「usaf」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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He graduated from the | USAF Academy Prep School and received an appointment |
He is also a member of the | USAF Academy Association of Graduates. |
hed in Journal of Professional Military Ethics, | USAF Academy, April 1980. |
ts: An International Journal of the Humanities, | USAF Academy. |
ts: An International Journal of the Humanities, | USAF Academy. |
Aviation Hall of Fame class of 2001, along with | USAF ace Robin Olds, Marine Corps ace Marion Carl, a |
Endicott, Judy G. | USAF Active Flying, Space, and Missile Squadrons as |
This was one of the last | USAF active duty Black Widows. |
USAF Aeroshell "Flying Saucer" on public display in | |
in 1990 as part of the military drawdown of the | USAF after the end of the Cold War. |
ctivated in 1993 as part of the drawdown of the | USAF after the end of the Cold War. |
Inactivated in 1994 as part of the drawdown of | USAF after the end of the Cold War |
Henrik Ej Hermiz as | USAF Agent |
, the decision was made to terminate the entire | USAF aggressor program. |
As part of the settlement, the | USAF agreed to pay Sarris his full salary until he r |
In January 1951 the | USAF Air Defense Command (ADC) established the activ |
raining Command (A precursor to the current-day | USAF Air Education and Training Command). |
ir Base* was reopened on 17 October 1950 by the | USAF Air Training Command, as a contract flying trai |
d to Sembach AB at that time and controlled all | USAF Air Divisions and Wings in North of the Alps in |
, the 159 FS was also fully integrated into the | USAF Air and Space Expeditionary Force (AEF) constru |
ir Base* was reopened on 17 October 1950 by the | USAF Air Training Command, as a contract flying trai |
osed by the United States Air Force to become a | USAF air logistics and maintenance depot as part of |
The station was re-assigned to the | USAF Air Defense Command on 1 April 1957, and was gi |
The station was re-assigned to the | USAF Air Defense Command on 1 April 1957, and was gi |
USAF: Air Dominance (2005): Game produced by the US | |
In January 1950, the | USAF Air Materiel Command issued request for proposa |
B-21DC was integrated with the | USAF Air Defense Command/NORAD Semi Automatic Ground |
The airport hosted | USAF Air Defense Command interceptor units during th |
movie centers on three flight crew members of a | USAF Air Rescue Service HU-16 Albatross and various |
commander following a mid-air collision of two | USAF aircraft 200 miles (320 km) south of Cape Race, |
necessary, but the evacuation was supported by | USAF aircraft based in Thailand. |
That was the last | USAF aircraft to depart France. |
e estimated 70 to 80 prisoners, supported by 29 | USAF aircraft and 92 flight crew on the direct raid |
on the Nevada Test and Training Range involving | USAF aircraft and the aircraft of many different all |
ite undersides, was applied to B-52s when other | USAF aircraft were adopting camouflage. |
"Two | USAF aircraft provided the support but regrettably e |
an the occasional touch-and-go landing of NATO ( | USAF) aircraft, Cambrai-Niergnies Air Base was never |
Brazilian Air Force received 13 former | USAF aircraft. |
Royal Jordanian Air Force received four former | USAF aircraft. |
and fire, eight US servicemen were killed: five | USAF aircrew in the MC-130, and three USMC aircrew i |
at Bentwaters Parks (formerly RAF Bentwaters, a | USAF airfield from 1951 to 1993) in Suffolk staffed |
history and present conditions of seven RAF and | USAF airfields in the East Midlands. |
USAF airmen from the 20th Civil Engineer Squadron Fi | |
e United States Air Force Air Mobility Command ( | USAF AMC) for transporting troops and cargo. |
was employed by Standard Oil of California, the | USAF, and the United States Civil Service before joi |
ties at APAFR that continue to be maintained by | USAF and that are outside the core operational missi |
of this concept were recognized outside of the | USAF and the 1750A was adopted by numerous other org |
USAF and NASA declined to cooperate on the film. | |
His father, CMS Carl H. Hennen | USAF and his mother, Antoinette L. Hennen, are both |
