Air Force Roles and Missions:
A History

The United States Air Force from the 1900s to the 1990s

Nobody But the People big book cover

The twentieth century witnessed the emergence of three-dimensionality in war: surface forces now became prey for attackers operating above and below the earth and its oceans. The aerial weapon, prophesied for centuries, became a reality, as did air power projection forces. This insightful book by Warren A. Trest traces the doctrinal underpinnings of the modern United States Air Force, the world's only global air force. We - the men and women who serve in the Air Force, but also our fellow airmen in America's other military services - are the heirs and beneficiaries of a long heritage of doctrinal development and military thought.

Our predecessors pursued a vision of airborne global reach and power that often put them at

odds with those who could not break free of the confines of conventional thought and lock-step traditionalism. Fortunately, they had the courage of their convictions and the faith in their vision to continue to pursue the goal of global air power despite such resistance. Today, America is a genuine aerospace power, and that pioneering vision dating to the days of the Wright brothers, has expanded to encompass operations in space and between the mediums of air and space. It is well to ponder the lessons and the history of how a small group of truly gifted airmen transformed their nation's military establishment, and, in so doing, the world around them.
- Dr. Richard P. Hallion

A U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff's 2007 Reading List Book

"Do roles and missions matter? Warren A. Trest, a veteran of thirty years in the Air Force history program, thinks they do... he makes a convincing case that the services--the Air Force in particular--need to continue paying close attention. Simply put, roles and missions, or 'functions' as they are sometimes called, can make or break a service.The treatment of the interwar period is especially illuminating, not only in exploring the origins of the post-World War II roles and missions battles between the Air Force and the Navy, but also in explaining the Air Force's unique institutional development...
...it is a story worth retelling and this book brings it all together better than any I know."

- Dr. Stephen L. Reardon, Air Power History, Fall 200 issue

published by the U.S. Government Printing Office, 1998
and
reprinted by the University Press of the Pacific, 2005