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Flying ace

A flying ace, fighter ace or air ace is a military aviator credited with shooting down five or more enemy aircraft during aerial combat. The exact number of aerial victories required to officially qualify as an ace is varied, but is usually considered to be five or more.

The "first French ace", Frenchman Adolphe Pégoud being awarded the Croix de guerre.

The concept of the "ace" emerged in 1915 during World War I, at the same time as aerial dogfighting. It was a propaganda term intended to provide the home front with a cult of the hero in what was otherwise a war of attrition. The individual actions of aces were widely reported and the image was disseminated of the ace as a chivalrous knight reminiscent of a bygone era.[1] For a brief early period when air-to-air combat was just being invented, the exceptionally skilled pilot could shape the battle in the skies. For most of the war, however, the image of the ace had little to do with the reality of air warfare, in which fighters fought in formation and air superiority depended heavily on the relative availability of resources.[2]

Use of the term ace to describe these pilots began in World War I, when French newspapers described Adolphe Pégoud, as l'As (the ace) after he became the first pilot to down five German aircraft. The British initially used the term "star-turns" (a show business term).

The successes of such German ace pilots as Max Immelmann and Oswald Boelcke were much publicized, for the benefit of civilian morale, and the Pour le Mérite, Prussia's highest award for gallantry, became part of the uniform of a leading German ace. In the Luftstreitkräfte, the Pour le Mérite was nicknamed Der blaue Max/The Blue Max, after Max Immelmann, who was the first pilot to receive this award. Initially, German aviators had to destroy eight Allied aircraft to receive this medal.[3] As the war progressed, the qualifications for Pour le Mérite were raised,[3] but successful German fighter pilots continued to be hailed as national heroes for the remainder of the war.

The few aces among combat aviators have historically accounted for the majority of air-to-air victories in military history.[4]

History

World War I

 
Manfred von Richthofen, known as the "Red Baron", scored the most officially accepted kills (80) in World War I and is arguably the most famous flying ace of all time.
 
French Colonel Rene Fonck, to this day the highest-scoring Allied flying ace with 75 victories.

World War I introduced the systematic use of true single-seat fighter aircraft, with enough speed and agility to catch and maintain contact with targets in the air, coupled with armament sufficiently powerful to destroy the targets. Aerial combat became a prominent feature with the Fokker Scourge, in the last half of 1915. This was also the beginning of a long-standing trend in warfare, showing statistically that approximately five percent of combat pilots account for the majority of air-to-air victories.[4]

As the German fighter squadrons usually fought well within German lines, it was practicable to establish and maintain very strict guidelines for the official recognition of victory claims by German pilots. Shared victories were either credited to one of the pilots concerned or to the unit as a whole – the destruction of the aircraft had to be physically confirmed by locating its wreckage, or an independent witness to the destruction had to be found. Victories were also counted for aircraft forced down within German lines, as this usually resulted in the death or capture of the enemy aircrew.

Allied fighter pilots fought mostly in German-held airspace[5][6] and were often not in a position to confirm that an apparently destroyed enemy aircraft had in fact crashed, so these victories were frequently claimed as "driven down", "forced to land", or "out of control" (called "probables" in later wars). These victories were usually included in a pilot's totals and in citations for decorations.[7]

The British high command considered praise of fighter pilots to be detrimental to equally brave bomber and reconnaissance aircrew – so that the British air services did not publish official statistics on the successes of individuals. Nonetheless some pilots did become famous through press coverage,[3] making the British system for the recognition of successful fighter pilots much more informal and somewhat inconsistent. One pilot, Arthur Gould Lee, described his own score in a letter to his wife as "Eleven, five by me solo — the rest shared", adding that he was "miles from being an ace".[8] This shows that his No. 46 Squadron RAF counted shared kills, but separately from "solo" ones—one of a number of factors that seems to have varied from unit to unit. Also evident is that Lee considered a higher figure than five kills to be necessary for "ace" status. Aviation historians credit him as an ace with two enemy aircraft destroyed and five driven down out of control, for a total of seven victories.[9]

 
Albert Ball, Britain's first famous flying ace. He was killed in 1917, aged 20.

Other Allied countries, such as France and Italy, fell somewhere in between the very strict German approach and the relatively casual British one. They usually demanded independent witnessing of the destruction of an aircraft, making confirmation of victories scored in enemy territory very difficult.[10] The Belgian crediting system sometimes included "out of control" to be counted as a victory.[11]

The United States Army Air Service adopted French standards for evaluating victories, with two exceptions – during the summer of 1918, while flying under operational control of the British, the 17th Aero Squadron and the 148th Aero Squadron used British standards.[10] American newsmen, in their correspondence to their papers, decided that five victories were the minimum needed to become an ace.[12]

While "ace" status was generally won only by fighter pilots, bomber and reconnaissance crews on both sides also destroyed some enemy aircraft, typically in defending themselves from attack. The most notable example of a non-pilot ace in World War I is Charles George Gass with 39 accredited aerial victories.[13]

Between the world wars

Between the two world wars, there were two theaters that produced flying aces, the Spanish Civil War and the Second Sino-Japanese War.

The Spanish ace Joaquín García Morato scored 40 victories for the Nationalists during the Spanish Civil War. Part of the outside intervention in the war was the supply of "volunteer" foreign pilots to both sides. Russian and American aces joined the Republican air force, while the Nationalists included Germans and Italians.

The Soviet Volunteer Group began operations in the Second Sino-Japanese War as early as December 2, 1937, resulting in 28 Soviet aces.[14] The Flying Tigers were American military pilots recruited sub rosa to aid the Chinese Nationalists. They spent the summer and autumn of 1941 in transit to China, and did not begin flying combat missions until December 20, 1941.

World War II

 
Erich Hartmann, with 352 official kills the highest scoring fighter pilot of all time.
 
Ivan Kozhedub, the top Soviet and Allied flying ace in the war, with 60 solo victories to his credit
 
Major Richard Bong, the top American flying ace in the war, credited with shooting down 40 Japanese aircraft in his P-38 Lightning
 
Ilmari Juutilainen, a Finnish flying ace with Brewster BW-364 "Orange 4" on 26 June 1942 during the Continuation War.[15]

In World War II many air forces adopted the British practice of crediting fractional shares of aerial victories, resulting in fractions or decimal scores, such as 11+12 or 26.83. Some U.S. commands also credited aircraft destroyed on the ground as equal to aerial victories. The Soviets distinguished between solo and group kills, as did the Japanese, though the Imperial Japanese Navy stopped crediting individual victories (in favor of squadron tallies) in 1943.[citation needed] The Soviet Air Forces has the top Allied pilots in terms of aerial victories, Ivan Kozhedub credited with 66 victories and Alexander Pokryshkin scored 65 victories. It also claimed the only female aces of the war: Lydia Litvyak scored 12 victories and Yekaterina Budanova achieved 11.[16] The highest scoring pilots from the Western allies against the German Luftwaffe were Johnnie Johnson (RAF, 38 kills) and Gabby Gabreski (USAAF, 28 kills in the air and 3 on the ground).[17] In the Pacific theater Richard Bong became the top American fighter ace with 40 kills. In the Mediterranean theater Pat Pattle achieved at least 40 kills, mainly against Italian planes, and became the top fighter ace of the British Commonwealth in the war. Fighting on different sides, the French pilot Pierre Le Gloan had the unusual distinction of shooting down four German, seven Italian and seven British aircraft, the latter while he was flying for Vichy France in Syria.[citation needed]

