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#1
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In the "Shadows of Steel" by Dale Brown there was a fictional story of
USS Abraham Lincoln taking control over Southern Persian Gulf (with an Iranian carrier "Chomeini" in the North) by sending to the air 3 CAPs with 2 Tomcats each, F-14s armed with a mix of 2 AIM-9, 2 AIM-7 and 4 AIM-54 (2 normal + 2 extra), and as many as 3 E-2C Hawkeyes (one of them shot down by ARMs fired from Tu-22M Backfire). I've read somewhere 3 CAPs 2 F-14s each was a normal procedure in combat until 1990s(?). The limited number of Tomcats could easily be augmented by Hornets, but sending 3 of 4 (or 5 ) Hawkeyes to the air at the same time sounds like totally no Hawkeyes in the air a few hours later. Yes, I know this subject was discussed here long ago... According to the book at least one cruise missile escaped from AIM-54 range (because it was "faster than Phoenix" - uhh, that's funny;-), and had to be shot down by a Ticonderoga-class cruiser. Frankly, I am dissapointed with this book - the author describes Mi-8 in a way that proves that should be Ka-25 or Ka-27. Kind regards, Jacek Zemlo |
#2
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Frankly, I am dissapointed with this book - the author describes Mi-8 You really didn't need to include "book - the" in your sentence. Glenn D. |
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