Aviation History

WAR IS HELL

James M. Scott has a glowing reputation among Pacific War historians and his books include definitive accounts of the Doolittle Raid and the Battle of Manila. In Black Snow, Scott turns to the United States’ bombing campaign against Japan in 1945.

The cast includes Army Air Forces chief Henry “Hap” Arnold; 21st Bomber Command leader Haywood Hansell; and Hansell’s replacement, Curtis LeMay. Scott provides background to the Boeing B-29 Superfortress program and explains how Arnold drove to get the world’s most advanced bomber into combat—prematurely, as it turns out—and how Hansell in the Marianas led faltering attempts to deploy the B-29 against Japan. Waiting in the wings was the hard-driving LeMay, arguably the finest airman of his generation and an absolute master of his trade: flying, navigating and bombing. Arnold, dissatisfied with B-29 operations out of India and China in mid-1944, sent LeMay there to take over. Then, in January 1945, LeMay received orders to assume command of Hansell’s Marianas operation.

After trial missions bombing Japan with incendiaries, LeMay shifted tactics. Instead of pursuing Hansell’s doctrinaire daylight high-altitude “precision” bombing against factories, LeMay gambled on a night strike by B-29s loaded with incendiaries and flying at only 5,000 to 7,000 feet. On the night of March 9,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Aviation History

Aviation History1 min read
Carded
Henri Farman’s American adventure did not end as the aviator had intended (see the feature starting on page 60), but the Frenchman at least had the satisfaction of being portrayed on a cigarette card. Issued in 1912, four years after Farman’s trip to
Aviation History2 min read
Nonstop Action
Seventy-five years ago, as both the Cold War and aviation technology were ramping up, the newly formed United States Air Force wanted to show the world the reach of its air arsenal. The recent development of functional mid-air refueling techniques by
Aviation History1 min read
Pole Dancer
It is an ignominious fate for any airplane, impaled on a pole at what appears to be an abandoned junkyard. Photographer Carol M. Highsmith captured this image of a long-past-its-prime Beechcraft Bonanza outside Mannford, Oklahoma, in December 2020. ■

Related