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"Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message
... Tom Cooper wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Quant wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Arie Kazachin wrote: In message - "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" writes: snip Israel during the wars often found themeselves with more Combat ready pilots than planes. Actually it was always that way as the planes meant buying planes and a lot of spare parts. According to this logic of yours: buying spare parts = bad. No not bad just added expense that the Israeli budget even with the US aid could not afford. I don't remember to have ever heard about any such problems. As a matter of fact, the Israeli defence budget doubled between 1972 and 1974, and at the time the USA - also in the sence of the Nixon's Doctrine - trippled the worth of their aid projects for Israel. The problems with the Israeli defence budgets which not even the US aid could support developed only in 1986-1987, at the time of terrible economic problems and a massive inflation in Israel. Also having more piltots then planes allowed for more long time missions when the same pilot would not be taking that plane out again that day but another pilot would who was rested and well briefed on the next mission well prior to the plane landing and being refitted for that mission. But how many really "long-range" missions were flown in 1973? The most distanced targets were Homs in Syria and el-Mansoura in Egypt. That's what - 250-300km, and that because of the over-the-sea leg, in order to avoid the enemy SAM-belts. Besides, this argument of yours is contradictive to your explanations about pilots flying five and more sorties a day: why should they, if there were enough pilots? As said: the tempo of operations was nowhere as high as in 1973 as it was on THE FIRST DAY (only) in 1967. I tried to explain why several times already, and can't help if you ignored this. Shooting down most of their best pilots supressed them to defense only. Err, actually the Egyptians reorganized and from the third day of the war hit hard on Israeli troops moving along the roads on Sinai. In that sence, the EAF lost most of its combat strenght, that's truth, but it never quit fighting. The Syrians lost too many planes also in one day engagement. The Syrians lost most of their planes on the ground. In air battles fought over the Syrian airfields it was 6:2 for the Israelis, if I recall all the details correctly. In total, however, the SyAAF was not as heavily damaged as the EAF, and certainly not as heavily as the RJAF (which lost of all its combat aircraft) - and none of the top Syrian pilot was killed (well, not in 1967: two or three were KIA in the War of Attrition; one in 1973, and at least two in 1982). By the third day no arab air force threatened Israel or its forces. You should ask the Israeli vets about this: there is even pictorial evidence about "non-threatening" (Algerian-supplied) Egyptian MiG-17s bombing Israeli column on Sinai, and several trucks going up in flame... Just because the Israeli media is not talking about such attacks (over 100) it doesn't mean they never happened. In the six day war also a Russian Frieter and 2 ships of their line were attacked in Port Alexandria. They had no air cover to speak of and were heavily enough damaged to flee the waters entirely to Lybian Waters and harbor to perform some repairs and set off again to sea ASAP. Aha. What was the name of this freighter? This is the first time I heard about any kind of air strikes against targets in the Alexandria area, in June 1967. They are not mentioned in any of at least a dozen of books and three dozens of articles I have to the topic of that air war.... After those first three days the majority of IAF activities was close ground support missions to take out bunkers, Tanks, other Armored Viechles as well as troops. This is how the Egyptian and Syrian Ground forces kept finding any defendable position unatenable. Not truth either. Egyptian Gen. Amer did a mistake (because of which he was later relieved of command and commited suicide) by ordering the troops on Sinai to pull back towards the Canal. In this way he draw his troops out of their well-dug in positions into the open, where they were hit by the air. This pull-back resulted in a rout, in which the Egyptians suffered over 30.000 KIA, MIA, and injured for almost nothing in return. If they remained in their positions along the Israeli border and fought it is 100% sure they would have not suffered similar losses. The Syrians, on the contrary, just sat there and wait, and then - when the Israelis were on the end with their strenght, they started pulling out of Golan. They were not routed, however: quite on the contrary, they inflicted heavy losses to the IDF. The 7th AB, for example, had only seven tanks remaining at the time of the cease-fire. In close