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TheAllied Expeditionary Air Force (AEAF),[1] also known as theAllied Armies’ Expeditionary Air Force (AAEAF), was theexpeditionary warfare component of theSupreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) which controlled the tactical air power of the Allied forces duringOperation Overlord duringWorld War II in 1944.
Its effectiveness was less than optimal on two counts. It did not function as the controlling headquarters for all Allied air forces, with the strategic forces ofRAF Bomber Command and theUS Eighth Air Force being retained by their national command authorities until pressure from U.S. GeneralDwight D. Eisenhower resulted in them being placed directly under SHAEF instead of AEAF. Its commander was also not universally liked. SirTrafford Leigh-Mallory was regarded by some as being too inept for his place in the high command.
It had two major components, theRAF Second Tactical Air Force and theUSAAF Ninth Air Force. Each supported their own nation's Army Group. It also had operational control of theAir Defence of Great Britain, but with that organisation not being under the control of SHAEF.
AEAF was dissolved after Leigh-Mallory was reassigned to command RAF forces in the Far East, later being killed in an air crash.[2]
Conference paper from Highway to the Reich: Operation Market Garden and the Campaign in the Low Countries 1944 – Seventy Years on, held at University of Wolverhampton