CHINA-BURMA-INDIA

Image of Fourteenth Air Force patch

FOURTEENTH AIR FORCE

10 March 1943 - December 1945


Fourteenth Air Force operated primarily in China during WWII, and subsequently served ADC, CAC, and the AFR. Established as Fourteenth AF 5 Mar 1943. Activated 10 Mar 1943 at Kunming, China, assigned to US Army Forces, China-Burma-India Theater. Assigned to US Forces, China Theater, c.24 Oct 1944. To Peishyi, China, 7 Aug 1945 and to Fort Lawton WA 5 Jan 1946. Inactivated 6 Jan 1946.

By May 1942, the Japanese Army completed their conquest of Burma, leaving China accessible to the outside world only by air. Every item of equipment, from buttons to ammunition had to be flown from India over the towering Himalayan range (nicknamed 'the Hump') to China. The 500 mile route combined obstacles such as bad weather, forbidding terrain, and attacks by Japanese fighter planes, which made flying the Hump the most dangerous transport operation of the war.

This well stated excerpt from A Brief History of the Fourteeth Air Force offers a lead-in to difficult accomplishments of that prestigious organization, as well as highlighting the efforts which the cargo crews had to overcome to keep supplies flowing to the combatants in China.

At this time the American Volunteer Group, the 'Flying Tigers', was completing its one year contract, leaving an outstanding record of kill/loss ratio against enemy aircraft, as well as an enviable ground target record. Chennault, recalled to active duty with the rank of Bigadier General, assumed command of the "China Air Task Force" (CATF) and the 23rd Fighter Group, which absorbed the aircraft and some of the pilots of the AVG. The CATF was assigned the primary mission of defending the southern and eastern approaches to the Hump and the transport terminals in China. Chennault employed rapid mobility, the element of surprise, and some subterfuge, such as repainting spinners and tailnumbers, to efectively keep the enemy guessing. His strategies were so effective that a Tokyo radio announcer vowed, late in 1942, to destroy the Chennault's 200 aircraft, when, in reality the CATF had but 29 operational aircraft at the time!

Unfortunately, all of the supplies which the overburdened C-47 aircraft and their Air Transport Command crews were able to get over the Hump were still insufficient to support the three main recipients, Chiang Kai-shek, General Stilwell's Chinese troops, and Chennault's CATF. The CATF was subordinate to the Tenth Air Force, and the priorities for the disposition of supplies were set by Generals Bissel (10th AF Commander) and Stillwell (Theater Commander). In addition to the CATF's stock of gasoline, munitions and spare parts being at the end of the world's longest supply line, the portion allocated to the CATF was at the discretion of men with whom Chennault had major differences. The difficult became the nearly impossible, for the CATF.

Much like its predecessor, the AVG, the guerilla-like CATF had to fight with what it had, while living up to its inherited tradition and reputation. In addition to the constant lack of parts and munitions, everything had to come across the Hump, sufficient numbers of personnel were lacking as well. Pilots working alongside mechanics and armorers to ready the aircraft for combat was almost a normal occurance. The tools and ground transportation available, had all been inherited from the AVG, as had the "Flying Tigers" nom de plume. During its months of trials and tribulations the CATF was sent additional combat units by the AAF.

On 5 Mar 1943, by special order of President Roosevelt, the "Flying Tiger" organization was constituted as Fourteenth Air Force, and activated in China on 10 March with Gen Chennault commanding. aking over for the China Air Task Force, to be the USAAF's China air command, the organization's original combat components were the same as those of the CATF, including the 23rd Fighter Group with the 74th, 75th, 76th and 16th Fighter Squadrons and with 11th Bomb Squadron (341st Bomb Group) attached. Being created in a war zone made the Fourteenth unique among number Air Forces. This uniqueness carried over in its being the first to be dependent on an airlited supply line, and its being the only one to operate in an area of the longest coninuous aerial combat by an American force against the Japanese.   Effectively, the Forteenth had been established for a particular leader - - Claire L. Chennault.

The outstanding accomplishments of the AVG and the CATF, along with the Flying Tigers logo, were inherited by the Fourteenth, along with General Chennault's thorough knowledge of enemy tactics, his experience at countering those tactics and the experienced, effective ching pao air raid notifcation system.

During the next fourteen months it would grow to four fighter groups, two bomb groups, a photo recon squadron and a troop carrier squadron.

We believe that Kenn C. Rust & Stephen Muth best sum up the Fourteenth's activities in their book, 'Fourteenth Air Force Story'. Quoting from pages 10 & 11 of that book:

