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MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
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Edited 10 mo ago
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ILLUSTRATIONS: (1) 312th BG A-20Gs attacking Wewak in 1944. (2) 312th BG A-20Gs hit an oil refinery on Borneo. (3) 389th BS, 312th BG A-20G "Texas Pom Pom" strafes coastal positions on New Guinea in 1944. (4) 312th BG A-20Gs wreak havoc on Luzon in 1945. (5) 380th BG A-20G "Little Joe" on a mission in the Philippines. (6) 417th BG A-20G "Green Hornet" over New Guinea. (7) 668th BS, 416th BG A-20Gs over France in July 1944. (8) The crew of a shattered 410th BG A-20J count themselves lucky after returning from a mission in June 1944. (9) 410th BG A-20G "Butch" after blasting a target in France. (10) A-20s wreak havoc on a target in the Ardennes.

SGT Wayne Dunn Amn (Join to see) SGT J.D. Corr SPC Lisa Hughes MIDN CAPT (Join to see) MSgt Guillermo Ybarra III (HVAC Recruiter) CPO Linda Aberdeen LCpl (Join to see) Capt Tf Sinclair CMSgt (Join to see) SPC Paul Eiden CPT (Join to see) SPC Scott S Maj Ronald Scarpa
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SPC Douglas Bolton
SPC Douglas Bolton
10 mo
Amazing aircraft.
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LTC Joe Anderson
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Cool!! Too bad, little by little, these pieces of History are becoming no longer airworthy.
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MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
10 mo
Especially true of the A-20 as nearly all of them were sold for scrap after the war.
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LTC Joe Anderson
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LTC Trent Klug
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She was faster than some of the fighters she faced. There are only 6 airworthy A20s. Seems sad there are that few left.
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