The Curtiss P-40, known to Americans as Warhawk, and to their allies of
the British Commonwealth as Tomahawk and Kittyhawk, fought on nearly all
fronts of the Second World War, serving with the American, British,
Australian, New Zealand, South African, Canadian, Free French, Chinese,
Dutch, and Soviet air forces. The American Warhawks were part of as many
as nine US Army Air Forces stationed overseas: the 5th (Australia, New
Guinea, Philippines); the 6th (Central America); the 7th (central
Pacific); the 9th (Middle East, North Africa), the 10th (India, Burma),
the 11th (Alaska, Aleutians), the 12th (North Africa, Italy); the 13th
(the Solomons); and the 14th (China). During the first years of the war
the P-40 helped the Allies stem the offensive of the Axis powers and
fight them back at the last-ditch defensive positions, like Kunming in
China, Port Moresby on New Guinea, Darwin in Australia, and El Alamein
in Egypt. Never a high-performance fighter, it nonetheless proved a
potent weapon in capable hands. Often turned into a fighter-bomber in
later years, it soldiered on until phased out in favor of more advanced
designs.