shotgun-toting chipmunk said:I thought the Mustang was very limited if not absent from the Pacific campaign, mainly due to their issues with the humidity. Could somebody please support or refute this?
I copied the following excerpt from an article linked from AcePilots.com
Joe Baugher said:Because of the higher priority of the war in Europe, the P-51D Mustang did not arrive in the Pacific until late in 1944. P-51Ds were initially based in the Philippines and on Iwo Jima. By that stage of the war, Japanese fighter opposition was rare, and Philippine-based Mustangs mostly performed close-support work. However, while flying over Japanese-occupied regions of Luzon on January 11, 1945, Captain William A. Shomo managed to shoot down six Tonys and one bomber in one day while flying an F-6D photo-recon aircraft. For this action, he was awarded the Medal of Honor, becoming the second Mustang pilot of World War 2 to receive this award.
As Japanese resistance on Luzon came to an end, the Philippine-based Mustangs were used to bomb and strafe Japanese forces based on Formosa. Iwo Jima-based Mustangs flew the first escort missions with B-29 bombers attacking Japan, and they undertook the first land-based fighter strikes against Tokyo on April 7, 1945, when B-29s hit the Nakajima Aircraft Engine Factory. Such missions involved flights lasting up to seven or eight hours, covering distances of over 1500 miles. When General Curtis LeMay decided that most B-29 missions would take place at night from medium altitudes, the Iwo Jima-based Mustangs went over to ground attack missions against Japanese airfields. Extensive use was made of the five-inch rockets which were carried under each wing.
USAAF Mustang Groups in Pacific Theatre of Operations:
8th Reconnaissance Group
15th Fighter Group, VII Fighter Command
21st Fighter Group, VII Fighter Command, 46th, 72nd, 531st Fighter Squadrons
506th Fighter Group, VII Fighter Command, 457th, 458th, 462nd Fighter Squadrons
23rd Fighter Group, Fourteenth Air Force
Now of course, the roll they played (Mainly CAS) would hamper their ability to stay up with the Corsair, so that part of my argument just became weak. The fact still remains, the German planes and pilots faced in '44 were not significantly better than the Japanese, and were in all likelihood nowhere near as motivated. (People tend to be a little more "down for the fight" when they believe their leader is a God and not a charismatic psycho). :wink: