Hispanic-American General was Aviation Pioneer, Tactical
Genius
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Sept. 11, 2000 -- He was an aviation pioneer,
an organizer of Allied victory during World War II and a Hispanic American.
He was Elwood R. "Pete" Quesada. Quesada
was the son of a Spanish businessman and an Irish-American mother. His
military career spanned aviation history from post-World War I era biplanes
to supersonic jets.
Quesada was born in Washington, D.C., in 1904, a few
months after the Wright Brothers flew at KittyHawk,
N.C. He grew up with aviation.
World War I imposed hothouse growth on all things connected
with planes. In 1914, when the war began, primitive aircraft scouted enemy
formations. They did not
Army Maj. Gen. Elwood R. "Pete" Quesada and his tactical
air forces helped the Allies win the ground war in Europe. An advocate
of close air support and air supremacy over the battlefield, Quesada went
on to become an Air Force lieutenant general and first commander of the
Tactical Air Command. |
fire at each other nor did they drop bombs on the enemy troops.
The aviators themselves began the first moves toward arming the craft.
The pilots shot at each other first with pistols and rifles and then machine
guns. Bombs and rockets came next.
The U.S. Army used aircraft to good effect during the
St. Mihiel offensive of 1918.
All through the war, the opposing sides developed planes
that flew longer, farther, faster and could do more things. After the war,
aircraft development continued. The 1920s were a time of experimentation.
Plane design changed from biplanes at the beginning of the decade to sleek
monoplanes by the end.
Quesada started his military career in the middle of this
ferment. He entered the Army Air Service as a flying cadet in 1924. He
went through flight school at what is now Brooks Air Force Base, Texas
(then called Brooks Field) and advanced training at neighboring Kelly Air
Force Base.
Having only a reserve commission, Quesada found the active
Army Air Service had no space for him. He returned to civilian life, playing
baseball for the St. Louis Cardinals. In 1927, he returned to the Air Service
and received a Regular Army commission. He reported to Bolling Field in
Washington.
Bolling Air Force Base is now an administrative center,
but its runways in 1927 were full of aircraft flown by some of the most
innovative thinkers in the Army Air Corps. Pete Quesada joined then-Maj.
Carl "Tooey" Spaatz and then-Capt. Ira Eaker in developing air-to-air refueling.
On Jan. 1, 1929, a three-engine Fokker C-2A rose into
the air from metropolitan Airport in Los Angeles. It did not land again
until Jan. 6. Quesada, Spaatz and Eaker shared piloting duties aboard the
plane, dubbed the "Question Mark."
Throughout their five days aloft, the Fokker crew took
in fuel from a Douglas C-1C that passed a hose in flight — as well as oil,
water and food. In all, the Fokker crew made 37 mid-air transfers and flew
more than 11,000 nonstop miles.
Today, air-to-air refueling is almost routine. The United
States bases the B-2 bomber in Missouri, knowing that no spot on the globe
is too far away thanks to inflight refueling. This started with the flight
of the Question Mark.
But Quesada's larger contribution came during World War
II. The fabulous Allied air-ground machine that chewed up Nazi forces in
Europe didn't just materialize. It was Quesada's baby.
Even before the war, Quesada — like many others — had
been thinking of the place of air power. But where others looked to strategic
bombing, Quesada concentrated on the tactical application of air power.
During classes at Maxwell Field, Ala., and at the Command and General Staff
College at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Quesada began to build the concept of
close air support. He predicted the next war would require "all sorts of
arrangements between the air and the ground, and the two will have to work
closer than a lot of people think or want."
He got the chance to put his theories into practice. In
December 1942, he was promoted to brigadier general and sent to North Africa
to command the 12th Fighter Command. He put his ideas through the crucible
of combat, and they evolved into Army Air Forces field regulations "Command
and Employment of Air Power," published in July 1943.
At the heart of these regulations is the premise that
air superiority is the prerequisite for successful ground operations. Further,
he said, the air and ground commanders must be equals and there had to
be centralized command of air assets to exploit the flexibility of air
power.
In October 1943, Quesada went to England and assumed command
of the 9th Fighter Command and readied that unit for the Normandy invasion.
During the build-up and breakout that followed the invasion, Quesada was
at his best. He placed forward air observers with divisions on the ground,
and they could call for air support. He mounted radios in tanks so ground
commanders could contact pilots directly. He pioneered the use of radar
to vector planes during attacks. This was particularly helpful during the
Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, when bad weather hid many German
targets.
The air-ground apparatus he put together was the best
in the world. After the war, he was the first commander of TAC — the Tactical
Air Command. He moved the headquarters from Tampa, Fla., to Langley Air
Force Base, Va., so he could be close to the headquarters of the Army Ground
Forces. When the Air Force became a separate service in 1947, he went along
as a lieutenant general.
Quesada retired from the Air Force in 1951. He was disillusioned
with the emphasis placed on Strategic Air Command at the expense of tactical
air. He served as the first head of the Federal Aviation Administration
and held positions in private firms.
Quesada died in Washington in 1993.
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