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Framed photo of the second batch of FAB-100 personnel

1945/1945

Museum of Chinese in America

Museum of Chinese in America
New York, United States

In 1945, 100 young Chinese officers were specially selected for a confidential mission and sent on planes to the U.S. with no knowledge of their assignment's purpose. The "FAB-100" were well-educated, fluent in English, familiar with American military doctrine, highly trained, and had seen heavy combat. They were divided into two groups containing 50 members each. Both groups left the city of Kunming in the Yunnan province only two months apart; the first leaving in April and the second in June. Their voyage to the U.S.—which passed through Burma, India, Saudi Arabia, Cairo, Libya, Casablanca, the Azores, and Newfoundland—was so secretive that they made no refueling stop sto avoid the Axis agents' eyes, flew through weather that would have grounded most aircrafts, and arrived in New York without the U.S. generals there knowing they were coming. After two groups of 50 arrived in New York and California, the highly skilled "Chinese Training Detachment" woked as interpreters and instructors in classrooms, labs, shops, and in the air, teaching aviation mechanics, bombardiers, meteorologists, navigators, pilots, and radio mechanics. While many of the FAB-100 were stationed at Bergstrom Army Air Field in Austin, TX, members of the special task force eventually served at most major air bases in the South, Midwest, and West. In December 1945, the FAB-100 were disbaned and 56 officers chose to stay in the U.S., many receiving advanced degrees. In 1945, President Truman awarded 22 of the officers with the Presidential Medal of Freedm for their "meritorious service" to the U.S. against the enemy, although it took over 40 years for many to receive their awards.

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  • Title: Framed photo of the second batch of FAB-100 personnel
  • Date Created: 1945/1945
Museum of Chinese in America

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