The German Luftwaffe continued the tradition of "one pilot, one kill", and now referred to top scorers as Experten.[N 1] Some Luftwaffe pilots achieved very high scores, such as Erich Hartmann (352 kills) or Gerhard Barkhorn (301 kills).[19] There were 107 German pilots with more than 100 kills. Most of these were won against the Soviet Air Force.[20] The highest scoring fighter ace against Western allied forces were Hans-Joachim Marseille (158 kills)[21] and Heinz Bär (208 kills, of which 124 in the west). Notable are also Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer, with 121 kills the highest-scoring night-fighter ace, and Werner Mölders, the first pilot to claim more than 100 kills in the history of aerial warfare.[17][22] Pilots of other Axis powers also achieved high scores, such as Ilmari Juutilainen (Finnish Air Force, 94 kills), Constantin Cantacuzino (Romanian Air Force, 69 kills) or Mato Dukovac (Croatian Air Force, 44 kills). The highest scoring Japanese fighter pilot was Tetsuzō Iwamoto, who achieved 216 kills.

A number of factors probably contributed to the very high totals of the top German aces. For a limited period (especially during Operation Barbarossa), many Axis victories were over obsolescent aircraft and either poorly trained or inexperienced Allied pilots.[23] In addition, Luftwaffe pilots generally flew many more individual sorties (sometimes well over 1000) than their Allied counterparts. Moreover, they often kept flying combat missions until they were captured, incapacitated, or killed, while successful Allied pilots were usually either promoted to positions involving less combat flying or routinely rotated back to training bases to pass their valuable combat knowledge to younger pilots.[citation needed] An imbalance in the number of targets available also contributed to the apparently lower numbers on the Allied side, since the number of operational Luftwaffe fighters was normally well below 1,500, with the total aircraft number never exceeding 5,000, and the total aircraft production of the Allies being nearly triple that of the other side. A difference in tactics might have been a factor as well; Erich Hartmann, for example, stated "See if there is a straggler or an uncertain pilot among the enemy... Shoot him down.",[24] which would have been an efficient and relatively low-risk way of increasing the number of kills. At the same time, the Soviet 1943 "Instruction For Air Combat" stated that the first priority must be the enemy commander, which was a much riskier task, but one giving the highest return in case of a success.

Post-World War II aces

Korean War

The Korean War of 1950–53 marked the transition from piston-engined propeller driven aircraft to more modern jet aircraft. As such, it saw the world's first jet-vs-jet aces. The highest scoring ace of the war is considered to be the Soviet pilot Nikolai Sutyagin who claimed 22 kills.

Vietnam War

 
Capt. Richard Stephen Ritchie, 555th Tactical Fighter Squadron, pictured beside the aircraft in which he became the first Air Force ace of the Vietnam War

The Vietnam People's Air Force had begun development of its modern air-forces, primarily trained by Czechoslovak and Soviet trainers since 1956.[25] The outbreak of the largest sustained bombardment campaign in history prompted rapid deployment of the nascent air-force, and the first engagement of the war was in April 1965 at Thanh Hóa Bridge which saw relatively outdated subsonic MiG-17 units thrown against technically superior F-105 Thunderchief and F-8 Crusader, damaging 1 F-8 and killing two F-105 jets.[26] The MiG-17 generally did not have sophisticated radars and missiles and relied on dog-fighting and manoeuvrability to score kills on US aircraft.[25] Since US aircraft heavily outnumbered North Vietnamese ones, the Warsaw Pact and others had begun arming North Vietnam with MiG-21 jets.[25] The VPAF had adopted an interesting strategy of "guerrilla warfare in the sky" utilising quick hit-and-run attacks against US targets, continually flying low and forcing faster, more heavily armed US jets to engage in dog-fighting where the MiG-17 and MiG-21 had superior manoeuvrability.[27] The VPAF had carried out the first air-raid on US ships since WW2, with two aces including Nguyễn Văn Bảy attacking US ships during the Battle of Đồng Hới in 1972. Quite often air-to-air losses of US fighter jets were re-attributed to surface-to-air missiles, as it was considered "less embarrassing".[28] By the war's end, the US had nevertheless confirmed 245 air-to-air US aircraft losses[29] while the figures for North Vietnam are disputed, ranging from 195 North Vietnamese aircraft from US claims[30] to 131 from Soviet, North Vietnamese and allied records.[31]

American air-to-air combat during the Vietnam War generally matched intruding United States fighter-bombers against radar-directed integrated North Vietnamese air defense systems. American F-4 Phantom II, F-8 Crusader and F-105 fighter crews usually had to contend with surface-to-air missiles, anti-aircraft artillery, and machine gun fire before opposing fighters attacked them.[citation needed] The long-running conflict produced 22 aces: 17 North Vietnamese pilots, two American pilots, three American weapon systems officers or WSOs (WSO is the USAF designation, one of the three was actually a US Naval aviator, with an equivalent job, but using the USN designation of Radar Intercept Officer or RIO).[32]

Arab–Israeli war

 
Giora Epstein, the highest scoring flying ace in the Israeli Air Force with 17 aerial victories

The series of wars and conflicts between Israel and its neighbors began with Israeli independence in 1948 and continued for over three decades.

Iran–Iraq war

 
Brig. General Jalil Zandi, an ace fighter pilot in the Iranian Air Force. The most successful F-14 Tomcat pilot ever with eight confirmed kills during the Iran-Iraq war.

Brig. General Jalil Zandi (1951–2001) was an ace fighter pilot in the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force, serving for the full duration of the Iran–Iraq War. His record of eight confirmed and three probable[33] victories against Iraqi combat aircraft qualifies him as an ace and the most successful pilot of that conflict and the most successful Grumman F-14 Tomcat pilot worldwide.[34][35][36][37][38]

 
General Shahram Rostami, an ace fighter pilot in the Iranian Air Force. The F-14 Tomcat pilot had six confirmed kills during the Iran-Iraq war.

Brig. General Shahram Rostami was another Iranian ace. He was also an F-14 pilot. He had six confirmed kills. His victories include one MiG-21, two MiG-25s, and three Mirage F1s.[39]

Colonel Mohammed Rayyan was also another ace fighter pilot who shot down 5 to 8 Iranian aircraft, mostly F-4 Phantoms during the war.[40]

Indo-Pakistan War

Air Commodore Muhammad Mahmood Alam was an ace fighter pilot in the Pakistan Air Force. During the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965, Alam downed five aircraft in a single sortie on 7 September 1965 with four in less than a minute, establishing a world record. These claims, however, have been widely contested by Indian Air Force officials. [41][42][43][44]

Russo-Ukrainian War

On 13 October 2022, the Ukrainian government claims that Ukrainian pilot Vadym Voroshylov shot down 5 Shahed 136 drones before being forced to eject from his MiG-29 aircraft after it was hit by debris from the last Shahed-136 that had shot down. Voroshylov had shot down two Russian cruise missiles the day prior. [45][46]

Accuracy

Realistic assessment of enemy casualties is important for intelligence purposes, so most air forces expend considerable effort to ensure accuracy in victory claims. In World War II, the aircraft gun camera came into general usage by the Luftwaffe as well as the RAF and USAAF, partly in hope of alleviating inaccurate victory claims.

