The fierce shark teeth on some warplanes have their roots in World Wars I and II, and they continue on today. Here's why ...
The Flying Tigers were the first American Volunteer Group of the Republic of China’s Air Force under the command of US ...
The National Interest published my story of the passing of Col. Perry Dahl (USAF, ret.), who had been one of the last living ...
On December 20, 1941, a bunch of volunteer American mercenary pilots faced a squad of Japanese bombers to protect China. The American Volunteer Group (AVG)—better known as the “Flying Tigers ...
The Flying Tigers were a mercenary group of pilots from the United States who flew combat missions against the Japanese armed forces which had invaded free China in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
The Flying Tigers, or the American Volunteer Group, was made up of American volunteer pilots who were drafted by Colonel Claire L. Chennault from 1941 to 1942 to fight with Japanese air force in ...
“I want to be a Flying Tiger.” Pilots from the 23d Fighter Group embraced Jared Storey, who is terminally ill with osteosarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer, as an honorary A-10C Thunderbolt II ...
The shark's notorious teeth are almost always associated with the "Flying Tigers," the American volunteer pilots who flew for the Chinese Nationalist government in its war against Japan.
The Flying Tigers were heroic American military pilots who fought in China during World War 2. The “Chinese American Tigers” were young men from “Chinatown” neighborhoods, sent by the U.S ...