The Northwest African Tactical Air Force (NATAF) was a component of the Northwest African Air Forces which itself reported to the Mediterranean Air Command (MAC). These new Allied air force organizations were created at the Casablanca Conference in January 1943 to promote cooperation between the British Royal Air Force (RAF), the American United States Army Air Force (USAAF), and their respective ground and naval forces in the North African and Mediterranean theater of World War II . Created on February 18, 1943, the NATAF and other MAC commands existed until December 10, 1943, when MAC was disbanded and the Mediterranean Allied Air Forces (MAAF) were established.
Acting Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham , who had been air officer commanding Western Desert Air Force became the commander of NATAF.[ 1] and the WDAF became part of the new NATAF
The components of NATAF at the time of the Allied invasion of Sicily (Operation Husky) on July 10, 1943, are illustrated below.[ 2] [ 3]
No. 112 Squadron Kittyhawk at Medenine, Tunisia in 1943.
A 27th Fighter-Bomber Group North American A-36 Apache (Mustang).
African American pilots of 99th Fighter Squadron standing by one of their P-40 Warhawks.
No. 601 Squadron Spitfires over North Africa in 1943.
Northwest African Tactical Air Force (Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham ) [ 4] [ 5]
Desert Air Force Air Vice Marshal Harry Broadhurst
XII Air Support Command Major General Edwin House
Tactical Bomber Force Air Commodore Laurence Sinclair
No. 7 Wing (SAAF)
No. 2 Squadron , Supermarine Spitfire No. 4 Squadron , SpitfireNo. 5 Squadron , Curtiss Kittyhawk [ a]
27th Fighter-Bomber Group (USAAF) Lieutenant Colonel John Stevenson
522nd Squadron , North American A-36 [ b] Mustang523rd Squadron , A-36 Mustang524th Squadron , A-36 Mustang
No. 3 Wing (SAAF)
No. 12 Squadron , Douglas Boston light bomberNo. 21 Squadron , Martin Baltimore light bomberNo. 24 Squadron , Boston
No. 239 Wing
No. 3 Squadron RAAF , KittyhawkNo. 112 Squadron RAF , KittyhawkNo. 250 Squadron RAF , KittyhawkNo. 260 Squadron RAF , KittyhawkNo. 450 Squadron RAAF , Kittyhawk
86th Fighter-Bomber Group (USAAF) Major Clinton True
525th Squadron , A-36 Mustang526th Squadron , A-36 Mustang527th Squadron , A-36 Mustang
No. 232 Wing (RAF)
No. 55 Squadron , BaltimoreNo. 223 Squadron , Baltimore
No. 244 Wing [ c] Brian Kingcome (RAF)[ 6]
No. 1 Squadron SAAF , SpitfireNo. 92 Squadron RAF , SpitfireNo. 145 Squadron RAF , SpitfireNo. 417 Squadron RCAF , SpitfireNo. 601 Squadron RAF , Spitfire
33d Fighter Group (USAAF) Colonel William Momyer
58th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk59th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk60th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk -99th Squadron , P-40, Detached
No. 326 Wing (RAF)
No. 18 Squadron , BostonNo. 114 Squadron , Boston
No. 322 Wing (RAF)Colin Falkland Gray (RAF)
No. 81 Squadron , SpitfireNo. 152 Squadron , SpitfireNo. 154 Squadron , SpitfireNo. 232 Squadron , SpitfireNo. 242 Squadron , Spitfire
324th Fighter Group (USAAF) Colonel William McNown
314th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk315th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk316th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk
47th Bombardment Group (USAAF) Colonel Malcolm Green, Jr.
