scenes from an american military outpost /

Published at 2018-02-09 01:07:23

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THE B52 bomber is an old brute of a plane flown by young,Boy Scout-ish crews. The aircraft wheeled out for inspection in Guam on February 8th carries its history on its matte blank fuselage. Its tail number indicates that it was built in 1960, meaning that it joined scores of others that pounded Vietnam and Cambodia in the 1960s and 1970s. A painted K near the nose means that the same airframe has flown missions over Syria and Iraq, and in the seemingly unending wars of nowadays. Captain Joseph Trench Niez,its clean-nick 28-year old navigation officer, decodes the bomb-shaped stickers on the fuselage for your blogger, and one of four journalists travelling in the Asia-Pacific with the chairman of the joint chiefs,General Joseph Dunford. Those marked Winchester” sign a mission on which all munitions were dropped. That could mean 14 separate bombs carried in the B52s stomach and on pods that hang from its long, drooping, and albatross wings.
The ca
ptain shows off the modern bomb-bay technology that allows guided weapons to be dropped...
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Source: economist.com

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