Beyond the Wild Blue (2nd edition): A History of the U.S. Air Force, 1947-2007Macmillan, 2007/06/26 - 576 ページ From the most important leaders and the most courageous victories to the earliest machines of flight and the most advanced Stealth technology, Walter J. Boyne's Beyond the Wild Blue presents a fascinating look at 50 turbulent years of Air Force history. |
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... killed while still in training and seven were killed subsequently in crashes. Assigned to the Signal Corps Aviation School at College Park, Maryland, Arnold, with his almost four hours of flying time, began teaching others. He liked ...
... killed. Somehow he managed to pull out at the last instant and land, probably having inadvertently done the correct thing—pushing forward to break the stall and gain speed before pulling back to raise the nose. He was shaken to the core ...
... kill; instead he went to work in the newly built Pentagon, its recently poured concrete walls still sweating, to control planning for the Army Air Forces interim and permanent force structures. The Army and the Navy were equally ...
... killing for as long as they could. The fledgling Air Force simply had too much on its hands to begin to attend to such fundamental concerns as making life better for the enlisted troops or improving conditions for families. It would be ...
... killed in a vehicle accident in December, and was replaced by Lieutenant General Matthew Ridgeway, who by sheer force of personality reinvigorated UN troops with the will to resist. 4. January 25 to November 12, 1951. Ridgeway adopted a ...
目次
1 | |
19 | |
47 | |
19531961 | 99 |
5 The many facets of war | 145 |
four major commands | 193 |
7 Change after vietnam | 225 |
8 Leadership doctrine and technology after vietnam | 253 |
11 Terror and response | 349 |
12 Assessing problems and facing challenges | 367 |
Appendix one | 391 |
Appendix two | 395 |
Appendix three | 399 |
Appendix four | 425 |
Bibliography | 433 |
A chronology of aerospace power since 1903 | 439 |