In World War I the standards for confirmation of aerial victories were developed. The most strict were the German and French ones which required both the existence of traceable wrecks or observations of independent observers. In contrast to this, the British system also accepted single claims of the pilots and deeds such as enemy planes "out of control", "driven down" and "forced to land".[47] Aerial victories were also divided among different pilots. This led to vast overclaims on the British and partially on the US American side. Some air forces, such as the USAAF, also included kills on the ground as victories.

The most accurate figures usually belong to the air arm fighting over its own territory, where many wrecks can be located, and even identified, and where shot down enemy are either killed or captured. It is for this reason that at least 76 of the 80 aircraft credited to Manfred von Richthofen can be tied to known British losses[48]—the German Jagdstaffeln flew defensively, on their own side of the lines, in part due to General Hugh Trenchard's policy of offensive patrol.

In World War II overclaims were a common problem. Nearly 50% of RAF victories in the Battle of Britain, for instance, do not tally statistically with recorded German losses—but some at least of this apparent over-claiming can be tallied with known wrecks, and aircrew known to have been in British PoW camps.[49] An overclaim of about 2-3 was common on all sides,[50][51][52][53] and Soviet overclaims were sometimes higher.[54][55] The claims of the Luftwaffe pilots are considered as mostly reasonable and more accurate than those according to the British and American system.[56][57]

To quote an extreme example, in the Korean War, both the U.S. and Communist air arms claimed a 10-to-1 victory/loss ratio.[58][59]

Non-pilot aces

 
Charles B. DeBellevue, the first USAF weapon systems officer to become a flying ace.

While aces are generally thought of exclusively as fighter pilots, some have accorded this status to gunners on bombers or reconnaissance aircraft, observers in two-seater fighters such as the early Bristol F.2b, and navigators/weapons officers in jet aircraft such as the McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II. Because pilots often teamed with different air crew members, an observer or gunner might be an ace while his pilot is not, or vice versa. Observer aces constitute a sizable minority in many lists.

In World War I, the observer Gottfried Ehmann of the German Luftstreitkräfte was credited with 12 kills,[60][61] for which he was awarded the Golden Military Merit Cross. In the Royal Flying Corps the observer Charles George Gass tallied 39 victories, of which 5 were actually confirmed.[62] The spread was caused by the lavish British system of aerial victory confirmation.[47]

In World War II, United States Army Air Forces S/Sgt. Michael Arooth, a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress tail gunner serving in the 379th Bombardment Group, was credited with 19 kills[63][64] and the Consolidated B-24 Liberator gunner Arthur J. Benko (374th Bombardment Squadron) with 16 kills. The Royal Air Force's leading bomber gunner, Wallace McIntosh, was credited with eight kills while serving as a rear turret gunner on Avro Lancasters, including three on one mission. Flight Sergeant F. J. Barker contributed to 12 victories while flying as a gunner in a Boulton Paul Defiant turret-equipped fighter piloted by Flight Sergeant E. R. Thorne.[65][66] On the German side, Erwin Hentschel, the Junkers Ju 87 rear gunner of Luftwaffe pilot and anti-tank ace Hans-Ulrich Rudel, had 7 confirmed kills. The crew of the bomber pilot Otto Köhnke from Kampfgeschwader 3 is credited with the destruction of 11 enemy fighters (6 French, 1 British, 4 Soviet).

With the advent of more advanced technology, a third category of ace appeared. Charles B. DeBellevue became not only the first U.S. Air Force weapon systems officer (WSO) to become an ace but also the top American ace of the Vietnam War, with six victories.[67] Close behind with five were fellow WSO Jeffrey Feinstein[68] and Radar Intercept Officer William P. Driscoll.[69]

Ace in a day

The first military aviators to score five or more victories on the same date, thus each becoming an "ace in a day", were pilot Julius Arigi and observer/gunner Johann Lasi of the Austro-Hungarian air force, on August 22, 1916, when they downed five Italian aircraft.[70] The feat was repeated five more times during World War I.[71][72][73]

Becoming an ace in a day became relatively common during World War II. A total of 68 U.S. pilots (43 Army Air Forces, 18 Navy, and seven Marine Corps pilots) were credited with the feat, including legendary test pilot Chuck Yeager.

In the Soviet offensive of 1944 in the Karelian Isthmus, Finnish pilot Hans Wind shot down 30 enemy aircraft in 12 days. In doing so, he obtained "ace in a day" status three times.

During the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965, Pakistani pilot Muhammad Mahmood Alam downed five aircraft in a single sortie on 7 September 1965 with four in less than a minute, establishing a world record. These claims, however, as always have been widely contested by Indian Air Force. [41][42][43][44]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For the award of decorations, the Germans initiated a points system to equal up achievements between the aces flying on the Eastern front with those on other, more demanding, fronts: one for a fighter, two for a twin-engine bomber, three for a four-engine bomber; night victories counted double; Mosquitoes counted double, due to the difficulty of bringing them down.[18]

