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[personal profile] frustratedpilot
Due to the contraversy on the rec.aviation.military forum on USENET (yes, I still check USENET every day, even if the server is regurgitating messages from years past) I have been informed about the Air Force's "rediscovery" of the trainer-as-counter-insurgency-strike aircraft and the use of ex-Raptor funding in this program. Yes, the Air Force has done this on a regular basis. In Korea, they pulled T-6 Texans out of mothballs, put bomb racks on them and sent them after Mao's Mob. In Vietnam, they had to scrounge T-28 Trojans from junkyards and mount flare pods on them to mark targets on the Ho Chi Minh Trail. For Desert Storm, they decided "well, better wait to retire the OV-10 Bronco--gonna need those for Iraq and Kuwait". Between the wars, the pundits always conclude that small, low-altitude aircraft have no place over a "modern" battlefield, and then war comes along and there's a need to be filled. Something cheap, easy to use, that can be fielded close to the front lines without heavy support demands. (Of course, for all its high-technology and specialization, the F-22 is none of these things.)

Anyway, my look into that story led me to this story, and from there to this story. Yes, a "random encounter", just like what role-playing gamers have seen over the last three or four decades. A weapon is only as good as the person who uses it...and even the best can be beaten if he makes an error of judgment.

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Stephen R Bierce

March 2022

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