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WWII Aircraft still useful
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January 10th 04, 04:39 PM
B2431
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From:
(robert arndt)
Date: 1/10/2004 9:07 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id:
Again, more words of ignorance spoken like the non-authority Keith is.
Hey Keith, it has already been done. On May 28, 1987 Matthias Rust, a
West German amatuer pilot, took his unarmed Cessna and flew 400 miles
through the USSR's air defenses (the world's greatest)to land on Red
Square.
We all know that if he had carried a nuke Moscow would have been
history.
No US military pilot had ever or will ever accomplish a similar feat.
Rob
God, I love proving Keith wrong. By all means Keith, keep saying
"No/Nope"
If you checked the radii of the Soviet air defense radar at different
altitudes
you would see it was only at low altitude like Rust used. Now then, the
question was WW2 aircraft. Rust used a post war airplane with limited
payload.
Let's assume he flew a nuke in and blew Red Square apart. Gee, what an
accomplishment to start WW3. It was an entirely impractical act. If you are
going to give an example make it valid.
BTW, I believe Rust went nuts and stabbed someone about 10 years ago.
No US military pilot had ever or will ever accomplish a similar feat.
U.S. Military pilots have been doing similar things during time of war for
decades. Prove me wrong.
Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired
What US military pilot flew through 400 miles of the USSR's air
defense network and landed in Red Square? Even the SR-71 was reduced
to spying with side-looking cameras outside Soviet airspace.
Done.
Rob
I said similar, not same.
I suggest you look at Bird Dog missions during Viet Nam and similar in WW2 and
Korea.
The Soviets DID track him but he was not worth shooting down.
Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired
B2431