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Over the past eight decades, developments in vertical lift
aircraft-both helicopters and vertical/short takeoff and landing
(V/STOL) planes-have given the American military unparalleled
capabilities on the modern battlefield. The U.S. has led the world
in vertical lift technologies with the help of some of the
brightest minds in this field-Igor I. Sikorsky, Arthur M. Young,
Frank N. Piasecki, Charles H. Kaman and Stanley Hiller, Jr., to
name a few-and by having the industrial prowess to make their
concepts reality. This book gives a concise historical survey,
including technical specifications, drawings, and photographs of
every type of helicopter and V/STOL aircraft developed for the U.S.
military, from the earliest examples tested in 1941 and 1942, up to
the newest prototypes.
Without the support of airlift, the modern American military
machine would be brought to a standstill. Since World War
II--beginning with the Cold War and continuing up to the present
day--the U.S. armed forces have come increasingly to rely upon
airlift for mobility. The power to move and thereafter support a
military operation--anywhere in the world, at any time--has become
a foundational element of American defense policy. This work
provides the reader with a comprehensive historical
survey--including technical specifications, drawings, and
photographs--of each type of fixed-wing aircraft used by U.S.
military forces over a nearly 90-year period to carry out the
airlift mission.
The United States of America did not become the world's foremost
military air power by accident. Arriving at this position has been
a long and difficult learning process that continues to present
day. The learning curve--World War I, World War II, the Korean War,
the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, and more recently, the War on
Terror--has been a steep one. While climbing this curve, the U.S.
has not only produced superior military aircraft in greater numbers
than its foes but has--in due course--out-trained them, too. This
work is designed to provide the reader with a comprehensive
historical survey, including technical specifications, drawings,
and photographs, of each type of fixed and rotary-wing aircraft
used by U.S. military forces over a 98-year period to accomplish
the first step of the learning process: the training of pilots and
aircrews.
This book provides a concise historical survey of the various types
of aircraft used by the United States Army Air Corps, Army Air
Forces, and Air Force, and the Navy and Marine Corps to accomplish
air attack missions since 1926. The text covers four types of
fixed-wing aircraft: designated attack aircraft; light, medium, and
tactical bombers; fighter-bombers; and adapted attack aircraft.
Reports on individual aircraft types include the aircraft's
original military requirements, production history, and operational
record, usually accompanied by photographs, illustrations, and
technical specifications. Four appendices detail aircraft
designations and nomenclature used throughout the military, the
organizational structure of various military air units, aircraft
designs that never made it into official service, and the evolution
of attack aircraft weapons and tactics.
Within six months of the devastating attack on Pearl Harbor, the
U.S. Navy had checked the Japanese Empire's military advance in the
Pacific to the extent that the United States could return to its
original ""Defeat Germany First"" strategy. That the Navy was able
to accomplish this feat with only six fleet aircraft carriers (in
the Pacific) and little more than 1,000 combat aircraft was not
sheer luck but the culmination of more than two decades of
determined preparation. This thorough study, with detailed drawings
and photographs, explains and illustrates the trial and error
process which went into developing the aircraft, airships, and
ships of the interwar period. The critical factors that shaped
Naval Aviation after World War I--naval treaties, fleet tactics,
government programs, leadership and organization, as well as the
emergence of Marine Corps and Coast Guard aviation--are discussed
in detail.
Among the world's various military air arms, United States Marine
Corps Aviation occupies a historically unique niche. As the
aviation component of a combined-arms expeditionary force, it
exists primarily to support Marine combat forces on the ground in
the accomplishment of their amphibious assault mission. From the
"Banana Wars" of the 1920s up to the present day "War on Terror,"
Marine aviation has undergone a lengthy fine-tuning process not
only in terms of the warfare doctrines and tactics applied to its
mission, but also in the types of aircraft needed to accomplish the
mission. This work is designed to provide the reader with a
comprehensive historical survey, including technical
specifications, drawings, and photographs, of every type of fixed
and rotary-wing aircraft used by Marine aviation from its humble
origins prior to World War I all the way up to its current
operations in the second decade of the 21st Century.
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