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  1. The first North Vietnamese combat plane was a T-28 Trojan trainer, whose pilot defected from the Royal Lao Air Force; it was utilised from early 1964 by the VPAF as a night fighter. The T-28 was the first North Vietnamese aircraft to shoot down a US aircraft, a C-123, on 15 February 1964.

    • 24 January 1955; 68 years ago
    • Air force
  2. Dec 5, 2018 · The obsolescent fighter entered Soviet service in 1953. No one saw the two low-flying North Vietnamese MiG-17 fighters approaching the large force of U.S. Navy and Air Force aircraft, which was zeroing in on taking out the North’s Than Hoa Bridge on April 3, 1965.

    • Carl O. Schuster
    • What was the first North Vietnamese combat plane?1
    • What was the first North Vietnamese combat plane?2
    • What was the first North Vietnamese combat plane?3
    • What was the first North Vietnamese combat plane?4
  3. Oct 1, 2019 · The first combat aircraft was a T-28 trainer whose pilot defected from the Laotian air force. The Vietnamese Peoples’ Air Force—as it was officially called—sent pilots to the Soviet Union and China for training in MiG fighters but had no jet aircraft of its own until February 1964, when the Soviets donated 36 MiG-15s and -17s to the VPAF.

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  5. MiG pilots did little better in December 1972 -- by the end of OPERATION LINEBACKER II, USAF B-52s and tactical aircraft hit targets at will, forcing the North Vietnamese to sign a peace treaty. At the end of the Southeast Asia War in 1973, the VPAF had lost nearly 150 MiGs in combat to USAF fighter crews, while the USAF lost about 70 aircraft ...

  6. Fifty-two North Vietnamese pilots went to China and the Soviet Union in 1960 to train on the MiG-17. They began returning to their country two years later. To mark this achievement, Moscow sent 36 MiG-17s, along with an unspecified number of MiG-15 two-seat trainers, to Hanoi on February 3, 1964. These aircraft constituted the 921st Sao Do ...

  7. Jun 21, 2022 · Flynn hoped to “troll” the enemy airfields nearby and engage the North Vietnamese Air Force in air-to-air combat. While the group was still on their first aerial refuel, they got that wish. Lt. Bill John (top) paints a MiG-shaped victory marking on the intake of the F-4 Phantom as Cmdr. Sam Flynn (below) watches.

  8. Like U.S. pilots, the North Vietnamese typically flew 200 hours in training before going into combat. Bay, Chao, and Hoang got about a hundred of those hours in the MiG-17. Getting his wings did ...

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