Monde de l'aviation, Nouvelles
The video opens with a clip of an esports tournament. Screens glow. Controllers click. A crowd roars. Then the camera cuts to an air traffic control tower, and a voice asks the question the Federal Aviation Administration hopes will change American aviation forever:...
Aviation militaire, Nouvelles
On April 3, 2026, an F-15E Strike Eagle with the callsign Dude 44 was hit by a shoulder-fired missile over Iran’s Zagros Mountains. Both crew members ejected. The pilot was recovered within hours. The weapons systems officer — a colonel — was not. He landed on a...
Aviation militaire, Nouvelles
On April 8, 2026, two French Air and Space Force Rafale B fighters roared off the runway at Šiauliai Air Base in Lithuania, afterburners slicing through the cold Baltic morning. This was not a training exercise. A NATO Alpha Scramble — the real thing — had been...
Aviation militaire, Nouvelles
In the pre-dawn darkness of April 1, 2026, a Royal Bahraini Air Force F-16 Block 70 lifted off from Sheikh Isa Air Base and turned toward an incoming threat that ground-based air defenses had already failed to stop. Two Iranian drones were inbound. Within minutes,...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
In August 1914, when the first European armies crossed their borders and the Great War began, military aircraft were used for one purpose: watching. Unarmed reconnaissance planes flew over enemy lines, their observers sketching troop positions and supply routes. The...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
On the morning of April 18, 1942 — four months and eleven days after Pearl Harbor — sixteen B-25 Mitchell medium bombers launched from the pitching deck of the aircraft carrier USS Hornet. They were headed for Tokyo. None of them had enough fuel to return. There was...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
Two small, strange-looking aircraft were built in total secrecy at Lockheed’s Skunk Works facility in Burbank, California, between 1976 and 1977. They were angular, faceted, and looked like something a geometry student had folded out of sheet metal. They were...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
In 1920, Bessie Coleman walked into every flight school in the United States that she could find. Every single one turned her away. She was Black. She was a woman. In Jim Crow America, that was two disqualifications, and neither was negotiable. So she learned French....
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
Eugene Jacques Bullard was born in Columbus, Georgia, in 1895 — the grandson of enslaved people, the son of a man who had barely escaped a lynch mob. By the time he was eleven years old, he had decided that his future lay anywhere but the American South. So he ran...
Monde de l'aviation, Aviation militaire
Major Sarah Chen flew F-16s for eleven years. Two combat deployments. 200 combat hours. An instructor qualification and a Top Gun equivalent weapons school graduation patch on her shoulder. She was the kind of pilot the Air Force cannot afford to lose. She left...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
It was ugly. It leaked. It trailed a filthy black smoke plume that could be spotted from thirty miles away. The cockpit was cramped, the controls were heavy, and early models did not even carry a gun — a decision that got pilots killed over Vietnam. The McDonnell...
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