References

  1. ^ Robertson, pp. 100—103.
  2. ^ Belich 2001.
  3. ^ a b c Payne, Dr. David. "Major 'Mick' Mannock, VC: Top Scoring British Flying Ace in the Great War." 2017-06-21 at the Wayback Machine Western Front Association, May 21, 2008.
  4. ^ a b Dunnigan 2003, p. 149.
  5. ^ Shores et al. 1990, p. 6.
  6. ^ Guttman 2009, p. 39.
  7. ^ Shores, Franks and Guest, 1990, p. 8.
  8. ^ Lee 1968, p. 208.
  9. ^ Shores et al. 1990, pp. 236–237.
  10. ^ a b Franks and Bailey 1992, p. 6.
  11. ^ Pieters 1998, pp. 34, 85.
  12. ^ Farr 1979, p. 55.
  13. ^ Franks et al. 1997, pp. 18–19.
  14. ^ "Allied aces of War in China and Mongol-Manchurian border" Wio.ru Retrieved: October 10, 2014.
  15. ^ Blomberg, valokuvaaja. Lentomestari Juutilainen, Mannerheim-ristin ritari koneineen. www.finna.fi. Retrieved 2020-01-19.
  16. ^ Bergström 2007, p. 83.
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  18. ^ Johnson 1967, p. 264.
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  20. ^ Murray, Williamson (1996). The Luftwaffe, 1933-45 - Strategy for Defeat. Brassey's. p. 82. ISBN 9781574881257.
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  22. ^ Jackson, Robert (2003). Air Aces of World War II. Airlife. ISBN 9781840374124.
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  • Franks, Norman and Frank W. Bailey. Over the Front: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the United States and French Air Services, 1914–1918. London: Grub Street, 1992. ISBN 978-0-948817-54-0.
  • Franks, Norman, Frank W. Bailey and Russell Guest. Above the Lines: The Aces and Fighter Units of the German Air Service, Naval Air Service and Flanders Marine Corps, 1914–1918. London: Grub Street, 1993. ISBN 978-0-94881-773-1.
  • ———; Guest, Russell; Alegi, Gregory (1997), Above the War Fronts: The British Two-seater Bomber Pilot and Observer Aces, the British Two-seater Fighter Observer Aces, and the Belgian, Italian, Austro-Hungarian and Russian Fighter Aces, 1914–1918, Fighting Airmen of WWI, vol. 4, London: Grub Street, ISBN 978-1-898697-56-5.
  • Galland, Adolf The First and the Last London, Methuen, 1955 (Die Ersten und die Letzten Germany, Franz Schneekluth, 1953).
  • Goll, Nicole-Melanie (2011). "Godwin von Brumowski (1889–1936): The Construction of an Austro-Hungarian War Hero during World War I". In Marija Wakounig; Karlo Ruzicic-Kessler (eds.). From the Industrial Revolution to World War II in East Central Europe. LIT Verlag. pp. 139–56. ISBN 978-3643901293.
  • Guttman, Jon. Pusher Aces of World War 1. London: Osprey, 2009. ISBN 978-1-84603-417-6.
  • Hobson, Chris. Vietnam Air Losses, USAF, USN, USMC, Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses in Southeast Asia 1961–1973. North Branch, Minnesota: Specialty Press, 2001. ISBN 1-85780-115-6.
  • Johnson, J. E. Wing Leader. London: Ballantine, 1967.
  • Lake, John. The Battle of Britain. London: Amber Books, 2000. ISBN 1-85605-535-3.
  • Lee, Arthur Gould. No Parachute. London: Jarrolds, 1968.
  • O'Connor, Martin. Air Aces of the Austro-Hungarian Empire 1914–1918. Boulder, Colorado: Flying Machine Press, 1986. ISBN 978-1-89126-806-9.
  • Pieters, Walter M. Above Flanders' Fields: A Complete Record of the Belgian Fighter Pilots and Their Units During the Great War, 1914–1918. London: Grub Street, 1998. ISBN 978-1-898697-83-1.
  • Robertson, Linda R. (2005). The Dream of Civilized Warfare: World War I Flying Aces and the American Imagination . University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0816642710, ISBN 978-0816642717
  • Robinson, Bruce (ed.) von Richthofen and the Flying Circus. Letchworth, UK: Harleyford, 1958.
  • Shores, Christopher. Air Aces. Greenwich Connecticut: Bison Books, 1983. ISBN 0-86124-104-5
  • ———; Franks, Norman; Guest, Russell (1990), Above the Trenches: A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915–1920, London: Grub Street, ISBN 978-0-948817-19-9.
  • Stenman, Kari and Kalevi Keskinen. Finnish Aces of World War 2 (Osprey Aircraft of the Aces, number 23). London: Osprey Publishing. 1998. ISBN 952-5186-24-5.
  • Thomas, Andrew. Defiant, Blenheim and Havoc Aces. London: Osprey Publishing, 2012. ISBN 978-1-84908-666-0.
  • Toliver, Raymond J. and Trevor J. Constable. Horrido!: Fighter Aces of the Luftwaffe. London: Bantam Books, 1979. ISBN 978-0-55312-663-1.
  • Toperczer, Istvan. MIG-17 and MIG-19 Units of the Vietnam War (Osprey Combat Aircraft, number 25). London: Osprey, 2001. ISBN 978-1-84176-162-6.
  • ——— (2001), MIG-21 Units of the Vietnam War, Combat Aircraft, London: Osprey, ISBN 978-1-84176-263-0.

External links

  • Air Aces Homepage (A.Magnus)
  • Air Aces Website (Jan Šafařík)
  • All aces of Korean air war

