The Royal Air Force (RAF).
The british Air hore
sanders
No..The United States has the most powerful Air Force, with both planes and pilots maintaining air superiority in every conflict they have been engaged in since WW2.
Bring about WW2 by not wanting peace with Germany and getting ready to attack Germany with the British expeditionary force.
The name for Germany's air force during the World War II period was "Luftwaffe". The name is generally translated into English as "Air Force"; however, a more literal translation would be "Air Arm" or "Air Weapon".
AnswerAccording to all the websites that I have consulted, the 8th Air Force suffered more than 47 000 casualties, of whom more than 26 000 were killed. This was over half the casualties suffered by the entire USAAF in WW2.~ See related link below .
luftwaffe
The German Air Force in WW2 was called the Luftwaffe.
sanders
Yes, I remember a newspaper obituary suggesting just that concerning a veteran of WW2.
Britain WW2
The Luftwaffe in WW2 was the German air force.
Yes, it means to get angry, particularly with a military subordinate. Originating in the Royal Navy in WW2 and much loved by British Army and Air Force DI's.
Every air force develops it's own tactics. In the RAF during WW2 even each Group developed its own unique tactics.
Neville Chamberlain
Possibly, because right in the middle of WW2, the US Army Air CORPS changed it's name to US Army Air FORCE...and then two years AFTER WW2, in 1947, the US Army Air Force separated from the US Army and became it's own separate branch of service; the USAF. So, from 1941 thru 1947, there were THREE US Air Forces! Any US serviceman being discharged, promoted, using his GI bill to purchase a house, etc. may have joined the US Army Air CORPS in 1941, fought WW2 while a member of the US Army Air FORCE...then did his "twenty years" and retired from the US Air Force in 1961.
I do not know but I do know that they contributede a large air force for WW2.
No..The United States has the most powerful Air Force, with both planes and pilots maintaining air superiority in every conflict they have been engaged in since WW2.