ground support flying the pilot must be well rested. When he takes off he only knows what sector on he is to patrol. He has no designated targets to be briefed on. His targets are communicated to him from the ground forces that need an airstrike at a set of co-ordinates. Yeah, this was tried on 7, 8, 9 and 10 October 1973, with the result that the IDF/AF lost over 80 combat aircraft shot down and over 150 damaged... If there is time he does a flyover at susonic speed and Id's his target(s) and then on the next pass unloads it. Sometimes he is asked for specific ordinence and a direction of the attack. That is common when they are against a line of heavy firing from hidden troops. They ask for Nalpalm from one direction from a start point. That causes a large line of incinerating fire that cannot be put out till it all burns off. The pilot only knows that he and the number of planes that will be in that sector. Nothing is known about what targets he will hit, when or where in that sector. If on his return to the field he still has ordinence and can find a target of oportunity he will use what is left to take that out. Sorry, but I doubt I ever read anything as senseless as this. Briefing time is not needed for those missions, just pilots that are rested and planes loaded with the ordinence and fuel. Aha. Briefings are not needed now either? You don't really know what are you talking about, or? Not every pilot could fly 24 * 7 any way for the entire war. As a matter of fact, nobody can do this. Not "even" the Israelis: please, permit them to remain human beings. Four sorties a day - and for a single day - yes, but that's already the limit. Three a day for duration of three, four, perhaps five days. That can function too. But more would only decrease the capability of the pilot: it would simply drain him down. But make the ratio of pilots to planes heavier on the number of pilots to planes and the IAF could give the pilots a break after short periods and less sorties. That is how the IAF opperated in both the Six Day and Yom Kippur Wars as well as against the Palestinians in Lebanon. Any tired pilot could be given a break when he landed and another pilot would be available to relieve him for some time to rest. In the war, Matt, there are no "tired" or "rested" pilots: there are pilots that can fly and others that can't. Period. You have several combat-experienced pilots on this NG: go and ask Ed Rasimus if he would explain it any other way. So while they refitted the planes with more fuel, refilled Gpods, and other weapons used up, they often changed pilots allowing the pilot that already flew 1 to 5 missions to get some rest and a fresh rested pilot took his place. Could you name a single Israeli pilot that flew five sorties in one day, either in 1967 or 1973? I couldn't. Feel free to correct me, but I can only remember several that flew four sorties on the first day of the Six Day War, not a single one that flew as much in 1973. Over the 1/4 of the first wave against Egypt flew 5 sortees the first day in '67. Look: I asked you for names. I can mention names of the one or two IDF/AF pilots that flew four missions on that day. You say one quarter of them did so. OK. Can you mention even one name of an IDF/AF pilot that flew five sorties on that day? The story about this was on the History Channel as well as in a book by one of the lead pilots, (I do not rememeber his name). The Show on the History Channel was one of a series called "Air Power". Oh, now I understand everything. Thank's Lord, there is a "History Channel". You never came to the idea that they could be wrong about this? Have you ever heard about some stuff called "books" or something similar? I've heard these are made of paper and ink, and one might be forced to go to the so-called "book-shops" or "libraries" in order to get them, and then even have to "read" (spelling?) these too.... But, they say one can learn quite some stuff from reading these strange things. Tom Cooper Co-Author: Iran-Iraq War in the Air, 1980-1988: http://www.acig.org/pg1/content.php and, Iranian F-4 Phantom II Units in Combat: http://www.osprey-publishing.co.uk/t...hp/title=S6585 |
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Please Tom, keep your humor in check, just when I relax to take a sip
of tea I get to the end of your posting, and read about 'books'.... please stop before it is fatal to someone! -- G Hassenpflug * IJN & JMSDF equipment/history fan |
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Tom Cooper wrote:
"Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Tom Cooper wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Quant wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Arie Kazachin wrote: In message - "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" writes: snip Israel during the wars often found themeselves with more Combat ready pilots than planes. Actually it was always that way as the planes meant buying planes and a lot of spare parts. According to this logic of yours: buying spare parts = bad. No not bad just added expense that the Israeli budget even with the US aid could not afford. I don't remember to have ever heard about any such problems. As a matter of fact, the Israeli defence budget doubled between 1972 and 1974, and at the time the USA - also in the sence of the Nixon's Doctrine - trippled the worth of their aid projects for Israel. The problems with the Israeli defence budgets which not even the US aid could support developed only in 1986-1987, at the time of terrible economic problems and a massive inflation in Israel. Also having more piltots then planes allowed for more long time missions when the same pilot would not be taking that plane out again that day but another pilot would who was rested and well briefed on the next mission well prior to the plane landing and being refitted for that mission. But how many really "long-range" missions were flown in 1973? The most distanced targets were Homs in Syria and el-Mansoura in Egypt. That's what - 250-300km, and that because of the over-the-sea leg, in order to avoid the enemy SAM-belts. Besides, this argument of yours is contradictive to your explanations about pilots flying five and more sorties a day: why should they, if there were enough pilots? As said: the tempo of operations was nowhere as high as in 1973 as it was on THE FIRST DAY (only) in 1967. I tried to explain why several times already, and can't help if you ignored this. Shooting down most of their best pilots supressed them to defense only. Err, actually the Egyptians reorganized and from the third day of the war hit hard on Israeli troops moving along the roads on Sinai. In that sence, the EAF lost most of its combat strenght, that's truth, but it never quit fighting. The Syrians lost too many planes also in one day engagement. The Syrians lost most of their planes on the ground. In air battles fought over the Syrian airfields it was 6:2 for the Israelis, if I recall all the details correctly. In total, however, the SyAAF was not as heavily damaged as the EAF, and certainly not as heavily as the RJAF (which lost of all its combat aircraft) - and none of the top Syrian pilot was killed (well, not in 1967: two or three were KIA in the War of Attrition; one in 1973, and at least two in 1982). By the third day no arab air force threatened Israel or its forces. You should ask the Israeli vets about this: there is even pictorial evidence about "non-threatening" (Algerian-supplied) Egyptian MiG-17s bombing Israeli column on Sinai, and several trucks going up in flame... Just because the Israeli media is not talking about such attacks (over 100) it doesn't mean they never happened. In the six day war also a Russian Frieter and 2 ships of their line were attacked in Port Alexandria. They had no air cover to speak of and were heavily enough damaged to flee the waters entirely to Lybian Waters and harbor to perform some repairs and set off again to sea ASAP. Aha. What was the name of this freighter? This is the first time I heard about any kind of air strikes against targets in the Alexandria area, in June 1967. They are not mentioned in any of at least a dozen of books and three dozens of articles I have to the topic of that air war.... After those first three days the majority of IAF activities was close ground support missions to take out bunkers, Tanks, other Armored Viechles as well as troops. This is how the Egyptian and Syrian Ground forces kept finding any defendable position unatenable. Not truth either. Egyptian Gen. Amer did a mistake (because of which he was later relieved of command and commited suicide) by ordering the troops on Sinai to pull back towards the Canal. In this way he draw his troops out of their well-dug in positions into the open, where they were hit by the air. This pull-back resulted in a rout, in which the Egyptians suffered over 30.000 KIA, MIA, and injured for almost nothing in return. If they remained in their positions along the Israeli border and fought it is 100% sure they would have not suffered similar losses. The Syrians, on the contrary, just sat there and wait, and then - when the Israelis were on the end with their strenght, they started pulling out of Golan. They were not routed, however: quite on the contrary, they inflicted heavy losses to the IDF. The 7th AB, for example, had only seven tanks remaining at the time of the cease-fire. In close ground support flying the pilot must be well rested. When he takes off he only knows what sector on he is to patrol. He has no designated targets to be briefed on. His targets are communicated to him from the ground forces that need an airstrike at a set of co-ordinates. Yeah, this was tried on 7, 8, 9 and 10 October 1973, with the result that the IDF/AF lost over 80 combat aircraft shot down and over 150 damaged... If there is time he does a flyover at susonic speed and Id's his target(s) and