This Military Service Page was created/owned by
SSgt Robert Bruce McClelland, Jr.
to remember
Gilormini-Pacheco, Mihiel, Brig Gen USAF(Ret).
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Contact Info
Home Town Yauco, Puerto Rico
Last Address San Juan, Puerto Rico
Date of Passing Jan 29, 1988
Location of Interment Puerto Rico National Cemetery (VA) - Bayamon, Puerto Rico
He flew combat missions in WWII and later was one of the founders of the Puerto Rico ANG.
Synopsis of his Silver Star citation: Awarded for actions during World War II
(Citation Needed) - SYNOPSIS: Mihiel Gilormini, United States Army Air Forces, was awarded the Silver Star for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action against the enemy while serving with the TWELFTH Air Force during World War II. General Orders: Headquarters, 12th Air Force, General Orders No. 27 (1945) Service: Army Air Forces Division: 12th Air Force
WWII - European Theater of Operations/Egypt-Libya Campaign (1942-43)
From Month/Year
June / 1942
To Month/Year
February / 1943
Description (Egypt-Libya Campaign 11 June 1942 to 12 February 1943) When the United States entered World War II in December 1941, the British had been fighting German and Italian armies in the Western Desert of Egypt and Libya for over a year. In countering an Italian offensive in 1940, the British had at first enjoyed great success. In 1941, however, when German forces entered the theater in support of their Italian ally, the British suffered severe reversals, eventually losing nearly all their hard-won gains in North Africa.
Even though the United States had not yet entered the war as an active combatant, by the time General Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, commander of the German Army’s Afrika Korps, began his offensive against the British Eighth Army in Libya in March 1941, the American and British air chiefs were already discussing American support for the British Eighth Army. Rommel’s rapid and unexpected success in the Libyan desert forced British and American staff officers
in London to accelerate their planning. President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his advisers also agreed that the British might need American support in the Middle East. Overall theater responsibility would continue to be British, but the President recognized that a British collapse in Egypt would have far-reaching implications and approved contingency measures to prepare for American support to the theater at a future date.