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Air force blunders

 

Geoffrey regan

 

Aerial warfare has removed the walls and moats with which mankind once protected itself from armies and navies, and has thus become the most destructive of all "killing fields", threatening civilians and armed forces alike. 

 

Aviation blunders are therefore mainly serious in their implications, but Geoffrey Regan reveals eccentricity an incompetence alike in fearless fashion in this book - from Puggy Shone, the British WWII pilot who delighted in dropping oranges and bogus bombs on German soldiers relaxing on a beach in Belgium, to the officer in charge of the state-of-the-art radar a Pearl Harbour who missed the significance of the blips on the screen which were approaching Japanese planes, and uttered the immortal words, "Well, don't worry about it." In a world where no one is out of reach of aerial bombardment, it is as well to remember that aviation blunders can and do still occur today.

 

192 pp   -   Paperback   -   Published 1996

 

Australia  = AUD$37 (including postage, packing and GST)

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