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Title Fifth Air Force Light and Medium Bomber Operations During 1942 and 1943: Building Doctrine and Forces That Triumphed in the Battle of the Bismarck Sea and the Wewak Raid
Published Ft. Belvoir Defense Technical Information Center MAY 1992

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Description 61 pages
Summary When Generals George C. Kenney and Ennis C. Whitehead became the two senior commanders of the US Fifth Air Force in July 1942 their work was cut out for them. The previous January, the Japanese secured the port of Rabaul in eastern New Britain. They immediately began the drive down the east coast of New Guinea with the objective of driving the Allies from Port Moresby. For the next year and a half, in some the harshest climate of WW II, the Fifth Air Force helped to reverse the tide and drive the Japanese from eastern New Guinea. This was accomplished despite the Europe-first policy and an inappropriate doctrine based on high altitude, daylight, precision bombing. Kenney and Whitehead's first task was to modify existing aircraft and develop a suitable doctrine to interdict Japanese shipping between New Britain and New Guinea. In order to suppress ship-borne antiaircraft artillery, forward-firing machine guns were mounted in the nose of Douglas A-20 light bombers and North American B-25 medium bombers. Low altitude skip-bombing tactics were borrowed from the British. By Feb 1943, Allied intelligence, greatly aided by ULTRA intercepts, predicted the movement of a Japanese convoy destined for New Guinea. On Mar 3rd after being hit twice by mass, coordinated attacks, the convoy was virtually wiped out in what became known as the Battle of the Bismarck Sea. That same fleet of light and medium bombers also proved deadly against enemy airfields. Aircraft combat range was extended and modifications were made to the bomb bays to accept parachute fragmentation bombs. Airfield attack profiles were developed and ULTRA provided a suitable target. In preparation for the anticipated Allied ground invasion of the Huon Peninsula, the Japanese moved the 4th Air Army to their bases near Wewak. Beginning on Aug 17, Fifth Air Force bombers caught the enemy on the ground. By Aug 21, nearly every aircraft at Wewak was destroyed
Analysis FIFTH AIR FORCE
BATTLE OF THE BISMARCK SEA
WEWAK RAID
SOUTHWEST PACIFIC
Subject United States. Army Air Forces. Air Force, 5th.
SUBJECT United States. Army Air Forces. Air Force, 5th. fast (OCoLC)fst00597620
Subject Bismarck Sea, Battle of the, 1943.
World War, 1939-1945 -- Campaigns -- New Guinea.
World War, 1939-1945 -- Aerial operations, American
Bombing.
Second world war.
Military history.
Military doctrine.
Interdiction.
Theses.
Aerial warfare.
Military tactics.
Air power.
Bomber aircraft.
South pacific ocean.
Military campaigns.
Military operations, Aerial -- American.
Battles.
Military Aircraft Operations.
Bombers.
New Guinea.
Form Electronic book
Author Gann, Timothy D
AIR UNIV MAXWELL AFB AL SCHOOL OF ADVANCED AIRPOWER STUDIES