then on the next pass unloads it. Sometimes he is asked for specific ordinence and a direction of the attack. That is common when they are against a line of heavy firing from hidden troops. They ask for Nalpalm from one direction from a start point. That causes a large line of incinerating fire that cannot be put out till it all burns off. The pilot only knows that he and the number of planes that will be in that sector. Nothing is known about what targets he will hit, when or where in that sector. If on his return to the field he still has ordinence and can find a target of oportunity he will use what is left to take that out. Sorry, but I doubt I ever read anything as senseless as this. Briefing time is not needed for those missions, just pilots that are rested and planes loaded with the ordinence and fuel. Aha. Briefings are not needed now either? You don't really know what are you talking about, or? Not every pilot could fly 24 * 7 any way for the entire war. As a matter of fact, nobody can do this. Not "even" the Israelis: please, permit them to remain human beings. Four sorties a day - and for a single day - yes, but that's already the limit. Three a day for duration of three, four, perhaps five days. That can function too. But more would only decrease the capability of the pilot: it would simply drain him down. But make the ratio of pilots to planes heavier on the number of pilots to planes and the IAF could give the pilots a break after short periods and less sorties. That is how the IAF opperated in both the Six Day and Yom Kippur Wars as well as against the Palestinians in Lebanon. Any tired pilot could be given a break when he landed and another pilot would be available to relieve him for some time to rest. In the war, Matt, there are no "tired" or "rested" pilots: there are pilots that can fly and others that can't. Period. You have several combat-experienced pilots on this NG: go and ask Ed Rasimus if he would explain it any other way. So while they refitted the planes with more fuel, refilled Gpods, and other weapons used up, they often changed pilots allowing the pilot that already flew 1 to 5 missions to get some rest and a fresh rested pilot took his place. Could you name a single Israeli pilot that flew five sorties in one day, either in 1967 or 1973? I couldn't. Feel free to correct me, but I can only remember several that flew four sorties on the first day of the Six Day War, not a single one that flew as much in 1973. Over the 1/4 of the first wave against Egypt flew 5 sortees the first day in '67. Look: I asked you for names. I can mention names of the one or two IDF/AF pilots that flew four missions on that day. You say one quarter of them did so. OK. Can you mention even one name of an IDF/AF pilot that flew five sorties on that day? The story about this was on the History Channel as well as in a book by one of the lead pilots, (I do not rememeber his name). The Show on the History Channel was one of a series called "Air Power". Oh, now I understand everything. Thank's Lord, there is a "History Channel". You never came to the idea that they could be wrong about this? Have you ever heard about some stuff called "books" or something similar? I've heard these are made of paper and ink, and one might be forced to go to the so-called "book-shops" or "libraries" in order to get them, and then even have to "read" (spelling?) these too.... But, they say one can learn quite some stuff from reading these strange things. Tom Cooper Co-Author: Iran-Iraq War in the Air, 1980-1988: http://www.acig.org/pg1/content.php and, Iranian F-4 Phantom II Units in Combat: http://www.osprey-publishing.co.uk/t...hp/title=S6585 They flew several sorties over Port Alexandria well to the East of Ciaro where some of the air bases had been moved after the Six Day War. They flew and bombed the norther Air Bases in Syia nearer to Turkey as well. A lot further than you incicate. Those are excptions I will admit but they were long and strenous and tired those pilots out as they could not fly anything near direct routes due to the SAM Threats. Also A single flight for ground support was several sortees all rolled into one. They might be called at times to make 6 or more runs at enemy ground troops, armor, or installations, as well as field artilery. After these they needed relief, there is something very taxing coming in at 50 feet and bombing an enemy position when a miss could kill a lot of IDF troops. So the usual pattern (History of Air Power) was to relieve them as soon as they landed and ready the aircraft with a fresh, rested pilot for the next ground suppot mission. At times IAF Pilots were called in to hit troops less than 100 yards away from the IDF soldiers that called in the strike. How many time could you do that type of sortee and keep at it? The quicker they got to rest and try to relax the quiker they rested enough to do it all over again. Each plane could fly double the number of such missions and not burn out the pilots. -- MattA ?subject=HepatitusC-Objectives Matt's Hep-C Story web pages are back at a home. No more drop down ads to get in your way. http://mywebpages.comcast.net/matta00 Truth about Howard Aubrey AKA madyan67: http://www.geocities.com/lord_haha_libeler/ |