flying, other, uses, flying, disambiguation, flying, fighter, military, aviator, credited, with, shooting, down, five, more, enemy, aircraft, during, aerial, combat, exact, number, aerial, victories, required, officially, qualify, varied, usually, considered, . For other uses see Flying Ace disambiguation A flying ace fighter ace or air ace is a military aviator credited with shooting down five or more enemy aircraft during aerial combat The exact number of aerial victories required to officially qualify as an ace is varied but is usually considered to be five or more The first French ace Frenchman Adolphe Pegoud being awarded the Croix de guerre The concept of the ace emerged in 1915 during World War I at the same time as aerial dogfighting It was a propaganda term intended to provide the home front with a cult of the hero in what was otherwise a war of attrition The individual actions of aces were widely reported and the image was disseminated of the ace as a chivalrous knight reminiscent of a bygone era 1 For a brief early period when air to air combat was just being invented the exceptionally skilled pilot could shape the battle in the skies For most of the war however the image of the ace had little to do with the reality of air warfare in which fighters fought in formation and air superiority depended heavily on the relative availability of resources 2 Look up ace in Wiktionary the free dictionary Use of the term ace to describe these pilots began in World War I when French newspapers described Adolphe Pegoud as l As the ace after he became the first pilot to down five German aircraft The British initially used the term star turns a show business term The successes of such German ace pilots as Max Immelmann and Oswald Boelcke were much publicized for the benefit of civilian morale and the Pour le Merite Prussia s highest award for gallantry became part of the uniform of a leading German ace In the Luftstreitkrafte the Pour le Merite was nicknamed Der blaue Max The Blue Max after Max Immelmann who was the first pilot to receive this award Initially German aviators had to destroy eight Allied aircraft to receive this medal 3 As the war progressed the qualifications for Pour le Merite were raised 3 but successful German fighter pilots continued to be hailed as national heroes for the remainder of the war The few aces among combat aviators have historically accounted for the majority of air to air victories in military history 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 World War I 1 2 Between the world wars 1 3 World War II 1 4 Post World War II aces 1 4 1 Korean War 1 4 2 Vietnam War 1 4 3 Arab Israeli war 1 4 4 Iran Iraq war 1 4 5 Indo Pakistan War 1 4 6 Russo Ukrainian War 2 Accuracy 3 Non pilot aces 4 Ace in a day 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory EditWorld War I Edit See also Lists of World War I flying aces Aerial victory standards of World War I and Balloon buster Manfred von Richthofen known as the Red Baron scored the most officially accepted kills 80 in World War I and is arguably the most famous flying ace of all time French Colonel Rene Fonck to this day the highest scoring Allied flying ace with 75 victories World War I introduced the systematic use of true single seat fighter aircraft with enough speed and agility to catch and maintain contact with targets in the air coupled with armament sufficiently powerful to destroy the targets Aerial combat became a prominent feature with the Fokker Scourge in the last half of 1915 This was also the beginning of a long standing trend in warfare showing statistically that approximately five percent of combat pilots account for the majority of air to air victories 4 As the German fighter squadrons usually fought well within German lines it was practicable to establish and maintain very strict guidelines for the official recognition of victory claims by German pilots Shared victories were either credited to one of the pilots concerned or to the unit as a whole the destruction of the aircraft had to be physically confirmed by locating its wreckage or an independent witness to the destruction had to be found Victories were also counted for aircraft forced down within German lines as this usually resulted in the death or capture of the enemy aircrew Allied fighter pilots fought mostly in German held airspace 5 6 and were often not in a position to confirm that an apparently destroyed enemy aircraft had in fact crashed so these victories were frequently claimed as driven down forced to land or out of control called probables in later wars These victories were usually included in a pilot s totals and in citations for decorations 7 The British high command considered praise of fighter pilots to be detrimental to equally brave bomber and reconnaissance aircrew so that the British air services did not publish official statistics on the successes of individuals Nonetheless some pilots did become famous through press coverage 3 making the British system for the recognition of successful fighter pilots much more informal and somewhat inconsistent One pilot Arthur Gould Lee described his own score in a letter to his wife as Eleven five by me solo the rest shared adding that he was miles from being an ace 8 This shows that his No 46 Squadron RAF counted shared kills but separately from solo ones one of a number of factors that seems to have varied from unit to unit Also evident is that Lee considered a higher figure than five kills to be necessary for ace status Aviation historians credit him as an ace with two enemy aircraft destroyed and five driven down out of control for a total of seven victories 9 Albert Ball Britain s first famous flying ace He was killed in 1917 aged 20 Other Allied countries such as France and Italy fell somewhere in between the very strict German approach and the relatively casual British one They usually demanded independent witnessing of the destruction of an aircraft making confirmation of victories scored in enemy territory very difficult 10 The Belgian crediting system sometimes included out of control to be counted as a victory 11 The United States Army Air Service adopted French standards for evaluating victories with two exceptions during the summer of 1918 while flying under operational control of the British the 17th Aero Squadron and the 148th Aero Squadron used British standards 10 American newsmen in their correspondence to their papers decided that five victories were the minimum needed to become an ace 12 While ace status was generally won only by fighter pilots bomber and reconnaissance crews on both sides also destroyed some enemy aircraft typically in defending themselves from attack The most notable example of a non pilot ace in World War I is Charles George Gass with 39 accredited aerial victories 13 Between the world wars Edit Main articles List of Spanish Civil War flying aces and List of Flying Tigers pilots Between the two world wars there were two theaters that produced flying aces the Spanish Civil War and the Second Sino Japanese War The Spanish ace Joaquin Garcia Morato scored 40 victories for the Nationalists during the Spanish Civil War Part of the outside intervention in the war was the supply of volunteer foreign pilots to both sides Russian and American aces joined the Republican air force while the Nationalists included Germans and Italians The Soviet Volunteer Group began operations in the Second Sino Japanese War as early as December 2 1937 resulting in 28 Soviet aces 14 The Flying Tigers were American military pilots recruited sub rosa to aid the Chinese Nationalists They spent the summer and autumn of 1941 in transit to China and did not begin flying combat missions until December 20 1941 World War II Edit Main article List of World War II flying aces Erich Hartmann with 352 official kills the highest scoring fighter pilot of all time Ivan Kozhedub the top Soviet and Allied flying ace in the war with 60 solo victories to his credit Major Richard Bong the top American flying ace in the war credited with shooting down 40 Japanese aircraft in his P 38 Lightning Ilmari Juutilainen a Finnish flying ace with Brewster BW 364 Orange 4 on 26 June 1942 during the Continuation War 15 In World War II many air forces adopted the British practice of crediting fractional shares of aerial victories resulting in fractions or decimal scores such as 11 1 2 or 26 83 Some U S commands also credited aircraft destroyed on the ground as equal to aerial victories The Soviets distinguished between