapons. He was the deputy chief of the
Armed Forces Special Weapons Project and its successor, the
Defense Atomic Support Agency, from August 1957 to August 1960. As such, he was an observer at the British
Operation Grapple nuclear tests in the Pacific. From August 1960 to July 1962 he was the assistant for special weapons and commander of the
3079th Aviation Depot Wing of the
Air Force Logistics Command, which was located at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in
Ohio. He then became the commander of the Air Force Special Weapons Center at
Kirtland Air Force Base in
New Mexico. For this service he was awarded the
Air Force Distinguished Service Medal. He retired from the USAF on 1 April 1966. == Later life ==