OpsLens

20 Cold War-era Aircraft of the U.S. Air Force

During the Vietnam War, the Army convinced the Air Force to field an aircraft better suited for the close air support role than the propeller-driven A-1 Skyraider. The Air Force chose LTV’s A-7 Corsair II, a scaled-down version of the F-8 Crusader, which had already proven itself in the light attack role for the Navy. The Air Force added the beefed-up Allison TF41-A-1 turbofan engine, as well as an M61A1 20mm minigun and advanced avionics. Out of nearly 13,000 sorties, just six Air Force A-7s were downed during Vietnam. An impressive feat since “SLUF” (an acronym for “Short Little Ugly █████ “) drivers dropped more ordnance on Hanoi than every plane but the B-52 a/k/a “BUFF” (Big Ugly Fat ██████ ). Incidentally, the killshot to the Thanh Hoa Bridge mentioned earlier was delivered by Navy A-7s.

AC-119G Shadow, AC-119K Stinger

(Credit: U.S. Air Force)