solo and group kills as did the Japanese though the Imperial Japanese Navy stopped crediting individual victories in favor of squadron tallies in 1943 citation needed The Soviet Air Forces has the top Allied pilots in terms of aerial victories Ivan Kozhedub credited with 66 victories and Alexander Pokryshkin scored 65 victories It also claimed the only female aces of the war Lydia Litvyak scored 12 victories and Yekaterina Budanova achieved 11 16 The highest scoring pilots from the Western allies against the German Luftwaffe were Johnnie Johnson RAF 38 kills and Gabby Gabreski USAAF 28 kills in the air and 3 on the ground 17 In the Pacific theater Richard Bong became the top American fighter ace with 40 kills In the Mediterranean theater Pat Pattle achieved at least 40 kills mainly against Italian planes and became the top fighter ace of the British Commonwealth in the war Fighting on different sides the French pilot Pierre Le Gloan had the unusual distinction of shooting down four German seven Italian and seven British aircraft the latter while he was flying for Vichy France in Syria citation needed The German Luftwaffe continued the tradition of one pilot one kill and now referred to top scorers as Experten N 1 Some Luftwaffe pilots achieved very high scores such as Erich Hartmann 352 kills or Gerhard Barkhorn 301 kills 19 There were 107 German pilots with more than 100 kills Most of these were won against the Soviet Air Force 20 The highest scoring fighter ace against Western allied forces were Hans Joachim Marseille 158 kills 21 and Heinz Bar 208 kills of which 124 in the west Notable are also Heinz Wolfgang Schnaufer with 121 kills the highest scoring night fighter ace and Werner Molders the first pilot to claim more than 100 kills in the history of aerial warfare 17 22 Pilots of other Axis powers also achieved high scores such as Ilmari Juutilainen Finnish Air Force 94 kills Constantin Cantacuzino Romanian Air Force 69 kills or Mato Dukovac Croatian Air Force 44 kills The highest scoring Japanese fighter pilot was Tetsuzō Iwamoto who achieved 216 kills A number of factors probably contributed to the very high totals of the top German aces For a limited period especially during Operation Barbarossa many Axis victories were over obsolescent aircraft and either poorly trained or inexperienced Allied pilots 23 In addition Luftwaffe pilots generally flew many more individual sorties sometimes well over 1000 than their Allied counterparts Moreover they often kept flying combat missions until they were captured incapacitated or killed while successful Allied pilots were usually either promoted to positions involving less combat flying or routinely rotated back to training bases to pass their valuable combat knowledge to younger pilots citation needed An imbalance in the number of targets available also contributed to the apparently lower numbers on the Allied side since the number of operational Luftwaffe fighters was normally well below 1 500 with the total aircraft number never exceeding 5 000 and the total aircraft production of the Allies being nearly triple that of the other side A difference in tactics might have been a factor as well Erich Hartmann for example stated See if there is a straggler or an uncertain pilot among the enemy Shoot him down 24 which would have been an efficient and relatively low risk way of increasing the number of kills At the same time the Soviet 1943 Instruction For Air Combat stated that the first priority must be the enemy commander which was a much riskier task but one giving the highest return in case of a success Post World War II aces Edit Korean War Edit Main article List of Korean War flying aces The Korean War of 1950 53 marked the transition from piston engined propeller driven aircraft to more modern jet aircraft As such it saw the world s first jet vs jet aces The highest scoring ace of the war is considered to be the Soviet pilot Nikolai Sutyagin who claimed 22 kills Vietnam War Edit Main article List of Vietnam War flying aces Capt Richard Stephen Ritchie 555th Tactical Fighter Squadron pictured beside the aircraft in which he became the first Air Force ace of the Vietnam War The Vietnam People s Air Force had begun development of its modern air forces primarily trained by Czechoslovak and Soviet trainers since 1956 25 The outbreak of the largest sustained bombardment campaign in history prompted rapid deployment of the nascent air force and the first engagement of the war was in April 1965 at Thanh Hoa Bridge which saw relatively outdated subsonic MiG 17 units thrown against technically superior F 105 Thunderchief and F 8 Crusader damaging 1 F 8 and killing two F 105 jets 26 The MiG 17 generally did not have sophisticated radars and missiles and relied on dog fighting and manoeuvrability to score kills on US aircraft 25 Since US aircraft heavily outnumbered North Vietnamese ones the Warsaw Pact and others had begun arming North Vietnam with MiG 21 jets 25 The VPAF had adopted an interesting strategy of guerrilla warfare in the sky utilising quick hit and run attacks against US targets continually flying low and forcing faster more heavily armed US jets to engage in dog fighting where the MiG 17 and MiG 21 had superior manoeuvrability 27 The VPAF had carried out the first air raid on US ships since WW2 with two aces including Nguyễn Văn Bảy attacking US ships during the Battle of Đồng Hới in 1972 Quite often air to air losses of US fighter jets were re attributed to surface to air missiles as it was considered less embarrassing 28 By the war s end the US had nevertheless confirmed 245 air to air US aircraft losses 29 while the figures for North Vietnam are disputed ranging from 195 North Vietnamese aircraft from US claims 30 to 131 from Soviet North Vietnamese and allied records 31 American air to air combat during the Vietnam War generally matched intruding United States fighter bombers against radar directed integrated North Vietnamese air defense systems American F 4 Phantom II F 8 Crusader and F 105 fighter crews usually had to contend with surface to air missiles anti aircraft artillery and machine gun fire before opposing fighters attacked them citation needed The long running conflict produced 22 aces 17 North Vietnamese pilots two American pilots three American weapon systems officers or WSOs WSO is the USAF designation one of the three was actually a US Naval aviator with an equivalent job but using the USN designation of Radar Intercept Officer or RIO 32 Arab Israeli war Edit Giora Epstein the highest scoring flying ace in the Israeli Air Force with 17 aerial victories Main articles List of Egyptian flying aces List of Israeli flying aces and List of Syrian flying aces The series of wars and conflicts between Israel and its neighbors began with Israeli independence in 1948 and continued for over three decades Iran Iraq war Edit Brig General Jalil Zandi an ace fighter pilot in the Iranian Air Force The most successful F 14 Tomcat pilot ever with eight confirmed kills during the Iran Iraq war Brig General Jalil Zandi 1951 2001 was an ace fighter pilot in the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force serving for the full duration of the Iran Iraq War His record of eight confirmed and three probable 33 victories against Iraqi combat aircraft qualifies him as an ace and the most successful pilot of that conflict and the most successful Grumman F 14 Tomcat pilot worldwide 34 35 36 37 38 General Shahram Rostami an ace fighter pilot in the Iranian Air Force The F 14 Tomcat pilot had six confirmed kills during the Iran Iraq war Brig General Shahram Rostami was another Iranian ace He was also an F 14 pilot He had six confirmed kills His victories include one MiG 21 two MiG 25s and three Mirage F1s 39 Colonel Mohammed Rayyan was also another ace fighter pilot who shot down 5 to 8 Iranian aircraft mostly F 4 Phantoms during the war 40 Indo Pakistan War Edit Air Commodore Muhammad Mahmood Alam was an ace fighter pilot in the Pakistan Air Force During the Indo Pakistani War of 1965 Alam downed five aircraft in a single sortie on 7 September 1965 with four in less than a minute establishing a world record These claims however have been widely contested by Indian Air Force officials 41 42 43 44 Russo Ukrainian War Edit On 13 October 2022 the Ukrainian government claims that Ukrainian pilot Vadym Voroshylov shot down 5 Shahed 136 drones before being forced to eject from his MiG 29 aircraft after it was hit by debris from the last Shahed 136 that had shot down