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![]() wrote in message oups.com... The article at: http://www.afa.org/magazine/July2007/0707strafing.asp includes the following: "We're using the gun quite a bit in the Iraq and Afghanistan operations. The fighters are using lots of 20 mm off F-15Es and F-16s and 30 mm off A-10s to hit ground targets. Why is that? For individuals, the gun is probably one of the most accurate weapons, with the least collateral damage. That 20 mm will end the bad guy's life, but stray rounds will just drive into the ground, and that's it. In Iraq, the adversary uses both road networks and riverine networks. There have been a number of occasions where boats have been identified carrying insurgents on the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, and we've used 20 mm and 30 mm guns to destroy those boats. A moving target is hard to hit with a bomb. With a gun, it's no big deal. In one instance, the enemy was getting ready to move people somewhere to do something later that night, but we removed them from the fight. The same thing happened in Balad, where we found people going to get roadside bomb supplies. We have been using the gun against single persons who have been planting improvised exposive devices. You'll have an individual with a truck, and a couple of other individuals; you'll see them get out and move around, trying to dig a hole, and you'll bring in an F-16 or an F-15E, or maybe an A-10, and you'll use 20 or 30 mm and go kill them. If you have troops in contact, or you have individuals in buildings, you do the same thing." Discussions about aircraft guns usually center on air-to-air usage, but nowadays, that's a secondary mission. With the primary usage of aircraft guns being strafing. For how long has this been true? Strafe can be a worthwhile employment of the gun, evidently done with much success in the ongoing pair of conflicts. Can be somewhat hazardous in the daytime if the bad guys have the capability to shoot back (a risk/reward thing). Pretty functional at night with goggles, etc. R / John |
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