ar Nationwide Series driver, Ben Huff, Colonel, | USAF, and "Nature Boy" Buddy Landel the professional |
ide support to deployed air and space forces of | USAF and foreign air forces to Andersen, and to supp |
n invited him to take early retirement from the | USAF and become Deputy Assistant to the President. |
Wings were considered a provisional unit by HQ, | USAF and could not carry a permanent history or line |
ed United States Air Force officer and a former | USAF and NASA astronaut. |
The station was never occupied by the | USAF and returned to Ministry of Defence control on |
he took part in a special mission involving the | USAF and the Air National Guard relating to the Berl |
The | USAF and RAAF organize a strike force to reclaim maj |
of September, and eventually 225 C-54s (40% of | USAF and USN Skymasters worldwide) were devoted to t |
ity in 1962, he began a 25 year career with the | USAF and the ANG. |
a military operations of the Korean War by the | USAF and other airforces participating in the United |
During World War II it was occupied by the | USAF and, until 2003, by Carmarthen College as an ag |
In January 1960, the | USAF announced its intention to activate the first C |
ions by a review committee, in October 2008 the | USAF announced the creation of Air Force Global Stri |
sn't until late December 1959 that Headquarters | USAF approved the ATC request. |
December 1969: A | USAF AQM-34 Firebee unmanned aerial vehicle. |
21 September 1968, a | USAF AQM-34 unmanned aerial vehicle. |
oak leaf collar insignia worn by a major of the | USAF, Army, and Marine Corps is also worn by a lieut |
n of the Propulsion Wind Tunnel Facility at the | USAF Arnold Engineering Development Center (AEDC) on |
Following nine years (1954-1963) in the | USAF as a meteorologist, Jim came to the San Francis |
The Blue Scout Junior was regarded by the | USAF as the most useful of the various Blue Scout co |
The 125 FW recently participated in Red Flag ( | USAF) as part of its on-going readiness program. |
er (November 8, 1932 - November 12, 2005) was a | USAF astronaut, test pilot, and combat veteran. |
He went to work for the | USAF at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio to d |
As the gateway to | USAF Aviation, Doss will provide initial flying trai |
e book is commented by his friends and renowned | USAF aviators Gabby Gabreski and Charles Yeager |
On September 5, 1951, the | USAF awarded Consolidated-Vultee a contract to fly a |
rce facility in 1948, however it was used as an | USAF axillary military landing field as late as 1990 |
n 1 January 1962 as part of the drawdown of the | USAF B-47 force, with the aircraft were sent to AMAR |
on 25 June 1961 as part of the drawdown of the | USAF B-47 force, with the aircraft were sent to AMAR |
n 1 January 1962 as part of the drawdown of the | USAF B-47 force. |
d on 1 July 1961 as part of the drawdown of the | USAF B-47 force. |
2 May 1957, she rescued two crew members from a | USAF B-57 when they bailed out between Honolulu and |
Hambleton was a | USAF ballistic missile expert with a Top Secret clea |
played in and wrote arrangements for the 542nd | USAF Band, Craig Air Force Base, Selma, Alabama. |
The shift of | USAF bases to locations west of the Rhine River mean |
Map Of | USAF bases in West Germany during the Cold War - 197 |
RAF Lakenheath, which, she claims, are actually | USAF bases situated in the United Kingdom flagged to |
veries of the new Boeing B-47A Stratojet to the | USAF began in December 1950, and the aircraft entere |
on - F-16A Block 1, 10, and 15 versions for the | USAF, Belgian, and RNLAF Air Forces). |
A | USAF Boeing B-47B was leased to the RCAF and turned |
efense of the Maritime Pre-positioned Fleet and | USAF bomber force deployed there. |
y assist the Soviet defense interception of the | USAF bombers; to little effect, because the Soviets |
ight Air Development Center in Dayton, Ohio, by | USAF Brigadier General Donald Flickinger. |
Today some former | USAF buildings now used as part of a light industria |
Some | USAF buildings remain of the station, being used for |
As a result of the Cold War | USAF buildup in Europe, Woodbridge was made availabl |
nd the EAF units and personnel moved to the new | USAF built Fayid Air Base, located about 3 km south |
