The Mighty Eighth: The Air War in Europe as Told by the Men Who Fought It
The Mighty Eighth: The Air War in Europe as Told by the Men Who Fought It book cover

The Mighty Eighth: The Air War in Europe as Told by the Men Who Fought It

Paperback – September 1, 2015

Price
$18.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
512
Publisher
Dutton Caliber
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0425281574
Dimensions
5.9 x 1.1 x 9 inches
Weight
1.05 pounds

Description

Praise for The Mighty Eighth “Great reading.”—Stephen Ambrose“Bold, brawny, epic in scope...Astor captures the fire and apssion of these tens of thousands of U.S. airmen who flew through the inferno that was the bomber war over Europe.”—Stephen Coonts Gerald Astor was a World War II veteran and award-winning journalist and historian whose articles have appeared in the New York Times , Playboy , and Esquire . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Within twenty-four hours after the first bombs from carrier-based Japanese airplanes exploded at Pearl Harbor, the United States entered a world-wide war in which the flying machine, largely a bit player previously, assumed an ever larger role. But, on December 7, 1941, what would become the single largest component of the American aerial arms, the Eighth Air Force, which carried the heaviest portion of war in the skies to Germany, did not even exist on paper. For that matter, the entire U.S. Air Force hardly deserved the name, so deficient was it in terms of numbers of combat aircraft performance capability and qualified airmen compared to enemy forces.The Japanese Mitsubishi Zero or Zeke fighters in the South Pacific flew faster, higher and farther than any comparable aircraft in the American arsenal. In Europe, the German Messerschmitt 109 and 110 and the Focke Wulf 190s could outperform the P-39s and P-40s, the best U.S. Air Corps fighters. Only the biggest bombers, the four-engine B-17 Flying Fortress and the B-24 Liberator, surpassed what the enemy operated, but this reflected more the Axis powers' decision to employ smaller bombers than any deficiency of design or production on their part.The inventory of all types of planes available to the handful of air crews was small; U.S. factories had yet to move into high gear and much of what was produced had been committed to Allies already engaged in combat. What had been accomplished during the two years and three months from the onset of the war in Europe to the entry of the United States was a series of plans that would eventually help shape the use of American military assets. During what were officially labeled United States-British Staff Conversations of March 27, 1941, and became known as ABC-1, the participants settled on a number of policies including, "U.S. Army air bombardment units [would] operate offensively in collaboration with the Royal Air Force, primarily against German Military Power at its source." In the immediate aftermath of the devastation wrought against the U.S. fleet and the rapid onslaught of the Japanese against the Asiatic outposts of the Allies, President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his associates, in accord with such agreements as ABC-1 and various elaborations of the overall War Plan Orange series, had agreed that execution of the war against Germany held first priority.In preparation for the mandates of ABC-1, before December 7, 1941, an American military mission occupied offices in London. But even before then in recognition of the ties with Great Britain and the inevitability of a confrontation with Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany, a stream of U.S. observers made their way to England to watch the RAF fight the Battle of Britain against German fighters and bombers during the summer of 1940. They also scouted potential bases for American contingents and managed lend-lease deals that included American-built planes such as A-20 light bombers dubbed "Bostons" by the RAF.The advent of war almost instantly changed the nomenclature from the limited title of "mission" to U.S. Army Forces in the British Isles (USAFBI), and the label presaged the establishment of a significant presence of men and machines. As chief of the Army Air Forces, Lt. Gen. Henry (Hap) Arnold secured approval from the War Department to activate an air force as part of USAFBI. He chose Maj. Gen. Carl Spaatz, a World War I combat pilot, respected tactician, strategist and administrator to head the outfit and nominated Brig. Gen. Ira Eaker to run the bomber command. Even before Spaatz and Eaker could begin to mobilize the airplanes to carry out the task, they encountered fierce opposition from the brass in charge of all U.S. Army efforts in England. The traditional resistance of ground commanders to grant any autonomy to the air forces succumbed only through the intervention of Army chief of staff Gen. George C. Marshall. The vehicle tapped for Spaatz and Eaker was the Eighth Air Force, activated in January 1942.While the newly formed outfit initially consisted of a medium bombardment group, two pursuit groups (the designations of fighters or