RAF Wedgetail Finally Arrives at Lossiemouth After Five Years Without AEW
On 22 May 2026, the first Boeing E-7 Wedgetail airborne early warning and control aircraft landed at RAF Lossiemouth in northern Scotland. It is the first time the type has touched down at its operational home base. The RAF, after five years without a credible AEW...
A British Weapon Finally Flies Inside an F-35B
For more than a decade, the UK’s F-35B Lightning II programme has been chasing a single technical milestone that politicians, MPs, and the Royal Air Force itself have all asked about repeatedly: when will the F-35B be able to actually fire a British weapon. The...
Turkey’s Hürjet Trainer Just Grew Weapons Pylons
The Turkish Aerospace Industries Hürjet has, until this month, been pitched to international customers as an advanced jet trainer — the natural successor to the BAE Hawk, the South Korean KAI T-50, the Italian M-346. A 100% Turkish-designed, supersonic, twin-seat...
Red Arrows Cut to Seven Jets: Why Britain’s Diamond Nine Has Gone
The Diamond Nine is to the British what the Blue Angels’ Delta is to the Americans: a closing formation so tight and so visually unforgettable that for almost sixty years it has been the single most iconic shape in the sky over Britain. Nine red BAE Hawk T1s in...
The Mosquito: Built From Trees, Faster Than a Spitfire, Unstoppable
In 1940, Britain was short on aluminium, short on fighter pilots, and desperately short on time. The de Havilland Aircraft Company proposed something absurd: a bomber made almost entirely of wood. No armour. No defensive guns. No turrets. Just speed — enough speed...
When Swedish Viggens Saved an SR-71: The Day a Mach 3 Blackbird Came Limping Home
The SR-71 Blackbird is the most untouchable aircraft ever built. In 32 years of operational service it was fired at by surface-to-air missiles more than 4,000 times — and not a single one ever hit. The recipe was simple: cruise at Mach 3.2 at 85,000 feet and outrun...
The PZL M-15 Belphegor: A Jet-Powered Biplane Named After a Demon
In 1973, a Polish state-owned aircraft factory rolled out one of the strangest production aircraft ever built. Two wings, stacked biplane-style. A 3,300-pound-thrust turbofan on the back. Two enormous pesticide tanks slung between the wings like a chemical airliner’s...
35 Years Ago Today, the Luftwaffe Flew Its Last F-104 Starfighter
On 22 May 1991, F-104G serial 26+40 lifted off from Ingolstadt-Manching in Bavaria for the final flight of any German F-104 Starfighter. The pilot flew a brief profile over the Alps. He returned to Manching. The aircraft was shut down. The chocks went under the...
Germany Just Unveiled the Most Capable Eurofighter Ever Built
The Eurofighter Typhoon is old enough to vote in most European elections. Conceived in 1983, first flown in 1994, in service since 2003 — by every conventional metric it is a fourth-generation aircraft that should already be giving way to fifth. Instead, on 20 May...
Sweden Just Bought French Frigates — Naval Group Stuns the Nordic Market
Nobody saw it coming. The Royal Swedish Navy has spent forty years building its surface fleet around shallow-draft, locally-built corvettes optimised for Baltic archipelago warfare — the legendary Visby class, the new Lulea concept, decades of indigenous Saab-Kockums...
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