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While I did not check out your link .... :sleep_125 .... nothing personal you unnerstan' , just a commentary on most links herein ... but "dogfights" ARE "barbaric" to a degree ..... and when you think about it -- they SHOULD BE.[threadjack] Does anybody else think that dogfights are a little barbaric [/threadjack]
A4s comments about the F-15, their training, and different philosophy were spot on. I had very similar experiences during that timeframe.
And for anyone who might eagerly underestimate any potential aerial threat, and believe our air supremacy will easily conquer all, should also consider this:
"During the ten years of conflict in Vietnam, the United States lost 2,448 fixed wing aircraft to a third world military whose air force deployed fewer than 200 combat aircraft." (2005 remarks of USAF Gen. Richard Hawley)
Link
Au contraire, my NFO friend ...VPAF aircraft were only responsible for a fraction of those aircraft downed, he doesn't bother to point that out.......
VPAF aircraft were only responsible for a fraction of those aircraft downed, he doesn't bother to point that out.......
It's past my bedtime ... warm milk and cookies heals all wounds.
VPAF aircraft were only responsible for a fraction of those aircraft downed, he doesn't bother to point that out.......
Not to quibble with HJ, but Hanoi's skies, as bad as they were, may have very much been preferable than the "Estonia mentioned." At least Hanoi's heavy and concentrated defenses had less-than-state-of-the-art, Russia hand-me-downs.(also, SAM sites were indeed legit targets for us, and desirable; it was the pervasive, red-boxed no-bomb-zones where Jane Fonda's entourage was on that particular day where we couln't bomb.)
Au contraire, my NFO friend ...
'.... But they (NV) launched 9,000 SAMs and maintained more than 6,000 AAA sites throughout the war
... It was the AAA that proved so lethal, accounting for more than 65% of our combat losses ....'