|
Luftwaffe and Axis Air Forces Please use this forum to discuss the German Luftwaffe and the Air Forces of its Allies. |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
||||
|
||||
Top Ten Aces of the Military Channel
Today's official and unofficial policies of political correctness and
affirmative action are not only promoted by governmental agencies which also include the public schools and universities, they are being promoted by web sites and television programs which are being swallowed wholesale by today's uninformed youth and adults but which are recognized as such by persons who are familiar with the subjects presented which turn out to be distortions of the truth or are total lies. One such subject which I noted on the Military Channel (MC) deals with the top fighter pilots of history. The MC has pretty much replaced in my viewing the History Channel (HC) which has changed its entire format to deal with subjects appealing to the couch potato. The Dogfights series was cancelled so that viewers could be more entertained by such programs as Ice Truckers. The MC is very biased in its presentations but at least there programs of historical military significance. The bias is very evident in such programs as the Ten Top Tanks which never even mentions the Panther tank; no credit is given to Field Marshal Blücher for the victory at Waterloo; the Ten Top Snipers mentions only American, British and Russian snipers (admittedly info on German snipers is difficult to obtain but I have two books on this subject); the Top Ten Fighters gives no credit to the Bf 109 which scored more kills than any fighter in history. When I saw the program Showdown which compares fighter aircraft in dogfights such as thus far the F-86 v MiG 15; P-38 v Zero; and Wildcat v Zero, I was impressed. These documentaries took me to the MC website where a link to the Top Ten Flying Aces was portrayed. To my surprise, the #10 ace of all time was a Tuskegee airman who scored the incredible total of five kills. Also to my surprise was the #9 top ace of all time who was a Soviet woman with around 11 kills. The affirmitive action crowd obviously had to make room by deleting such greats as Adolf Galland, Hans Joachim Marseille, Werner Mölders, Johnnie Johnson, Robert Johnson, etc. John Thach, of the Thach weave fame, had to be included but not the developer of the finger-four fighter formation or Oswald Boelcke who developed fighter tactics which are still in use today. No fighter force uses the Thach weave. The MC never stated what the criteria were for the selection of the top ten aces but evidently there is one standard for Africans, one standard for females, one for Americans, and another for Germans. Here is the MC list for the top aces of history: #10 Lee Andrew Archer, Jr.: The only Tuskegee pilot with at least 5 kills. #9 Lilya Litvak: female Soviet ace whose claim to fame is that she is the first female to score a victory. Double ace. #8 R. Stephen Ritchie: The only USAF ace in the Vietnam war. #7 John S. Thach: developed the Thach weave to combat the Zero. #6 Saburo Sakai: claimed 64 kills. #5 James Jabara: With 15 kills, he was the second highest scorer of the Korean War. #4 Ilmari Juutilainen: 94 kills. #3 Richard Bong: Highest scorer of the Pacific campaign with 40 kills. #2 Erich Hartman: The Military Channel states that he was shot down and captured by the Russians after 1400 missions (sic). #1 Manfred von Richthofen.
__________________
Sylvester Stadler Meine Ehre heisst Treue! |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Top Jet Aces | Sylvester Stadler | Post-WW2 Military and Naval Aviation | 38 | 15th May 2021 22:16 |
Percentage of Verifiable Victories of Various Aces –Updates & Recommendations | Rob Romero | Luftwaffe and Axis Air Forces | 25 | 9th March 2010 03:39 |
My library - you rate it! | generalderpanzertruppen | Books and Magazines | 8 | 24th November 2007 03:36 |
Top REC-TAC aces of the Royal Air Force, RCAF | Adriano Baumgartner | Allied and Soviet Air Forces | 7 | 25th July 2007 19:09 |
Living Top German Aces | rm5252 | Luftwaffe and Axis Air Forces | 18 | 14th January 2007 08:10 |