interceptors were not yet in vogue) and auxiliary units, other priorities reduced the Eighth to a bare skeletal form as the Japanese advanced in the Pacific. The original bomber group committed to the Eighth joined Lt. Col. James H. Doolittle to train for his mission against Tokyo. Other aircraft allotted to the Eighth were siphoned away to participate in the critical antisubmarine warfare off the U.S. coast and for other responsibilities.In February of 1942, Ira Eaker took up station in England as the head of the Eighth Bomber Command, but the parent organization was not in residence until May 11, 1942, when the first contingent of thirty-nine officers and 384 enlisted men set foot on British soil. Eaker, at the time all too aware of what little material strength he brought with him, rose to speak to an assembly of RAF guests at an early June ceremony at the newly opened High Wycombe headquarters. "We won't do much talking until we've done more fighting. We hope that when we leave you'll be glad we came. Thank you."Eaker's twenty-three words could hardly offend the host country as they implicitly recognized that six months after the declaration of war, the American contribution to the air war effort in Europe had been only money and goods while British fliers continued to pay a bloody price. But while the British approved the gracious note, furious discord marked the opinions and policies of the two Allies even before they joined forces to fight.With less than thirty years' presence in the fields of combat, aerial warfare had never generated a consensus on its conduct. In 1907, a scant four years after the Wright brothers successfully demonstrated a twelve-second, 120-foot flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, the U.S. Army created the Aeronautical Division as a wholly controlled subsidiary of the Signal Corps. The premise for this arrangement lay in the belief that the basic role of the airplane would be as a more mobile reconnaissance tool, an improvement on the balloon-borne observer who had appeared overhead as early as the French Revolution and later in the Civil War. In 1910, nineteen-year-old U.S. Military Academy plebe Carl Spaatz gazed skyward and saw aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss win a $10,000 prize as the first to fly all the way down the Hudson River from Albany to New York City, passing West Point en route. Spaatz instantly decided to make a career in the fledgling Aeronautical Service.During World War I, while experts tinkered with such basic problems as reducing the fatality rate in accidents below that incurred during battle, and preventing machine guns from shooting off propeller blades, the air arm, renamed the Aviation Section, remained a Signal Corps fief until 1918 when American Expeditionary Force commander, Gen. John J. Pershing, removed Signal Corps control and President Woodrow Wilson officially proclaimed the Air Service as an organization within the Army. The military mission had slowly begun to evolve from solely scouting to a more active role in warfare. The European combatants all sought to develop aircraft that themselves served as weapons. The initial idea of inflicting damage on the foe's observation planes soon led to a battle for control of the air. Machine guns enabled fliers to strafe ground forces, and the addition of bombs provided the opportunity to hammer troop concentrations, artillery positions and even lines of transportation. The top Allied commanders had even begun to think of striking at cities or factories; although in some circles there was great reluctance to the notion of dropping high explosives on civilian areas. Occasionally, German airplanes and long range artillery did hit some populated sections, and their dirigibles struck London. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In the skies of World War II Europe, the Eighth Air Force was a defining factor in turning the tide against the Nazis. In these gripping oral histories, the sacrifice, savagery, and supremacy of the “Mighty Eighth” is described by those who experienced it...and survived it.
  • At the outbreak of World War II, America was woefully unprepared for a fight, though Europe was already years into the battle. Soon, though, America’s war machine was rolling out pilots, engineers, planes, and materials in astounding numbers. It was called the Eighth Air Force—and it would hit the Nazi juggernaut like a lightning bolt. Launching a then-groundbreaking campaign of daylight bombing runs, the men of the Eighth would suffer more casualties than the entire Marine Corps in the Pacific theater. But they would also prove to be the most effective weapon against the enemy, taking out strategic targets such as munitions plants and factories that were vital to the German war effort and grinding them to a halt. In
  • The Mighty Eighth
  • , the men who fought in the greatest air war in human history tell their stories of courage and camaraderie as only those who were there can tell them.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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Most Helpful Reviews

