- Egypt-Libya Campaign
The Egypt-Libya Campaign is the name used by the
United States military for the US contribution to theAllied Western Desert Campaign , duringWorld War II . From 1942, U.S. forces assisted the British Commonwealth in fighting Axis forces inEgypt andLibya . The U.S. Egypt-Libya Campaign was part of what the US military called theMediterranean Theater of Operations .The
United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) began planning for a buildup of American air power in the Middle East in January1942 in response to a request from the British Chief of the Air Staff. The initial unit to arrive was given the codenameHALPRO . It was under the command of Col.Harry A. Halverson and consisted of twenty-three B-24D Liberator heavy bombers with hand-picked crews. It had initially been assigned to the China Burma India Theatre to attack Japan from airfields inChina , but after the fall ofRangoon theBurma Road was cut so the detachment could not be logistically supported in China.HALPROs first mission was flown on
June 12 1942 against the Romanian oil facilities at Ploesti. Thirteen B-24s flew this first U.S. mission against a European target causing negligible damage. OnJune 15 , seven planes assisted theRoyal Air Force (RAF) in attacking an Italian fleet which had put to sea to intercept a British resupply convoy on its way toMalta . HALPRO then flew in support of British Commonwealth forces fighting in the deserts of Egypt and Libya on the eastern end of theSahara desert (the British term Western Desert refers to the Sahara being to the west of Egypt). HALPRO's primary mission became the interdiction of supplies to Rommel's Army in North Africa by bombing strikes on Axis cargo ships at sea or in the ports of Tobruk and Benghazi.The same day
U.S. Army Forces in the Middle East (USAFIME) was created to replace both the North African Mission in Cairo and the Iranian Mission in thePersian Corridor . OnJune 16 the War Department named Army GeneralRussell L. Maxwell as the first commander of USAFIME. An Army general, rather than an Army Air Corps general, was named because at the time it was still expected that there would be a large U.S. Army land force contribution to the campaign. The next day the War Department informed Maxwell that the Halverson Detachment would remain in Egypt as a part of USAFIME.In anticipation of the arrival of the American air groups, the War Department sent Maj. Gen.
Lewis H Brereton , commander of the U.S.Tenth Air Force in India, to Cairo for temporary duty to assist the Commonwealth forces. He arrived in Cairo onJune 25 , along with nine B-17s.On
June 30 Brereton had directed the B-17s which he had brought from India to move their operations to Palestine. The B-24s of the Halverson Detachment joined them at Lydda, Palestine. Both units flew day and night bombing missions against the Axis' increasingly inadequate supply lines, concentrating their efforts against the port ofTobruk .The heavy bombers of the Brereton and Halverson detachments (now combined into the
1st Provisional Group , under Halverson's command) had been flying with the Commonwealth air forces for some time, and drawing on that experience, the98th Bombardment Group (Heavy) which arrived in mid-August, was able to go directly into action. The 1st Provisional Group provided the nucleus of the 376th Bomb Group in October, 1942.When the
12th Bombardment Group (Medium) and the57th Fighter Group arrived in the theater of operations, they entered a highly cooperative type of air warfare in an unfamiliar desert environment. Initially, they were integrated into comparable RAF formations, allowing them to observe firsthand the complex techniques of air-ground coordination that the Commonwealth forces had developed during their years of fighting in the Western Desert.To co-ordinate the growing American presence the USAMEAF had established the
IX Bomber Command andIX Fighter Command .In November, Lt. Gen.
Frank M. Andrews assumed command of USAFIME, replacing Maxwell. Andrews was an experienced airman, and one of his first acts was to establish theNinth Air Force to replace USAMEAF. Which was a recognition that the force would remain an Air force and that Ground forces would not be taking part in the campaign. Brereton assumed command of the new organization and established theIX Air Service Command , which joined the "IX Bomber Command" and the "IX Fighter Command" as the major subordinate headquarters. The 376th Bombardment Group, originally organized to support Soviet forces, became part of the IX Bomber Command and flew its first combat missions over the deserts of North Africa.The U.S. Army's Egypt-Libya Campaign ended on
12 February 1943, when the Allied forces finally succeeded in driving all Axis forces out of Libya.References
*cite book | first=Clayton R.|last=Newell| url=http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/brochures/egypt/egypt.htm|title=Egypt-Libya 11 June 1942-12 February 1943 | series=CMH Online bookshelves: World War II Campaigns |publisher=US Army Center of Military History|location=Washington| year=1990?| id=CMH Pub 72-13
Footnotes
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