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Originally designated as the "advanced trainer" AT-6, North
American's single-engine training aircraft was extensively used by
the U.S. Army Air Forces, U.S. Navy (as the "SNJ"), Royal Air Force
(as the "Harvard") and allied air forces during WWII. The prototype
first flew in 1935, and by the time production ceased over 15,000
T-6s of all types were built. This included the AT-6B, which could
hold a machine gun and was used for gunnery training, the AT-6G
which offered a steerable tailwheel and advanced hydraulic system,
and the Navy's SNJ-3C with arresting gear to permit carrier
training. Aside from training duties T-6s saw service as forward
air controllers, and served in combat on several occasions
including for the French during the Algerian war. The T-6 remains a
popular aircraft for Hollywood (in Tora Tora Tora painted T-6s
impersonated Japanese Zeros) and at air shows, where its throaty
engine and classic "warbird" looks make it a crowd pleaser. This
pilot's flight handbook dates from 1945, and features details on
the AT-6C / SNJ-4 and Harvard IIA airplanes. Originally restricted,
it was declassified long ago, and is reprinted here in its
entirety.
The Marines in Vietnam, 1954-1973, An Anthology and Annotated
Bibliography, based on articles that appeared in the U.S. Naval
Institute Proceedings, Naval Review, and Marine Corps Gazette, has
served well for 14 years as an interim reference on the Vietnam
War. It has both complemented and supplemented our official
histories on Marine operations in Vietnam. Since its publication in
1974, however, events in Vietnam and the appearance of additional
significant articles in the three periodicals have made both the
anthology and bibliography somewhat dated. This expanded edition
extends the coverage of the anthology to 1975 and the entries in
the bibliography to 1984.
The purpose of this publication is to provide commanders, staffs,
key agencies, and service members with a key reference for planning
and conducting CBRN defense of installations. It provides the tools
for CBRN defense personnel to implement active and passive CBRN
sense, shape, shield, and sustain measures. It also serves as a key
source ii FM 3-11.34/MCWP 3-37.5/NTTP 3-11.23/AFTTP(I) 3-2.33 6
November 2007 document for refining existing service publications,
training support packages, training center exercises, and service
school curricula.
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Mine Warfare (Paperback)
U. S. Navy, United States Marine Corps
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R755
Discovery Miles 7 550
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Since the invention of the Bushnell Keg in 1776, mine warfare has
been an important element of naval warfare. The use of mines and
countermeasures to mines has figured significantly in every major
armed conflict and nearly every regional conflict in which the
United States has been involved since the Revolutionary War. Mine
warfare has been increasingly important and effective since World
War I. Mines presently on the world arms markets are relatively
inexpensive, easy to procure, reliable and effective, and difficult
for intelligence agencies to track. The mine, as a weapon system,
has an extremely favorable investment return (cost of mine to cost
of damage ratio) for the miner. Despite the logic and effectiveness
of maintaining the mine element of war at sea on an even footing
with the other naval warfighting specialties, throughout its
history, the U.S. Navy has devoted proportionally fewer resources
to mine warfare. As a result, despite the emergence of the U.S.
Navy as the world's premier maritime power whose individual
warfighting capabilities generally are superior to those of other
navies, its mine countermeasure capabilities have lagged behind.
The old adage that those who will not learn the lessons of history
are doomed to repeat them has persistently applied to the mine
warfare aspect of the U.S. Navy. North Arabian Gulf operations of
the U.S. Navy in Desert Storm contain some bitter experiences,
including the mission-aborting mine strikes to two major warships,
as well as the controversy over the decision not to land U.S.
Marines in Kuwait. Despite the unfortunate nature of the initial
Desert Storm experience and the need to recapture expertise in MCM,
the U.S. Navy and Allied navies did have substantial success in
countering the nearly 1,300 naval mines deployed by the Iraqis and
emerged victorious in the MCM element of Desert Storm warfighting
as in the other aspects of that war. This positive conclusion to
the mine clearance campaign in the North Arabian Gulf was because
of the unparalleled material and logistics support from the
Department of the Navy's shore establishment and the cooperation of
many allied nations in the coalition effort. In addition to
national support and multinational cooperation, the enabling
elements of this success were the ability of the American
Bluejacket to learn and adapt quickly, combined with good tactical
command in the fields. Of special note is that as the course of the
mine clearance campaign progressed, the Naval Component Command
leadership came to understand, appreciate, and support the complex
warfighting nature of mine clearance operations.
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