(right) and Brigadier General Charles Banfill (left) at
8th Air Force headquarters in England In World War II, Anderson worked in the
Air War Plans Division, and was involved in planning the
Combined Bomber Offensive against Nazi Germany. He proved to be a brilliant, strategic planner and combat leader, as he selected the targets, planned, and directed the missions for Operation Big Week of February of 1944. These concentrated bombing strikes were the beginning of the 1,000-plane raids over Germany, which marked the turning point of the air war over Europe. He was promoted to brigadier general on September 18, 1942 and promoted to major general on February 28, 1944.
Search for Glenn Miller At the end of 1944, Anderson was in charge of an important search effort. Anderson's wife, Maude Miller Anderson, was band leader Major
Glenn Miller's cousin. Miller went missing over the English Channel on December 15, 1944. The
Eighth Air Force and
SHAEF did not realize that the UC-64 Norseman plane with Miller aboard was missing until three days later, on December 18, 1944. Upon realizing the airplane and Miller were missing, Anderson, Deputy Commander for Operations of the Eighth Air Force, ordered a search and investigation. Miller was not found. Miller's wife Helen accepted her husband's Bronze Star medal at a ceremony at Miller's New York business office on March 23, 1945. ==Korean War==