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![]() "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Tom Cooper wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Tom Cooper wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Quant wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Arie Kazachin wrote: In message - "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" writes: snip They flew several sorties over Port Alexandria well to the East of Ciaro where some of the air bases had been moved after the Six Day War. Just a second: in your post above you said this happened during the Six Day War. Now you say it happened afterwards. Would you be so kind to agree with yourself so we could finally find out when exactly this happened? They flew and bombed the norther Air Bases in Syia nearer to Turkey as well. When? In 1967, the northernmost Syrian airfields hit by the IDF/AF were near al-Ladhiqiyah and T.4/Tiyas. In 1973, no airfields in either area were hit. A lot further than you incicate. Where? Those are excptions I will admit but they were long and strenous and tired those pilots out as they could not fly anything near direct routes due to the SAM Threats. Also A single flight for ground support was several sortees all rolled into one. They might be called at times to make 6 or more runs at enemy ground troops, armor, or installations, as well as field artilery. The situation in 1973 was so that by the time they would try to make the second run on their targets most of the Israeli aircraft were either shot down or at least damaged. That's what happened to the 201st Sqn IDF/AF, which lost 6 Phantoms during the Op Dogman 5, on the morning of 7 October 1973. This included the F-4E, flown by unit commander: he was shot down after he missed the target on the first run, turned around and tried it again.... One of those strange things of paper and ink I described in my last post, the book with the strange title "Israel's Best Defence", written (former IDF/AF pilot) Col. Elizer "Cheetah" Cohen describes this in detail. Cohen was brazen enough in that book to say that he participated in the wars 1948, 1956, 1967, and 1973. Yet, nowhere in that book is he describing anything of what you're talking about. Quite on the contrary. What do you think, could it be he knows it better than you or the History Channel? After these they needed relief, there is something very taxing coming in at 50 feet and bombing an enemy position when a miss could kill a lot of IDF troops. Really?!?!? You got to be kiddin.... So, how it then came they flew five missions a day? So the usual pattern (History of Air Power) was to relieve them as soon as they landed and ready the aircraft with a fresh, rested pilot for the next ground suppot mission. Are you sure? They really put _fresh_ pilots into their planes? How fresh were these? Factory-fresh, as fresh as wet paint, or as fresh as the sushi in the local Jap restaurant? BTW, what is "History of Air Power"? Another show on the History Channel? At times IAF Pilots were called in to hit troops less than 100 yards away from the IDF soldiers that called in the strike. How many time could you do that type of sortee and keep at it? Well, let's see: the USAF, USN and USMC Scooter and Phantom and other pilots were doing this at such places like Khe Sanh so two or three times a day. Their usual tour of duty was either a year or so (USAF) or between six and nine months (USN). Cambodian T-28 and MIG-17-pilots at least once a day at the Plain de Jars and similar stinking holes. Their tours of duty lasted until they were killed (either by the enemy or the own regime). The Iranian F-5 pilots so two or three times at day at the Karaqeh Plain, Shalamcheh, Majnoon, along the Shatt al-Arab and so many other places. They also had an endless tour of duty: most of those still alive in 1988 had over 1.500 combat sorties under their belt... Oh, sorry: your super-human Israeli pilots can't compare to all of these examples: simply ignore what I said. The quicker they got to rest and try to relax the quiker they rested enough to do it all over again. Each plane could fly double the number of such missions and not burn out the pilots. Matt, to be honest: if I hear once again a statement like this I'll probably crack a rib and then have to pay a visit to my doctor. Please, have mercy with my insurance. Tom Cooper Co-Author: Iran-Iraq War in the Air, 1980-1988: http://www.acig.org/pg1/content.php and, Iranian F-4 Phantom II Units in Combat: http://www.osprey-publishing.co.uk/t...hp/title=S6585 |
