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Author - Craig C. Hannah ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Hardcover Book item from Texas A&M University Press was reviewed on 18-Oct-2008. Search ISBN:1585441465 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Striving for Air Superiority: The Tactical Air Command in Vietnam (Texas a & M University Military History Series) Reference Book. Classifications : General Vietnam Asia History Subjects Books General Asia History Subjects Books Aviation Military History Subjects Books Vietnam War Military History Subjects Books General AAS Weapons & Warfare Milit . Click the following link to view the cover of Striving for Air Superiority: The Tactical Air Command in Vietnam (Texas a & M University Military History Series). Related topics: General. Vietnam. Asia. History. Subjects. Books. General. Asia. History. Subjects. requestid: 8687a349-8e41-4f86-bd2f-4e65e84540aarequestprocessingtime: 0.4621610000000000 salesrank: 514122 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 73952112640 1) Hardcover Book Striving for Air Superiority: The Tactical Air Command in Vietnam (Texas a & M University Military History Series) by Texas A&M University Press. "Striving for Air Superiority: The Tactical Air Command in Vietnam," by Craig C. Hannah, explores the evolution of Air Force equipment, philosophy, training, and tactics. Although the focus of the book is on the Vietnam War, the scope of Hannah´s research is far greater, and ultimately stretches from World War II to the Gulf War. Hannah´s core thesis is that after World War II, Air Force planners were too preoccupied with the specter of a nuclear air war with the Soviet Union, and their subsequent neglect of old-fashioned aerial combat essentials left their aviators unprepared for the deadly threats they faced over the skies of Vietnam. Hannah shows how the Air Force worked to correct this mistake.
2) Hardcover Book Striving for Air Superiority: The Tactical Air Command in Vietnam (Texas a & M University Military History Series) by Texas A&M University Press. "Tactical bombing," Gen. Jimmy Doolittle reportedly observed, "is breaking the milk bottle Strategic bombing is killing the cow," Most nations have historically chosen between building tactical and strategic air forces; rarely has a state given equal weight to both. The advantages of tactical air power are obvious today as small wars and petty tyrants bedevil us, but in a Cold War world split between continental superpowers, strategic bombing took precedence, with calamitous consequences. In the 1960s, the U.S. Air Force lacked the equipment and properly trained pilots to assure air superiority because the Tactical Air Command (TAC) had become little more than a handmaiden to the Strategic Air Command (SAC). TAC focused primarily on the interdiction of enemy bombers and virtually ignored its other responsibilities. Its aircraft were designed to shoot at large, lumbering bombers and not to engage in dog fights with highly maneuverable MiGs. Hannah shows how a tactical air force that won a victory in World War II deteriorated into a second-rate force flying aging aircraft during the early years of the Cold War, recovered briefly over Korea, then slid into obsolescence during the 1950s. His explanation of why America´s fighter aircraft did not work in Vietnam is instructive and unsettling. Hannah explains how TAC struggled through the war in Vietnam to emerge in the 1970s as the best tactical air force in the world. He side-steps politics and inter-service rivalries to focus on the nuts and bolts of tactical air power. The result is a factual, informative account of how an air force first loses its way then finds its mission again.¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 15-Nov-2008, 15854414659781585441464, 720-640-520-651-2X1-251-991-8
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