US Army Air Force was the predecessor of United States Air Force and was the military aviation wing of US Military during WW II. USAAF took a total of 88,119 casualties. This was 12 percent of total US casualties of the war. Out of 88,119 airmen deaths, 52,173 were battle casualty deaths and 35946 were non-battle deaths. Only US army had more casualties than USAAF in WW II.
40000 died in combat and 15000 in non combat activities
Technically none. There was no Air Force it was a branch of the Army referred to as The Army Air Corp at the time.
The Salvation Army now has 85 locations in the world.
PAK ARMY have 9 CORPS
In the U.S. Army Nurse Corps alone, over 217 nurses died.
Not really. the Army Air Corps was replaced in 1941 and was phased out by 1942. They became the United States Army Air Force, which conducted many raids over Germany.
How Many Military Deaths Where There In World War Two ? :)
A US Army group is made up of several corps and has 80,000 - 200,000 men
Of the 16,596,639 servicemen who fought for the US in World War Two, 416,837 lost their lives: 318,274 from the Army and Air Force, 62,614 from the Navy, 24,511 from the Marine Corps, 1,917 from the Coast Guard and 9,521 from the Merchant Marines. There were 643,846 wounded and also 1,700 civilian deaths.
Good Guestimate AnswerWe'll assume you're asking about the American Army which included the Army Air Corps (later the Air Force) during WW2. One commonly hears that 229,000 Americans died during World War Two. That is the ARMY figure, however. Overall American deaths (413,000, of which approx. 300,000 were combat deaths) were spread pretty much equally between the two theaters. We can assume, however, that Navy and Marine casualties were much higher in the Pacific while Merchant Marine and Army casualties were higher in Europe. Going with this information, I would surmise that the U.S. Army (again, including the Army Air Corps) probably lost about 120,000+ men in Europe during World War Two. My wife and I visited the D-Day museum in Caan, France in September, 2008. (The museum is spectacular.) In it, there is a plaque with the list of deaths by country. They are as follows:Allied PowersRussia 1,800,000France 1,375,800United Kingdom 908,371Italy 578,000Serbia 278,000Romania 250,000United States 114,000Belgium 38,716Central PowersGermany 2,033,700Austria/Hungary 1,100,000Turkey 804,000Bulgaria 87,500
A corps is two or more divisions. Frequently in the armies of both sides in WWI a corps had three divisions, but it could have more, There is no set number, just however many divisions seems best to the army commander. (A field army is two or more corps). So the answer depends on the size of the divisions fielded by the country of whose army the corps is a part. British, French and German divisions were around 12-15,000 men at full strength. US divisions of WWI were huge, more than 26,000 men. So, a US corps with only two divisions was bigger than any other nation's corps with three.
The number and strength of the various corps changed over time. The Union had 25 numbered corps, plus an ambulance corps, balloon, cavalry, and telegraph corps. Not all of these were in operations at the same time. Not all of the Confederate Army was divided into corps. The Army of Northern Virginia had four regular corps and one cavalry corps. The Army of Tennessee had 3 corps. The Confederates had about 13 small armies which might be considered as corps. Most of these armies did not operate throughout the war; instead they were broken off of other units and later merged again.
The corps are military formations within a larger army. Napoleon I created six corps within his Grande Armee. They were all led by French generals.
There were a considerble amount of deaths.