Voroshylov had shot down two Russian cruise missiles the day prior 45 46 Accuracy EditSee also Confirmation and overclaiming of aerial victories during World War II Realistic assessment of enemy casualties is important for intelligence purposes so most air forces expend considerable effort to ensure accuracy in victory claims In World War II the aircraft gun camera came into general usage by the Luftwaffe as well as the RAF and USAAF partly in hope of alleviating inaccurate victory claims In World War I the standards for confirmation of aerial victories were developed The most strict were the German and French ones which required both the existence of traceable wrecks or observations of independent observers In contrast to this the British system also accepted single claims of the pilots and deeds such as enemy planes out of control driven down and forced to land 47 Aerial victories were also divided among different pilots This led to vast overclaims on the British and partially on the US American side Some air forces such as the USAAF also included kills on the ground as victories The most accurate figures usually belong to the air arm fighting over its own territory where many wrecks can be located and even identified and where shot down enemy are either killed or captured It is for this reason that at least 76 of the 80 aircraft credited to Manfred von Richthofen can be tied to known British losses 48 the German Jagdstaffeln flew defensively on their own side of the lines in part due to General Hugh Trenchard s policy of offensive patrol In World War II overclaims were a common problem Nearly 50 of RAF victories in the Battle of Britain for instance do not tally statistically with recorded German losses but some at least of this apparent over claiming can be tallied with known wrecks and aircrew known to have been in British PoW camps 49 An overclaim of about 2 3 was common on all sides 50 51 52 53 and Soviet overclaims were sometimes higher 54 55 The claims of the Luftwaffe pilots are considered as mostly reasonable and more accurate than those according to the British and American system 56 57 To quote an extreme example in the Korean War both the U S and Communist air arms claimed a 10 to 1 victory loss ratio 58 59 Non pilot aces Edit Charles B DeBellevue the first USAF weapon systems officer to become a flying ace While aces are generally thought of exclusively as fighter pilots some have accorded this status to gunners on bombers or reconnaissance aircraft observers in two seater fighters such as the early Bristol F 2b and navigators weapons officers in jet aircraft such as the McDonnell Douglas F 4 Phantom II Because pilots often teamed with different air crew members an observer or gunner might be an ace while his pilot is not or vice versa Observer aces constitute a sizable minority in many lists In World War I the observer Gottfried Ehmann of the German Luftstreitkrafte was credited with 12 kills 60 61 for which he was awarded the Golden Military Merit Cross In the Royal Flying Corps the observer Charles George Gass tallied 39 victories of which 5 were actually confirmed 62 The spread was caused by the lavish British system of aerial victory confirmation 47 In World War II United States Army Air Forces S Sgt Michael Arooth a Boeing B 17 Flying Fortress tail gunner serving in the 379th Bombardment Group was credited with 19 kills 63 64 and the Consolidated B 24 Liberator gunner Arthur J Benko 374th Bombardment Squadron with 16 kills The Royal Air Force s leading bomber gunner Wallace McIntosh was credited with eight kills while serving as a rear turret gunner on Avro Lancasters including three on one mission Flight Sergeant F J Barker contributed to 12 victories while flying as a gunner in a Boulton Paul Defiant turret equipped fighter piloted by Flight Sergeant E R Thorne 65 66 On the German side Erwin Hentschel the Junkers Ju 87 rear gunner of Luftwaffe pilot and anti tank ace Hans Ulrich Rudel had 7 confirmed kills The crew of the bomber pilot Otto Kohnke from Kampfgeschwader 3 is credited with the destruction of 11 enemy fighters 6 French 1 British 4 Soviet With the advent of more advanced technology a third category of ace appeared Charles B DeBellevue became not only the first U S Air Force weapon systems officer WSO to become an ace but also the top American ace of the Vietnam War with six victories 67 Close behind with five were fellow WSO Jeffrey Feinstein 68 and Radar Intercept Officer William P Driscoll 69 Ace in a day EditMain article Aviators who became ace in a day The first military aviators to score five or more victories on the same date thus each becoming an ace in a day were pilot Julius Arigi and observer gunner Johann Lasi of the Austro Hungarian air force on August 22 1916 when they downed five Italian aircraft 70 The feat was repeated five more times during World War I 71 72 73 Becoming an ace in a day became relatively common during World War II A total of 68 U S pilots 43 Army Air Forces 18 Navy and seven Marine Corps pilots were credited with the feat including legendary test pilot Chuck Yeager In the Soviet offensive of 1944 in the Karelian Isthmus Finnish pilot Hans Wind shot down 30 enemy aircraft in 12 days In doing so he obtained ace in a day status three times During the Indo Pakistani War of 1965 Pakistani pilot Muhammad Mahmood Alam downed five aircraft in a single sortie on 7 September 1965 with four in less than a minute establishing a world record These claims however as always have been widely contested by Indian Air Force 41 42 43 44 See also EditFighter aircraft Iraqi aerial victories during the Iran Iraq war Light fighter List of aces of aces List of Egyptian flying aces List of German World War II jet aces List of Iranian aerial victories during the Iran Iraq war List of Israeli flying aces List of Korean War flying aces List of Spanish Civil War flying aces List of Syrian flying aces List of Vietnam War flying aces List of World War I flying aces List of World War II aces by country List of World War II flying aces Lists of flying aces in Arab Israeli warsNotes Edit For the award of decorations the Germans initiated a points system to equal up achievements between the aces flying on the Eastern front with those on other more demanding fronts one for a fighter two for a twin engine bomber three for a four engine bomber night victories counted double Mosquitoes counted double due to the difficulty of bringing them down 18 References Edit Robertson pp 100 103 Belich 2001 a b c Payne Dr David Major Mick Mannock VC Top Scoring British Flying Ace in the Great War Archived 2017 06 21 at the Wayback Machine Western Front Association May 21 2008 a b Dunnigan 2003 p 149 Shores et al 1990 p 6 Guttman 2009 p 39 Shores Franks and Guest 1990 p 8 Lee 1968 p 208 Shores et al 1990 pp 236 237 a b Franks and Bailey 1992 p 6 Pieters 1998 pp 34 85 Farr 1979 p 55 Franks et al 1997 pp 18 19 Allied aces of War in China and Mongol Manchurian border Wio ru Retrieved October 10 2014 Blomberg valokuvaaja Lentomestari Juutilainen Mannerheim ristin ritari koneineen www finna fi Retrieved 2020 01 19 Bergstrom 2007 p 83 a b Sims Edward H 1976 The Greatest Aces London Random House Publishing Group p 17 ISBN 9780345253309 Johnson 1967 p 264 Mitcham Samuel W 2007 Eagles of the Third Reich Men of the Luftwaffe in World War II Stackpole Books p 217 ISBN 9780811734059 Murray Williamson 1996 The Luftwaffe 1933 45 Strategy for Defeat Brassey s p 82 ISBN 9781574881257 Colin Lewis D Heaton Anne Marie 2012 The Star of Africa The Story of Hans Marseille the Rogue Luftwaffe Ace Who Dominated the WWII Skies MBI Publishing Company ISBN 9780760343937 Jackson Robert 2003 Air Aces of World War II Airlife ISBN 9781840374124 Shores 1983 pp 94 95 Toliver Raymond F Constable Trevor J 1986 The Blond Knight of Germany New York McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 8306 8189 1 a b c Toperczer Istvan 2017 09 21 MiG 21 Aces of the Vietnam War Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781472823571 Toperczer Istvan 2017 09 21 MiG 21 Aces of the Vietnam War Bloomsbury Publishing p 4 ISBN 9781472823571 Toperczer Istvan 2016 10 20 MiG 17 19 Aces of the Vietnam War Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781472812575 E Gordon 2008 Mikoyan MiG 21 Dexter Keith Komissarov Dmitriĭ Dmitriĭ Sergeevich Hinckley Midland ISBN 9781857802573 OCLC 245555578 US Air to Air Losses in the Vietnam War myplace frontier com Retrieved 2018 06 19 Boyne Walter J ed 2002 Air warfare an international