Aviation militaire, Nouvelles
It has no tail, three engines, and a planform like a stingray crossed with a stealth bomber. It is the most radical-looking combat aircraft on Earth — and it is Chinese. Grainy photographs of Chengdu’s tailless giant, widely dubbed the J-36, keep leaking out of China,...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
No aircraft in American history has been hated, redeemed, and mourned quite like the F-111 Aardvark. Born from Robert McNamara’s disastrous TFX programme — an attempt to force the Air Force and Navy to share a single airframe — it arrived overweight, overpriced,...
Aviation militaire, Nouvelles
For decades, the global fighter market had two aisles: American and Russian. You bought F-16s or you bought MiG-29s. China was a buyer, not a seller — importing Russian engines, Israeli avionics, and Western design philosophy to build aircraft it could not yet export....
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
The morning of 1 March 1945 broke cold and foggy over the Heuberg training ground in Baden-Württemberg. While the men waited for the cloud to lift, a 22-year-old pilot named Lothar Sieber stood in a clearing getting last-minute advice from two engineers, the...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
When Captain Jack Donovan was briefed on the mission — fly in the back seat of an F-100, home in on a North Vietnamese SAM site, and destroy it before it destroys you — his response entered aviation legend: “You want me to fly in the back of a tiny little jet...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
When the US Navy bet its future on the all-missile F-4 Phantom, one aircraft refused to play along. The Vought F-8 Crusader kept its four 20mm cannons when every other fighter in the fleet was stripping theirs out. In Vietnam, it proved the gunfighters right —...
Aviation militaire, Nouvelles
The MQ-1 Predator was retired by the US Air Force in 2018. Eight years later, Iran just shot down a drone CENTCOM will only identify as an “MQ-1” over the Persian Gulf — quite possibly the Army’s still-serving MQ-1C Gray Eagle rather than a...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
The deck crew on USS Hancock froze as the Cutlass approached from astern, its twin vertical fins silhouetted against a Pacific sunset in the summer of 1955. Lieutenant Commander Jay Alkire lined up his approach, but the underpowered Westinghouse engines couldn’t...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
Two hours into a surveillance mission over Afghanistan, Lt. Col. Kevin Henry felt it begin. A tingling in his joints. A creeping confusion behind his eyes. Then the nausea hit — sudden, violent, disorienting. At 70,000 feet in a Lockheed U-2 Dragon Lady, the nitrogen...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
Imagine strapping yourself to a platform no larger than a manhole cover, powered by counter-rotating helicopter blades spinning beneath your feet, with nothing between you and the ground but air and optimism. Now imagine the U.S. Army telling you that any soldier...
Histoire et légendes, Aviation militaire
Somewhere over the Nevada desert in the spring of 1966, a shape detached itself from the back of what appeared to be an impossibly stretched SR-71 Blackbird. For a fraction of a second, the shape hung in the slipstream like a remora leaving a shark — and then the...
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