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A WONDERFUL TRIBUTE TO THE MEN OF THE MIGHTY U.S. 8TH AIR FORCE AND THE GREATEST GENERATION

Great book! So well written. I really enjoyed hearing from the men who flew these missions in their own words. My father flew in B-24 Liberators in WWII. My father, Hank Culver, flew with Jimmy Stewart, the movie actor-turned bomber pilot. They both flew some of the most dangerous missions of the war together in the same squadron - 703rd Bomb Squadron, 445th Bomb Group - with the U.S. 8th Air Force based at Tibenham, England. I used this book as a reference for the writing of my first book, Nine Yanks a and a Jerk, and my forthcoming books, Daylight Raiders and Son of a Gunner. See my website page www.sonofagunnerb24.com for more details. You did a wonderful job Lauren. Your book is a great tribute to these airmen and their ground crews, and the Greatest Generation!
14 people found this helpful
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Very interesting look at the Mighty 8th

I was drawn to this book after visiting the National World War II museum in New Orleans. The museum has a large collection of vintage aircraft, including a B-17. After seeing the displays, I wanted to put them into context. This book did that for me. I like first-person accounts and this book is chock full of them. There is even a section on the B-17 that is displayed at the museum.
3 people found this helpful
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RIVETING -- COMBAT IS HELL.

Fascinating first-person vignettes by various air crews, e,g., pilot, navigator, bombardier, gunner, radioman, during WWII in Europe. Disturbing regarding the upper military echelon's decision for bombers to fly without protective fighters, and thereby, maintain requisite tight formations against enemy aircraft which resulted in numerous unexpected horrific collisions. The bombs dropped often failed to reach its target. Hence, unjustified reliance upon precision bombing and its policy tragically led to wasteful devastation: lives, planes, fuel, supplies. The author deftly portrays the men who bravely fought under despicable conditions.
1 people found this helpful
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Can You Believe It?

Can one believe that it was a 1 & 3 chance to make all the required flying missions from England during WWII to qualify an air crew to retire from the war!? The book The Mighty 8th, tells the story of so many flight crews that were trying to make the 25 missions. Day light bombing meant SO many air craft of the 8th were prime targets by the German Luftwaffe and ground to air flak and yet the aircrews flew which meant the lessening of Germany's influence in WWII. The book takes the reader to the time with stories from the men who were involved literally with their lives and the aircraft they flew and maintained.
1 people found this helpful
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Important writing on WWII

I have read several books by Gerald Astor, including this one. My father was wounded twice in Europe during the war and Astor has done a good job of bringing forth the voices of that generation. I took this book with me to meet Robert Morgan, the pilot of the Memphis Belle (see WWII pic), in 2003, and he autographed it for me. My interest in the 8th has taken me to many of the airfields of England from which they flew. Most have gone back to farmers fields, but there are still remnants, and others are active RAF bases. Morgan flew with the 91st, and there was a museum on that base in the tower building where the commanding officer would watch the planes return from missions, though I was recently advised that the RAF may need the space, at the loss of the museum. Still, it was incredible to stand there, looking out the window at the far landing strip where B-17s struggled back from the battles in the skies over Germany.
1 people found this helpful
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as a ww2 vet that wassupposed to go to england ...

as a ww2 vet that wassupposed to go to england when they quit sending us ,I always wantwd to know what I missed but the air force had other plans but the book was very true to what happened and everyone should find what war is about.
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Good

Good
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It is transparent

This gel is semi transparent. It does NOT look like the photo. Also, I have used it on multiple occasions and it does not dry all the way through. Though I use the same lamp that I use with all my poly gels (and they dry through)
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The best eyewitness accounts ever put in one volumn.

superb authorship
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The truth

Son likes books like this