nd the EAF units and personnel moved to the new | USAF built Fayid Air Base Currently, the airfield is |
At the same time the United States Air Force ( | USAF) built new housing alongside this development, |
A | USAF C-130 taking off from RAAF Base Darwin in 1999 |
Continued training mission, receiving the first | USAF C-141 Starlifter aircraft in 1964 and expanding |
part of the transfer of the base, the remaining | USAF C-7 Caribou aircraft were transferred in place |
d sees such attractions as the Airbus A380, the | USAF C5M, and the VMS Eve. |
tly the article has this statement: ...In 1956, | USAF Captain Edward J. Ruppelt, the supervisor of th |
Jimmy P. Robinson, a | USAF captain, was lost while piloting his F-84G thro |
Ferebee spent most of his | USAF career in the Strategic Air Command, serving du |
MOL program cancellation, Taylor continued his | USAF career as an instructor at the Test Pilot Schoo |
e beacon (SIF) only for several years after the | USAF ceased radar operations. |
A | USAF CH-3E downed in a rice paddy after having taken |
Colonel George S. Howard, | USAF Chief of Bands and Music |
Doris, Michael CMSgt(ret), | USAF, Chief of Enlisted Matters, Office of The Civil |
four children of James Avery Stokes, a retired | USAF Chief Master Sergeant and Garnett Lucile Jackso |
status Air Reserve Technicians (ART) and other | USAF civilians, as well as over 1,000 "traditional" |
, it was the only reverse-Associate unit in the | USAF, co-located with the 711th SOS of the Air Force |
πύρος Πίσανος του Νικολάου και της Αθηνάς) is a | USAF Colonel (retired) who served successfully as a |
The tribunal president, a | USAF colonel (whose name has been blacked out in the |
ed in absentia 22 CIA agents, a U.S. Air Force ( | USAF) colonel and two Italian secret agents of the k |
is and AH-1 Cobra helicopters of the day, which | USAF commanders had said should handle close air sup |
Maj. Gen. Wendy Motlong Masiello, | USAF, competed in UIL Mathematics for Lubbock's Mont |
p (Contract Primary) with the implementation of | USAF Consolidated Pilot Training. |
e wing participates around the globe supporting | USAF contingency operations such as Operations Noble |
The | USAF contingent, also referred to as "iceworms", man |
The catchment area is home to two large | USAF contingents at RAF Mildenhall and RAF Lakenheat |
When the Vietnamization program ended | USAF control of the base in 1971, Phu Cat was turned |
mited access to maintain the cemetery since the | USAF controlled the land surrounding the cemetery. |
SOURCES: Air Force Historical Study 85: | USAF Credits for the Destruction of Enemy Aircraft, |
d on Roger Zelazny's 1969 novel, were two large | USAF cross-country all-terrain vehicles used by a gr |
Lloyd Nolan as | USAF Debriefing Officer / Narrator (uncredited) |
spectrographs for the United States Air Force ( | USAF) Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP |
It was responsible for | USAF Delta II launches from its activation in Octobe |
In 1962, the | USAF departed from Bovingdon. |
However, that | USAF didn't lose any of its EB-66/RB-66s during the |
In August 1955, the | USAF discontinued the use of aircraft-like type desi |
ald McNair, Lieutenant Colonel Ellison Onizuka ( | USAF), Dr. Judith Resnik, and fellow civilian payloa |
On 28 August 2009, a | USAF E-3C, 83-0008, was damaged while landing at Nel |
3 March 1968, a | USAF EB-66 (shared kill with a pilot named "Thanh"); |
14 January 1968, a | USAF EB-66C (pilots Mercer and Terrell + 5) (shared |
The | USAF ended operational control of Carswell on 30 Sep |
The | USAF ended its use of Naha AB on 31 May 1971 and it |
He served as Assistant to the Commandant at the | USAF Experimental Flight Test Pilot School from Nove |
3 February 1968: The | USAF F-102A piloted by 1st Lt. Wallace L. Wiggins of |
30 April 1967: The | USAF F-105D piloted by Robert A. Abbott of the USAF |
9 October 1967: The | USAF F-105D piloted by Clements. |
3 January 1968, a | USAF F-105D (pilot Bean); |
23 August 1967, a | USAF F-105D (pilot Baker). |
en a US Air Force RB-66 on 5 October 1966 and a | USAF F-105D (serial number 59-1820, pilot Asire) on |
11 July 1966, a | USAF F-105D (pilot McLelland) (shared with Dong Van |
30 April 1967, a | USAF F-105D; |
