March 29, 1972
1972: Prompted by a massive North Vietnamese invasion, US discards previous Rules of Engagement, thus ending previous restrictions on US air power and leading to Operations Linebacker I and II.
1972: Prompted by a massive North Vietnamese invasion, US discards previous Rules of Engagement, thus ending previous restrictions on US air power and leading to Operations Linebacker I and II.
1961: President Kennedy asks Congress to: (1) put 50 % of SAC’s bombers on ground alert; (2) speed up B-47 phaseout; (3) produce Skybolt to replace the Hound Dog missile; (4) defer 3 Mobile Minuteman squadrons
1945: Gen Carl Spaatz sends Eighth Air Force against Berlin to destroy the Luftwaffe. Spaatz realizes the enemy would defend Berlin, so he sends bombers over the city with P-51 Mustang escorts. General Galland of
1943: The first Air Medal awarded to a woman goes to 2Lt Elsie S. Ott, Army Nursing Corps, who served as nurse for five patients evacuated from India to Washington DC.
1951: Operation TOMAHAWK. 120 USAF transports drop 3,400 troops and materiel behind enemy lines at Munsan, Korea.
1944: Thru 23 March, Mount Vesuvius erupts and buries Pompeii airdrome; some 88 B-25s are damaged/destroyed, perhaps worst single loss of aircraft in WWII.
1958: Holloman high-speed test track establishes new speed record of 2,704 MPH for rocket-propelled monorail sleds.
1932: First flight of The Boeing XP-26: 1st Army all-metal monoplane fighter and the last pursuit plane with an open cockpit and fixed landing gear.
1969: SECDEF Melvin Laird announced that the FB-111 program would be reduced, due to its lack of intercontinental range. He thus limited the USAF to four squadrons with 60 aircraft and a few replacements. Laird