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Mines Away : The Significance of US Army Air Forces Minelaying in World War II

By Major John S. Chilstrom, USAF

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Book Id: WPLBN0002170747
Format Type: PDF eBook:
File Size: 0.7 MB
Reproduction Date: 10/23/2012

Title: Mines Away : The Significance of US Army Air Forces Minelaying in World War II  
Author: Major John S. Chilstrom, USAF
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Non Fiction, Military Science, World War II
Collections: Authors Community, United States
Historic
Publication Date:
Publisher: Air University Press
Member Page: Air University Press

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John S. Chilstrom, Usa, B. M. (n.d.). Mines Away : The Significance of US Army Air Forces Minelaying in World War II. Retrieved from http://gutenberg.cc/


Description
Minelaying by the U.S. Army Air Forces (AAF) had to overcome the absence of doctrine, serious questions of service autonomy, and preconceptions about naval and air force traditional roles. Though this initially unappreciated weapon gained considerable acceptance during the years of World War II, mines were not again dropped from aircraft in combat until the Vietnam War. During the Cold War, the U.S. Air Force gave little effort to its collateral maritime missions until concern grew over containing an expanding Soviet naval threat. Today, Air Force capabilities for aerial minelaying and other naval missions remain an important (though little appreciated) means for projecting long-range air power in support of "Global Reach--Global Power."

Table of Contents
1. MINE WARFARE..................3 Theory and History Mines and How They Worked 2. WORLD WAR II AERIAL MINELAYING IN EUROPE............7 First Use by Germany The Royal Air Force Fights Back 3. MINELAY’ING IN JAPAN’S "OUTER ZONE" -1942-1945............10 Early Plans and Capability U.S. Navy Submarine and Surface Laid Mines Air Operations Minelaying by Naval Aviation 4. AAF MINELAYING IN JAPAN/S "INNER ZONE" -1945...............18 Planning "Operation Starvation LeMay and the XXI Bomber Command 5. PLAN AND REALITY -THE EFFECTIVENESS OF AAF AERIAL MINELAYING............26 Plans and Opportunities “Outer Zone" Results “Inner Zone" Results Japanese Mine Countermeasures World War II Conclusions 6. AERIAL MINELAYING -AN AIR FORCE MISSION............31 Contributions of the Army Air Forces Mines and the Postwar Air Force Mines in Three Limited Wars The Lessons -Are They Learned? Applications in the Future Conclusion

 
 



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