17 December 1967, a | USAF F-105D; |
It was supposed to include two | USAF F-15's and the Kent Spitfire, but they did not |
A | USAF F-16 (serial 87-257) was shot down on January 1 |
GIB (note:"Guy in Back", the second pilot on a | USAF F-4), but by God, if you wanted a target bombed |
24 July 1972, a | USAF F-4; |
In January 1964 the 12th TFW began receiving | USAF F-4Cs, becoming the first operational Wing to u |
18 December 1971, a | USAF F-4D (serial number 06-241, 555th Tactical Figh |
23 August 1967: The | USAF F-4D (serial number 66-0238) of Major Charles R |
23 February 1968, a | USAF F-4D) (pilot Gutterson, WSO Donald); |
8 July 1972, a | USAF F-4E (pilot Ross, WSO Imaye). |
11 September 1972, a | USAF F-4E (pilot Ratzlaff, WSO Heeren). |
10 May 1972, a | USAF F-4E; |
Base, Georgia - the Museum of Aviation has two | USAF F-4s on display: an F-4C and an F-4D |
Hewitt (centre) inspecting a | USAF F-86 Sabre in Korea during a visit to No. 77 Sq |
ctivation, Tsuiki Air Base became a second-line | USAF facility for the remainder of the Korean War, h |
The | USAF facility at NKP was the only one in Southeast A |
Bartow Air Base was gradually deactivated as a | USAF facility throughout 1960, with the City of Bart |
mployed as a test pilot before serving with the | USAF Fifth Air Force in the Korean War. |
In January 1983, he attended | USAF Fighter Weapons School at Nellis Air Force Base |
On 1 August 1960, the | USAF finally formally assumed B-58 operations respon |
USAF firefighters drag hoses in front of the C-141 S | |
tack by rockets, during a counter-attack by the | USAF five Taliban were killed. |
y rotary-wing and fixed-wing aviation units and | USAF fixed-wing air support / forward air control un |
the United States Air Force, at which time all | USAF flight instructors became full-time, active-dut |
Milburn G. Apt ( | USAF), flying an X-2 rocket-powered plane on its 13t |
Forces (USAAF) and the United States Air Force ( | USAF) flying the Curtiss P-40, Lockheed P-38 Lightni |
as part of an ongoing Reduction in Force in the | USAF following the end of the Vietnam War, reduction |
In the 1950s, the base was used by the | USAF for Air Rescue squadrons for four years. |
In 1960, with the need for additional | USAF forces in Europe and budget restrictions, Ashiy |
ghts, starting with John Glenn in Friendship 7. | USAF General Bernard Schriever, head of the ICBM pro |
it tells the story of Lawrence Dell, a renegade | USAF general, who escapes from a military prison and |
n paranoid delusion, a moribund U.S. Air Force ( | USAF) general, thinking to make the world a better p |
vision, under which it operated SPACETRACK, the | USAF globe-spanning space surveillance network, from |
His father, Col. Norman Dale Eaton, | USAF, graduated from the U.S. Military Academy in 19 |
With the | USAF Grasshopper after being parachuted down from a |
Fuchu Air Station retained | USAF ground units under the 475th Air Base Wing at Y |
The | USAF had to change its tactics in turn. |
Like his father, Haynes entered the | USAF; he served for almost four years 1951-1954. |
Since retiring from the | USAF, he has been an employee of Booz Allen Hamilton |
USAF helicopter crewman in Vietnam firing a minigun | |
The | USAF Helicopter School moved to Sheppard AFB, Texas |
A C-17 and | USAF Heritage Flight at March Airfest 2010. |
replacing the 363d Fighter Wing as part of the | USAF heritage program, which kept senior units on ac |
28 January 1970, a | USAF HH-53B (crew Bell, Leeser + 4). |
he cemetery was brought to the attention of the | USAF high commanding officers and orders were given |
lds (ETO), D-Day to V-E Day; Research Division, | USAF Historical Research Center, Maxwell AFB, Alabam |
Source: | USAF Historical Study 91: Biographical Data on Air F |
Additional construction to | USAF Hospital Travis was completed in 1961, which in |
Asia after the Gulf of Tonkin incident in 1965, | USAF Hospital Travis became the central receiving me |
Nearly two years later, on July 1, 1966 the | USAF Hospital at Travis AFB, California was official |
The base closed in 1992 and the | USAF housing was transferred to Sovereign Housing As |
The | USAF immediately began an investigation. |
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