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IX Tactical Air Command
392d Fighter Squadron Lockheed P-38G-10-LO Lightning 42-12982
367th Fighter Group Lockheed P-38G-10-LO Lightning 42-12982
Active 1943-1945
Country United States
Branch United States Army Air Forces
Role Fighter Command and Control

The IX Tactical Air Command is an inactive United States Air Force unit. Its last assignment was with the Ninth Air Force, based at Camp Shanks, New York. It was inactivated on 25 October 1945.

History[]

Formed in England during 1943 as IX Air Support Command (IX ASC). The primary mission of the command was to provide tactical Close Air Support of the United States First Army ground forces to interdict concentration of enemy forces, attack communications and ammunition dumps, and harass the enemy's retreat as well as provide reconnaissance to bombing support. It was re-designted as IX Tactical Air Command (IX TAC) in April 1944 in England, and its mission initially was attacking enemy forces in Occupied France and the Low Countries in preparation for the Normandy Invasion in June. Targets included bridges, roads, railroads and enemy interceptor aircraft both on the ground as well as in air-to-air combat. After the D-Day invasion, units attacked enemy targets initially in the Cotentin Peninsula, then supported Operation Cobra, the breakout of Normandy and attacked enemy forces in the Falaise-Argentan Gap. Wing headquarters and subordinate units operated primarily from liberated airfields and newly built temporary Advanced Landing Grounds in France, moved into north-central France, its groups attacking enemy targets near Paris then north-west into Belgium and the southern Netherlands. In December 1944/January 1945, engaged enemy targets on the north side of the Battle of the Bulge, then moved eastward into the Northern Rhineland as part of the Western Allied invasion of Germany.

Supported First Army as it crossed the Rhine River at Remagen then moved north to attack ground targets in the Ruhr, providing air support as Allied ground forces encircled enemy forces in the Ruhr Pocket, essentially ending organized enemy resistance in Western Germany. First Army halted its advance at the Elbe River in late April 1945, the wing engaging targets of opportunity in enemy controlled-areas until combat was ended on 5 May 1945.

Remained in Europe after the war as part of United States Air Forces in Europe, performing occupation duty and the destruction or shipment to the United States of captured enemy combat equipment. Assigned units also performed air defense duty over the American Zone of Occupation. Demobilized in Germany in the late summer, inactivated as an administrative unit in the United States during October 1945.

Lineage[]

  • Constituted as IX Air Support Command on 29 November 1943
Activated on 4 December 1943
Redesignated IX Tactical Air Command in April 1944
Inactivated on 25 October 1945
Disbanded on 8 October 1948

Assignments[]

Components[]

Under operational control of 84th Fighter Wing, 7 April-29 September 1944

Stations[]

  • RAF Aldermaston (AAF-467), England, 4 December 1943
  • RAF Middle Wallop (AAF-449), England, February 1944
  • RAF Uxbridge, England, 15 February–June 1944
  • Au Gay, France, 10 June 1944
  • Les Oubeaux, France, 2 July 1944
  • Canisy, France, 2 August 1944
  • Coulouvray-Boisbenâtre, France, 12 August 1944
  • Haleine, France, 22 August 1944

  • Versailles, France, 2 September 1944
  • Janoulx, Belgium, 11 September 1944
  • Verviers, Belgium, 2 October 1944
  • Brühl, Germany, 26 March 1945
  • Marburg, Germany, 8 April 1945
  • Weimar Airfield (R-7), Germany, 26 April 1945
  • AAF Station Fritzlar, Germany, 26 June–September 1945
  • Camp Shanks, New York, 24–25 October 1945

References[]

PD-icon This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency website http://www.afhra.af.mil/.

  • Maurer, Maurer (1983). Air Force Combat Units Of World War II. Maxwell AFB, Alabama: Office of Air Force History. ISBN 0-89201-092-4.
  • Johnson, David C. (1988), U.S. Army Air Forces Continental Airfields (ETO), D-Day to V-E Day; Research Division, USAF Historical Research Center, Maxwell AFB, Alabama.

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at IX Tactical Air Command and the edit history here.
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