|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
The writing of this book, the first in-depth and fully detailed
research about the early years of the Chel Ha'avir - from the
light-plane days to the supersonic fighters received roughly ten
years later - is the culmination of a long research period by the
author. Research that was made harder by the tight - but
understandable and respected - security measures involving Israel's
Forces. An exceptional source of information has been the help
provided by many Chel Ha'Avir veterans who fought in the early days
during 1948/1949, and those who helped establish a viable air force
in 1949-1956 in spite of tight budgets, obsolescent equipment and
lack of experience, and also those who fought in Sinai in late
1956, establishing the seeds for its future role as the airborne
shield of Israel. As the reader will discover, the beginnings were
extremely hard, and the Chel Ha'Avir had to face unfriendly
attitudes from both the United States and the United Kingdom, which
took place while many people - civilian and military - were dying
in the newborn Hebrew state. But in observing that official
policies do not always reflect the citizenship's feelings, most of
the colorful band of foreign volunteers that helped the Chel
Ha'avir - and the other defense forces - to resist, fight back and
win, came from those countries. These foreign volunteers, mostly
with combat experience in World War II, provided a core in which
many highly talented young Israelis learned fast. One thing was
certain, then and now; Israel exists because of the resolute people
that live in this small country, both civilian and military, but
above all because of the Chel Ha'avir which in the following years
would be proclaimed the most combat experienced air force in the
world.
The FACA programme (Future Fighter and Attack Aircraft) was once
the largest investment in armaments made in Spain. When choosing
the F-18 of McDonnell Douglas (today Boeing), the Air Force has had
since 1986 - for the first time in its history - one of the most
advanced fighter planes ever designed, with very wide possibilities
for adapting new systems throughout its operational life, as
evidenced by the Retrofit made in the early 1990s and the current
MLU. The FACA program (which ultimately remained in 72 aircraft),
followed by the CX programme (for 24 aircraft), was the most
important challenge faced by the Spanish Air Force since its
creation. The professionalism demonstrated by the commission in
charge of flight and technical evaluations won the admiration of
the countries involved in the programme. The F-18 Hornet has proven
to be the ideal aircraft for air forces in countries with large
territorial areas and wide coastlines, or extreme weather
conditions.
The birth of the Ninth Squadron (Novena Escuadrilla) of the Spanish
Navy Fleet Air Arm (Flotilla de Aeronaves in short FLOAN) took
place in 1987 with the receipt of the first three AV-8B aircraft
from McDonnell Douglas factory in St. Louis on October 6 of that
year. Deliveries continued for a total of 12 AV-8B Harrier IIs
(numbered 01- 901 to 01-912) commonly known as “Day Attack” to
differentiate them from later models Night Attack and AV-8B+ or
“Radar” Aircraft. On January 29, 1996 the first AV-8B Plus
01-914 joined the squadron. Then continued deliveries up to 01-921,
which makes a total of eight AV-8B+ that greatly enhanced the
operational capabilities of the squadron. On 1 October 2000 the
unit received TAV-8B 01-922, which is the only two-seater with the
squadron and together with the simulator allows it to be totally
autonomous in the adaptation to training new pilots just graduated
from the U.S Naval Aviator pipeline. On July 30, 2003 were received
from the now Boeing factory in Saint Louis the first two AV-8B to
be remanufactured as AV-8B+ numbered 01-923 and 01-924. On 21
November the same year the last three planes in the remanufacturing
programme, 01-925, 01-926 and 01-927 were ferried to Rota Naval
Sation flown by Novena Escuadrilla pilots.
This is the first book ever to chronicle in detail all of the
Mirage III, 5, F1 and 2000 aircraft and specifically their use in
combat operations from the Middle East to the South Atlantic, the
Persian Gulf to the steaming jungles of Ecuador and Peru. With well
over three million flight hours since 1961, the Mirage has seen
more combat than any present day jet fighter, including action in
the Six-Days War, the Falklands, the Gulf War and many other lesser
known conflicts. Superb color photography is combined with detailed
text including squadron histories, and Mirage pilot narratives from
Israel, Argentina, South Africa,Iraq and others.
|
You may like...
Funny Story
Emily Henry
Paperback
R380
R351
Discovery Miles 3 510
|