Giulio Douhet (born May 30, 1869, Caserta, Italy—died Feb. 15, 1930, Rome) was an Italian army general and the father of strategic air power.
Trained as an artillery officer, from 1912 to 1915 Douhet served as commander of the Aeronautical Battalion, Italy’s first aviation unit (also the first to practice aerial bombardment, in Libya during Italy’s war with Turkey, 1911–12). Largely because of his efforts, the three-engine Caproni bomber was ready for use by the time Italy entered World War I. He soon grasped the potential of air power and at every opportunity expounded his theories. His severe criticism of the conduct of the war resulted in his court-martial, imprisonment, and retirement. But investigation of the Italian defeat at Caporetto in 1917 justified his criticisms; his conviction was reversed, and he was appointed head of the aviation service.
Douhet’s most noted book is Il dominio dell’aria (1921; The Command of the Air, 1942). He challenged the violent opposition it aroused until strategic air power became an accepted part of military thinking. Although technological developments have made some of his ideas obsolete, his theory of the important role of strategic bombing in disorganizing and annihilating an enemy’s war effort was incorporated into future military plans of Italy and the United States. (The U.S. Army Air Corps had a translation of Il dominio dell’aria by the mid-1920s.) He further advocated the creation of an independent air force, the reduction of land and sea forces, and the unification of the armed forces. Controversial though his ideas were, many were adopted, in part at least, by the major powers before and during World War II.