Operation Matterhorn was a military operations plan of the United States Army Air Forces in World War II for the strategic bombing of Japan by B-29's forward-based in China. A subsequent "Operation Matterhorn" was conducted by the RAF in Malaya in 1963.
Gen. Henry H. Arnold approved the plan on October 12 and presented it to the U.S. Joint Chiefs after convincing President Roosevelt, through Gen. George C. Marshall as an intermediary, that no other strategic bombing of Japan was possible until the capture of the Marianas, then not yet scheduled. Roosevelt was unhappy with the projected starting date of June 1, 1944, having promised Chiang Kai-Shek that the campaign would begin January 1, 1944, but agreed on condition that the campaign be continued for a year.
The key development for the bombing of Japan was the B-29, which had an operational range of 1500 miles (2,400 km); almost 90% of the bombs dropped on the home islands of Japan were delivered by this type of bomber (147,000 tons). The first raid by B-29s on Japan from China was on June 15, 1944. The planes took off from Chengdu, over 1500 miles away. This first raid was also not particularly damaging to Japan. Only forty-seven of the sixty-eight B–29s airborne hit the target area in Tokyo; four aborted with mechanical problems, four crashed, six jettisoned their bombs because of mechanical difficulties, and others bombed secondary targets or targets of opportunity. Only one B–29 was lost to enemy aircraft.
Bombing from China was never a satisfactory arrangement because not only were the Chinese forward airbases difficult to supply via the Hump, but the B-29s operating from them could only reach Japan if they substituted some of the bomb load for extra fuel tanks in the bomb-bays. When Admiral Chester Nimitz's island-hopping campaign captured islands close enough to Japan to be within the range of B-29s, XXI Bomber Command commanded Twentieth Air Force units flying from the islands in a much more effective bombing campaign of the Japanese home islands. XX Bomber Command remained in the CBI until April, 1945, as agreed upon in 1943, then was disssolved and its groups moved to Guam.
General Henry "Hap" Arnold retained personal command of the Twentieth Air Force with Brigadier General Haywood S. Hansell as chief of staff (and later commander of XXI Bomber Command). XX Bomber Command originally had two subordinate combat wing components before deploying overseas (the 58th and 73rd Combat Bomb Wings), but only the 58th went to the CBI. There it was deemed a redundant level of command and removed from the chain of command until the groups moved to Guam in April, 1945, when it was restored as part of XXI Bomber Command.
Commanders of XX Bomber Command:
World War II aerial operations and battles of the East Asian Theatre
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"Operation Matterhorn".
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