"The mission of the Fourteenth in the days to come -- based in part on policies evolved by the CATF -- would be sixfold:
  1. To defend its own lifelines over the Hump;
  2. To ferret out and destroy Japanese aircraft and troop concentrations;
  3. To destroy the enemy's military and naval installations in China;
  4. To smash and disrupt Japanese shipping along the China coast and beyond and on the numerous inland waterways of China;
  5. To destroy enemy supplies and military installations in Indochina, Thailand, Burma and Formosa;
  6. To encourage Chinese resistance and provide all possible aerial support to their ground forces.
"To accomplish this ambitious mission, Chennault would take advantage of his interior positions, strategically located air bases spotted within a semi-circle stretching from before Ichang to Hankow and down to Canton and Hong Kong, with the Japanese concentrated around the rim of the semi-circle or beyond. Theoretically, such a battle position gave tactical advantage to the Fourteenth and, given an appreciable quantity of planes, men and supplies, Chennault could have blasted the enemy out of China. Since such was not the case, however, Chennault had to rely on jabbing tactics to cause the Japanese as much damage and confusion as limited supplies would permit. "Indeed the story of supply is to a great extent the story of the AAF in China, as the supply problem set the China Theater apart from all others, limiting activity and sometimes even stopping it completely. Every item necessary to maintain and operate an air force had to be flown into China along the 500 mile air ferry route from India over the towering Himalaya Mountains where bad weather and enemy action were a constant threat to success. The situation was such that the Fourteenth never received more than 15,000 tons of supplies a month and, up to mid-1944, often less than half that amount. Therefore, its limited forces were never more than sustained at full operational strength and often they suffered telling shortages of equipment and personnel. "Yet, despite such limitations, the Fourteenth managed to conduct effective fighter and bomber operations along a vast front during its operational life -- from the bend of the Yellow River and Tsinan in the north to Indochina in the south, from Chengtu and the Salween River in the west to the China Sea and the island of Formosa in the east."

All in all, a very limited number of planes and men, under the most difficult of conditions, had placed the Fourteenth Air Force in the ranks of great military organizations.

The Fourteenth Air Force moved to the US in Dec 1945-Jan 1946, and was inactivated on 6 Jan 1946.

  • COMMANDERS

    • Maj Gen Claire L. Chennault, 10 Mar 1943;
    • Maj Gen Charles B. Stone III, 10 Aug-31 Dec 1945.

  • STATIONS

    • Kunming, China, 10 Mar 1943;
    • Peishiyi, China, 7 Aug-15 Dec 1945;
    • Ft Lawson, Wash., 5-6 Jan 1946.

  • UNITS

    • 308th Bombardment Group, 1943-1945;
      • 373rd Bombardment Squadron, Mar 1943-1945, B-24.
      • 374th Bombardment Squadron, Mar 1943-1945, B-24.
      • 375th Bombardment Squadron, Mar 1943-1945, B-24.
      • 425th Bombardment Squadron, Mar 1943-1945, B-24.

    • 68th Composite Wing; 1943-1945.
      • 23rd Fighter Group;
        • 74th Fighter Squadron, Mar 1943-1945, P-40 and P-51.
        • 5th Fighter Squadron, Mar 1943-1945, P-40 and P-51.
        • 76th Fighter Squadron, Mar 1943-1945, P-40 and P-51.
        • 16th Fighter Squadron, Mar - Sep 1943, P-40 and P-51
        • 449th Fighter Squadron, Aug - Sep 1943, P-38.
        • 118th Tactical Recon Squadron, Jun 1944-1945, P-51.

    • 69th Composite Wing; 1943-1945.
      • 51st Fighter Group;
        • 16th Fighter Squadron, Sep 1943-1945, P-40 and P-51.
        • 25th Fighter Squadron, Oct 1943-1945, P-40 and P-51.
        • 26th Fighter Squadron, Oct 1943-1945, P-40 and P-51.
        • 449th Fighter Squadron, Sep 1943-1945, P-38.

      • 341st Bombardment Group;
        • 11th Bombardment Squadron, Sep 1942-1945, B-25.
        • 22nd Bombardment Squadron, Jan 1944-1945, B-25.
        • 491st Bombardment Squadron, Jan 1944-1945, B-25.
        • 490th Bombardment Squadron, Apr - Sep 1945, B-25.

      • 27th Troop Carrier Squadron (attached), May 1944-1945, C-47

    • 312th Fighter Wing; 1944-1945
      • 33rd Fighter Group
        • 58th Fighter Squadron, May - Sep 1944, P-47.
        • 59th Fighter Squadron, Jun - Sep 1944, P-47.
        • 60th Fighter Squadron, Mar - Sep 1944, P-47.

      • 81st Fighter Group;
        • 91st Fighter Squadron, Jun 1944-1945, P-47.
        • 92nd Fighter Squadron, Jun 1944-1945, P-47.
        • 93rd Fighter Squadron, Aug - Sep 1944, P-47.

      • 311th Fighter Group;
        • 528th Fighter Squadron, Aug 1944-1945, P-51.
        • 529th Fighter Squadron, Aug 1944-1945, P-51.
        • 530th Fighter Squadron, Oct 1944-1945, P-51.

    • Chinese-American Composite Wing (Provisional); 1943-1945. (attached)
      • 1st Bomb Group (Provisional), B-25s
        • 1st Bomb Squadron (Provisional)
        • 2nd Bomb Squadron (Provisional)
        • 3rd Bomb Squadron (Provisional)
        • 4th Bomb Squadron (Provisional)

      • 3rd Fighter Group (Provisional), P-40s
        • 7th Fighter Squadron (Provisional)
        • 8th Fighter Squadron (Provisional)
        • 28th Fighter Squadron (Provisional)
        • 32nd Fighter Squadron (Provisional)

      • 5th Fighter Group (Provisional), P-40s
        • 17th Fighter Squadron (Provisional)
        • 26nd Fighter Squadron (Provisional)
        • 27th Fighter Squadron (Provisional)
        • 29th Fighter Squadron (Provisional)

    • Other Squadrons;
      • 21st Photo Reconnaisance Squadron, Jul 1943-1945, F-5.
      • 322nd Troop Carrier Squadron, Oct 1944-1945, C-47.
      • 426th Night Fighter Squadron, Nov 1944-1945, P-61.