84th Squadron , A-20 Havoc[ d] light bomber85th Squadron , A-20 Havoc86th Squadron , A-20 Havoc97th Squadron , A-20 Havoc
No. 324 Wing (RAF) Daniel Le Roy du Vivier (RAF[ e] )
No. 43 Squadron , SpitfireNo. 72 Squadron , SpitfireNo. 93 Squadron , SpitfireNo. 111 Squadron , SpitfireNo. 243 Squadron , Spitfire
31st Fighter Group (USAAF) Lieutenant Colonel Frank Hill
307th Squadron , Spitfire308th Squadron , Spitfire309th Squadron , Spitfire
12th Bombardment Group (USAAF) Colonel Edward Backus
81st Squadron , North American B-25 Mitchell medium bomber82nd Squadron , B-25 Mitchell83rd Squadron , B-25 Mitchell434th Squadron , B-25 Mitchell
57th Fighter Group (USAAF) Colonel Arthur Salisbury
64th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk65th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk66th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk
111th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron , Mustang
340th Bombardment Group (USAAF) Lieutenant Colonel Adolph Tokaz
486th Squadron , B-25 Mitchell487th Squadron , B-25 Mitchell488th Squadron , B-25 Mitchell489th Squadron , B-25 Mitchell -
79th Fighter Group (USAAF) Colonel Earl Bates
85th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk86th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk87th Squadron , P-40 Warhawk
No. 225 Squadron (RAF), Spitfire
No. 285 Wing (Reconnaissance)
No. 40 Squadron SAAF , Detachment, SpitfireNo. 60 Squadron SAAF , de Havilland Mosquito No. 1437 Flight RAF , Mustang
No. 241 Squadron RAF , Hurricane
No. 6 Squadron RAF , Hurricane
For Operation Husky, No. 242 Group RAF , originally a component of NATAF in February 1943, was assigned to the Northwest African Coastal Air Force (NACAF). At the same time, Air Headquarters, Western Desert became known as Desert Air Force . All of the fighter units of Desert Air Force formed No. 211 (Offensive Fighter) Group commanded by Air Commodore Richard Atcherley on April 11, 1943, in Tripoli. The 99th Fighter Squadron (one of the Tuskegee Airmen units) was assigned to the XII Air Support Command on May 28, 1943, and subsequently attached to the 33rd Fighter Group. The actual squadron assignments and detachments varied throughout the war depending on the specific needs of the air force.
The table above illustrates the squadron assignments and commanders for the important period of World War II when the Allies prepared to invade Italy (Operation Husky ), having just won the war in North Africa with the end of the Tunisia Campaign . In recognition of XII Air Support Command's operations in Sicily, Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower presented Major General Edwin House with the Legion of Merit and saying that "...for the first time established the application of a tactical air force operating in support of an American Army."[ 7]
^ The British and Commonwealth forces used "Kittyhawk" as service name for Curtiss P-40D and later models
^ Dive bomber version of the North American P-51 Mustang fighter/fighter-bomber
^ 244 Wing was commanded by Ian Gleed until he was shot down on 16 April 16, 1943 then by W. G. G. Duncan Smith until replaced by Kingcome
^ American designation of the same aircraft as the Boston
^ le Roy du Vivier was a Belgian pilot who joined RAF in 1940
^ Craven, Wesley F. and James L. Cate. The Army Air Forces in World War II, Volume 2, Chicago, Illinois: Chicago University Press, 1949 (Reprinted 1983, ISBN 0-912799-03-X ).
^ Richards, Dennis; Saunders, Hilary (1954). The Royal Air Force 1939-1945: Volume II The Fight Avails . History of the Second World War. HMSO – via Hyperwar Foundation.
^ Howe, George F., Northwest Africa: Seizing the Initiative in the West , Center of Military History, Washington, DC., 1991.
^ Participation of the Ninth & Twelfth Air Forces in the Sicilian Campaign , Army Air Forces Historical
Study No. 37, Army Air Forces. Historical Office Headquarters, Maxwell AFB, Alabama, 1945.
^ Maurer, Maurer, Air Force Combat Units Of World War II , Office of Air Force History, Maxwell AFB, Alabama, 1983.
^ Thomas, Andrew (2013). Spitfire Aces of North Africa and Italy . Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 47. ISBN 9781849083447 . Retrieved 15 March 2018 .
^ "Biographies : Major General Edwin J. House" . Archived from the original on 17 July 2012.