With the enthusiasm and credibility of a fighter pilot who actually rolled down the chute in Southeast Asia, C. R. “Lucky” Anderegg provides a “sierra hotel” account of how a small corps of dedicated fighter pilots capitalized on their combat experience and a vision of what should have occurred in Vietnam to sow the seeds of transformation that took root in the Tactical Air Force (TAF) during the decade that followed. Detailing significant advances in combat capability that sprang forth from fertile minds cultivated in the crucible of combat, Anderegg argues that the creation of the Aggressors and Red Flag marked the Fighter Mafia’s crowning achievements since both served to ensure that the fruit of their many innovations fell upon Allied fighter crews in the following decades. Anderegg begins his work by examining the performance of Air Force fighter pilots in Vietnam’s “school of hard knocks.” Flying fighters designed for a nuclear confrontation with the Warsaw Pact, fighter crews went to Southeast Asia with inadequate training for the machines they flew and the conventional air war they faced. Highlighting numerous contributing factors, Anderegg astutely points to poor instructional methodology as the principal reason new fighter pilots arrived in-theater largely unprepared.
Название: Sierra Hotel: Flying Air Force Fighters in the Decade After Vietnam
Автор: C. R. Anderegg
Издательство: US Air Force
Год: 2001
Страниц: 211
Качество: хорошее
Язык: Английский
Формат: PDF
Размер: 22 мб