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![]() "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... They flew several sorties over Port Alexandria well to the East of Ciaro BTW, Matt, since when is Alexandria east of Cairo? I tought on the History Channel they try to teach history, not re-draw the maps.... Tom Cooper Co-Author: Iran-Iraq War in the Air, 1980-1988: http://www.acig.org/pg1/content.php and, Iranian F-4 Phantom II Units in Combat: http://www.osprey-publishing.co.uk/t...hp/title=S6585 |
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Tom Cooper wrote:
"Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... They flew several sorties over Port Alexandria well to the East of Ciaro BTW, Matt, since when is Alexandria east of Cairo? I tought on the History Channel they try to teach history, not re-draw the maps.... Tom Cooper Co-Author: Iran-Iraq War in the Air, 1980-1988: http://www.acig.org/pg1/content.php and, Iranian F-4 Phantom II Units in Combat: http://www.osprey-publishing.co.uk/t...hp/title=S6585 If you read up on those raids the planes stayed over target for a long time. The premise falsly made was that the IAF did not fly that many hours to need to have pilots to rotate inorder to rest. -- MattA ?subject=HepatitusC-Objectives Matt's Hep-C Story web pages are back at a home. No more drop down ads to get in your way. http://mywebpages.comcast.net/matta00 Truth about Howard Aubrey AKA madyan67: http://www.geocities.com/lord_haha_libeler/ |
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![]() "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Tom Cooper wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... They flew several sorties over Port Alexandria well to the East of Ciaro BTW, Matt, since when is Alexandria east of Cairo? I tought on the History Channel they try to teach history, not re-draw the maps.... snip If you read up on those raids the planes stayed over target for a long time. The premise falsly made was that the IAF did not fly that many hours to need to have pilots to rotate inorder to rest. Aha. I see. And this places Alexandria due east of Cairo? Tom Cooper Co-Author: Iran-Iraq War in the Air, 1980-1988: http://www.acig.org/pg1/content.php and, Iranian F-4 Phantom II Units in Combat: http://www.osprey-publishing.co.uk/t...hp/title=S6585 |
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Tom Cooper wrote:
"Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Tom Cooper wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... They flew several sorties over Port Alexandria well to the East of Ciaro BTW, Matt, since when is Alexandria east of Cairo? I tought on the History Channel they try to teach history, not re-draw the maps.... snip If you read up on those raids the planes stayed over target for a long time. The premise falsly made was that the IAF did not fly that many hours to need to have pilots to rotate inorder to rest. Aha. I see. And this places Alexandria due east of Cairo? Tom Cooper Co-Author: Iran-Iraq War in the Air, 1980-1988: http://www.acig.org/pg1/content.php and, Iranian F-4 Phantom II Units in Combat: http://www.osprey-publishing.co.uk/t...hp/title=S6585 No but it does say they flew longer missions than you will admit to Jack! -- MattA ?subject=HepatitusC-Objectives Matt's Hep-C Story web pages are back at a home. No more drop down ads to get in your way. http://mywebpages.comcast.net/matta00 Truth about Howard Aubrey AKA madyan67: http://www.geocities.com/lord_haha_libeler/ |
#9
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![]() "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Tom Cooper wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... Tom Cooper wrote: "Matt A.00 01 is Matthew Ackerman" wrote in message ... They flew several sorties over Port Alexandria well to the East of Ciaro BTW, Matt, since when is Alexandria east of Cairo? I tought on the History Channel they try to teach history, not re-draw the maps.... snip If you read up on those raids the planes stayed over target for a long time. The premise falsly made was that the IAF did not fly that many hours to need to have pilots to rotate inorder to rest. Aha. I see. And this places Alexandria due east of Cairo? No but it does say they flew longer missions than you will admit to Jack! Jack, huh? How comes this? You said Alexandria is east of Cairo, not me... But, OK. So, when did they fly such missions? In 1967 or 1973? In 1967, namely, they flew attacks against places like Aswan, far in southern Egypt, or against H-3, in western Iraq. That's much further away from Israel than Alexandria (especially if you place it east of Cairo) - except you put Aswan and H-3 also east of Cairo too, of course.... In 1973, however, they never flew over Alexandria (reagardless if it's east of Cairo or not). Tom Cooper Co-Author: Iran-Iraq War in the Air, 1980-1988: http://www.acig.org/pg1/content.php and, Iranian F-4 Phantom II Units in Combat: http://www.osprey-publishing.co.uk/t...hp/title=S6585 |
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