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Based on research and personal interviews, this book presents the
most successful North Vietnamese pilots' careers from their
training years to their missions and aerial victories. There were
nineteen aces in the Vietnamese People's Air Force during the war.
An additional eight MiG pilots were also successful in dogfights;
each claimed four aerial victories. More than 240 illustrations
feature rare war-era photography, color MiG profiles, maps of air
engagements, and lists of air victories and losses that reconstruct
the events that took place over North Vietnam from 1965 to 1973.
Having learned their trade on the subsonic MiG-17, pilots of the
Vietnamese People's Air Force (VPAF) received their first examples
of the legendary MiG-21 supersonic fighter in 1966. Soon thrown
into combat over North Vietnam, the guided-missile equipped MiG-21
proved a deadly opponent for the US Air Force, US Navy and US
Marine Corps crews striking at targets deep in communist territory.
Although the communist pilots initially struggled to come to terms
with the fighter's air-search radar and weapons systems, the
ceaseless cycle of combat operations quickly honed their skills.
Indeed, by the time the last US aircraft (a B-52) was claimed by
the VPAF on 28 December 1972, no fewer than 13 pilots had become
aces flying the MiG-21. Fully illustrated with wartime photographs
and detailed colour artwork plates, and including enthralling
combat reports, this book examines the many variants of the MiG-21
that fought in the conflict, the schemes they wore and the pilots
that flew them.
At the beginning of the Vietnam War, the Vietnam People's Air Force
(VPAF) were equipped with slow, old Korean War generation fighters
- a combination of MiG-17s and MiG-19s - types that should have
offered little opposition to the cutting-edge fighter-bombers such
as the F-4 Phantom II, F-105 Thunderchief and the F-8 Crusader. Yet
when the USAF and US Navy unleashed their aircraft on North Vietnam
in 1965 the inexperienced pilots of the VPAF were able to shatter
the illusion of US air superiority. Taking advantage of their jet's
unequalled low-speed maneuverability, small size and powerful
cannon armament they were able to take the fight to their
missile-guided opponents, with a number of Vietnamese pilots
racking up ace scores. Packed with information previously
unavailable in the west and only recently released from archives in
Vietnam, this is the first major analysis of the exploits of
Vietnamese pilots in the David and Goliath contest with the US over
the skies of Vietnam.
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