and General of the (then) Army Air Forces
"Hap" Arnold during the
Potsdam Conference in Germany, July 21, 1945 In August 1942, Norstad was named assistant chief of staff for operations (A-3) of the
Twelfth Air Force, going to
England with it the following month in support of
Operation Husky, and to
Algiers, North Africa in October 1942. Here he met
General Dwight Eisenhower, who said of him: "It was on that occasion that I first met Lieutenant Colonel Lauris Norstad, a young air officer who so impressed me by his alertness, grasp of problems, and personality that I never thereafter lost sight of him. He was and is one of those rare men whose capacity knows no limit." During his time in North Africa, future atomic strike commander
Paul Tibbets was briefly on his staff. In his autobiography, Tibbets claimed that he embarrassed Norstad in a strike planning meeting by being critical of his decision to bomb a target at low altitude, offering to lead it himself at 6000 feet if Norstad would fly with him as co-pilot, and Norstad was in the process of having him court-martialled before General
Jimmy Doolittle got Tibbets transferred back to the US before Norstad could sink his career. Tibbets also claimed that Norstad was a "social climber" and political animal in the Air Force and that he aligned himself tightly with
Hoyt Vandenberg and followed him up the chain of command. In February 1943, he was promoted to brigadier general and assumed the additional duty of assistant chief of staff for operations of the
Northwest African Air Forces. In December 1943 he was appointed director of operations of the
Mediterranean Allied Air Forces at Algiers, moving with it to
Caserta, Italy, two months later. Norstad was transferred to Washington, D.C. in August 1944, where he was deputy chief of Air Staff at Army Air Force Headquarters with added duty as chief of staff of the
20th Air Force. He was relieved of this additional duty May 8, 1945, and assumed additional duty as assistant chief of Air Staff for Plans at Army Air Force Headquarters. He was promoted to major general the following month.{{cite web Relieved of his assignment as chief of staff of the 20th Air Force in February 1946, he continued as assistant chief of air staff for plans until the following June, when he was appointed director of the
Plans and Operations Division of the
War Department at Washington, DC. On October 1, 1947, following the division of the War Department into the Departments of the Army and Air Force, Norstad transferred to the Air Force and was appointed deputy chief of staff for operations of the Air Force, and the following May assumed additional duty as acting vice chief of staff of the Air Force.{{cite web ==SHAPE leadership==