encyclopedia Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO p 679 ISBN 978 1576073452 OCLC 49225204 Kafedra i klinika urologii pervogo sankt peterburgskogo gosudarstvennogo meditsinskogo universiteta im akad I P Pavlova vchera segodnya zavtra Urologicheskie Vedomosti 5 1 3 2015 03 15 doi 10 17816 uroved513 6 ISSN 2225 9074 Aces Safari Kovi Retrieved October 10 2014 Herbert Adam January 2015 Air Power Classics Air Force Magazine 76 Imperial Iranian Air Force Samurai in the skies IIAF August 22 1980 Retrieved October 10 2014 Cooper Tom and Farzad Bishop Fire in the Hills Iranian and Iraqi Battles of Autumn 1982 ACIG September 9 2003 Retrieved October 10 2014 As 45 00 victoires Archived from the original on 2013 10 17 Retrieved 2015 04 16 Iranian Air to Air Victories 1976 1981 Archived from the original on 2010 03 23 Retrieved 2018 03 25 Iranian Air to Air Victories 1982 Today Archived from the original on 2010 03 23 Retrieved 2011 07 29 John Sadler Rosie Serdville 2017 Fighter Aces Knights of the Skies Casemate Publishers p 21 ISBN 9781612004839 Nicolle David Cooper Tom 2004 Arab MiG 19 and MiG 21 Units in Combat Osprey Publishing a b Air Cdre M Kaiser Tufail Alam s Speed shooting Classic Defencejournal com Retrieved 15 November 2011 a b Fricker John 1979 Battle for Pakistan the air war of 1965 pp 15 17 ISBN 9780711009295 a b Polmar Norman Bell Dana 2003 One hundred years of world military aircraft Naval Institute Press p 354 ISBN 978 1 59114 686 5 Mohammed Mahmood Alam claimed five victories against Indian Air Force Hawker Hunters four of them in less than one minute Alam who ended the conflict with 9 kills became history s only jet ace in a day a b O Nordeen Lon 1985 Air Warfare in the Missile Age Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press pp 84 87 ISBN 978 0 87474 680 8 Ukraine Claims MiG 29 Pilot Downed Five Drones Before Ejecting MSN https www thedrive com the war zone inside ukraines desperate fight against drones with mig 29 pilot juice a b Shores Christopher F 1990 Above the trenches a complete record of the fighter aces and units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915 1920 Norman L R Franks Russell Guest Ontario Fortress ISBN 0 948817 19 4 OCLC 22113328 Robinson 1958 pp 150 155 Lake 2000 p 122 Caldwell Donald 2012 Day Fighters in Defence of Reich a Way Diary 1942 45 Havertown Frontline Books ISBN 978 1 78383 415 0 OCLC 884646530 Bergstrom Christer 2007 Barbarossa the air battle July December 1941 Hersham Surrey Midland Ian Allan ISBN 978 1 85780 270 2 OCLC 141238674 Campion Garry 2015 The Battle of Britain 1945 1965 the Air Ministry and the Few Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire ISBN 978 0 230 28454 8 OCLC 918616186 Campion Garry 2009 The good fight Battle of Britain propaganda and the few Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 22880 1 OCLC 319175944 Trigg Jonathan 2016 The defeat of the Luftwaffe the Eastern Front 1941 45 a strategy for disaster Stroud Gloucestershire ISBN 978 1 4456 5186 6 OCLC 953861893 Morgan Hugh 2014 Soviet aces of world war 2 London Osprey Pub ISBN 978 1 4728 0057 2 OCLC 869378852 Toliver Constable Raymond F Trevor J 1968 Horrido Fighter Aces of the Luftwaffe Barker ISBN 9780213763817 Kaplan Philip 2007 Fighter aces of the Luftwaffe in World War II Barnsley Pen amp Sword Aviation ISBN 978 1 84415 460 9 OCLC 74525151 Korean Air War Korean air war statistics from sources of USA and USSR Wio RU Retrieved October 10 2014 Shores 1983 pp 161 167 Imrie Alex 1971 Pictorial history of the German Army Air Service 1914 1918 London Allan ISBN 0 7110 0200 2 OCLC 213232 Treadwell Terry C Alan C Wood 2003 German fighter aces of World War One Stroud Tempus ISBN 0 7524 2808 X OCLC 52531842 Franks et al 1997 p 18 Hall of Valor Michael Arooth Military Times Retrieved October 10 2014 Albert E Conder 1994 The history of enlisted aerial gunnery 1917 1991 the men behind the guns Limited ed Paducah KY Turner ISBN 1 56311 167 5 OCLC 55871021 The Airmen s Stories Sgt F J Barker Archived 2014 04 19 at the Wayback Machine Battle of Britain London Monument Retrieved April 17 2014 Thomas 2012 p 55 Col Charles DeBellevue Archived 2009 09 12 at the Wayback Machine U S Air Force official web site Retrieved May 22 2010 USAF Southeast Asia War Aces Archived 2013 12 20 at the Wayback Machine National Museum of the United States Air Force March 30 2011 Retrieved June 29 2012 USS Constellation CV 64 Archived 2012 09 26 at the Wayback Machine United States Navy Retrieved June 29 2012 O Connor 1986 pp 190 91 272 324 Franks et al 1993 p 70 Shores et al 1990 pp 368 390 Franks and Bailey 1992 p 161 Bibliography EditBelich Jamie Ace air combat Richard Holmes Charles Singleton and Spencer Jones eds The Oxford Companion to Military History Oxford University Press 2001 online 2004 Bergstrom Christer Barbarossa The Air Battle July December 1941 Birmingham UK Classic Publications 2007 ISBN 978 1 85780 270 2 Dunnigan James F How to Make War A Comprehensive Guide to Modern Warfare in the Twenty first Century New York HarperCollins 2003 ISBN 978 0 06009 012 8 Farr Finis Rickenbacker s Luck An American Life New York Houghton Mifflin 1979 ISBN 978 0 395 27102 5 Franks Norman and Frank W Bailey Over the Front A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the United States and French Air Services 1914 1918 London Grub Street 1992 ISBN 978 0 948817 54 0 Franks Norman Frank W Bailey and Russell Guest Above the Lines The Aces and Fighter Units of the German Air Service Naval Air Service and Flanders Marine Corps 1914 1918 London Grub Street 1993 ISBN 978 0 94881 773 1 Guest Russell Alegi Gregory 1997 Above the War Fronts The British Two seater Bomber Pilot and Observer Aces the British Two seater Fighter Observer Aces and the Belgian Italian Austro Hungarian and Russian Fighter Aces 1914 1918 Fighting Airmen of WWI vol 4 London Grub Street ISBN 978 1 898697 56 5 Galland Adolf The First and the Last London Methuen 1955 Die Ersten und die Letzten Germany Franz Schneekluth 1953 Goll Nicole Melanie 2011 Godwin von Brumowski 1889 1936 The Construction of an Austro Hungarian War Hero during World War I In Marija Wakounig Karlo Ruzicic Kessler eds From the Industrial Revolution to World War II in East Central Europe LIT Verlag pp 139 56 ISBN 978 3643901293 Guttman Jon Pusher Aces of World War 1 London Osprey 2009 ISBN 978 1 84603 417 6 Hobson Chris Vietnam Air Losses USAF USN USMC Fixed Wing Aircraft Losses in Southeast Asia 1961 1973 North Branch Minnesota Specialty Press 2001 ISBN 1 85780 115 6 Johnson J E Wing Leader London Ballantine 1967 Lake John The Battle of Britain London Amber Books 2000 ISBN 1 85605 535 3 Lee Arthur Gould No Parachute London Jarrolds 1968 O Connor Martin Air Aces of the Austro Hungarian Empire 1914 1918 Boulder Colorado Flying Machine Press 1986 ISBN 978 1 89126 806 9 Pieters Walter M Above Flanders Fields A Complete Record of the Belgian Fighter Pilots and Their Units During the Great War 1914 1918 London Grub Street 1998 ISBN 978 1 898697 83 1 Robertson Linda R 2005 The Dream of Civilized Warfare World War I Flying Aces and the American Imagination University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0816642710 ISBN 978 0816642717 Robinson Bruce ed von Richthofen and the Flying Circus Letchworth UK Harleyford 1958 Shores Christopher Air Aces Greenwich Connecticut Bison Books 1983 ISBN 0 86124 104 5 Franks Norman Guest Russell 1990 Above the Trenches A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915 1920 London Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 19 9 Stenman Kari and Kalevi Keskinen Finnish Aces of World War 2 Osprey Aircraft of the Aces number 23 London Osprey Publishing 1998 ISBN 952 5186 24 5 Thomas Andrew Defiant Blenheim and Havoc Aces London Osprey Publishing 2012 ISBN 978 1 84908 666 0 Toliver Raymond J and Trevor J Constable Horrido Fighter Aces of the Luftwaffe London Bantam Books 1979 ISBN 978 0 55312 663 1 Toperczer Istvan MIG 17 and MIG 19 Units of the Vietnam War Osprey Combat Aircraft number 25 London Osprey 2001 ISBN 978 1 84176 162 6 2001 MIG 21 Units of the Vietnam War Combat Aircraft London Osprey ISBN 978 1 84176 263 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flying aces Air Aces Homepage A Magnus Air Aces Website Jan Safarik Air Combat Information Group Website All aces of Korean air war Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flying ace amp oldid 1130901897, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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