Im not sure an exact number, but definently more then the Tuskegee Airmen...also World War 2 was a similar scenario of world war 1 , except World War 1 was near the great depression so supplies were low. world war 2 had more resources and more people were healthy enough and able to enter in the armed forces, so there were probably more pilots than in world war 1?
there were 100,000 RAF (royal air force) pilots in the World War II and 90,000 died in the war
14,166. on allied powers , the central powers is unknown
u.s poastal service
The exact number of pilots who survived World War II is difficult to determine, as records vary by country and the nature of military service. However, it is estimated that hundreds of thousands of pilots served during the war, with a significant portion surviving the conflict. For instance, the U.S. Army Air Forces alone had over 1.5 million personnel, and while many pilots faced combat and danger, a large number returned home after the war. Overall, the survival rate among pilots depended on various factors, including the theater of war and the intensity of combat.
there was only 1 for a fact
27
there were 100,000 RAF (royal air force) pilots in the World War II and 90,000 died in the war
About 17,000
100,000
No the Japanese Kamikaze pilots were a phenomenon of late World War II.
These numbers are not released
us in ww2
there was only 1 for a fact
14,166. on allied powers , the central powers is unknown
7 German pilots
u.s poastal service
Pilots.