M.Han

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M.Han

M.Han

@mittchu

North Carolina, USA Katılım Eylül 2009
481 Takip Edilen68 Takipçiler
M.Han
M.Han@mittchu·
@orlfoodie Probably just a touch of consumption
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Orlando Food Blogger
Orlando Food Blogger@orlfoodie·
Publix vs Walmart on same EVO. It does not hurt to do your homework to save money. That is outrageous. Come on Publix u can do better especially in these trying times. Even it was a Bogo..,,
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C.W. Lemoine
C.W. Lemoine@CWLemoine·
When nerds call the F-16 a “Fighting Falcon”
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Bascule The Rascule
Bascule The Rascule@basculerascule·
@OnDisasters How are you an ostensible author and self proclaimed safety expert and yet write "aircrafts"?
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Air Safety #OTD by Francisco Cunha
3 notes 1) Rescue was a success. Aircrafts are replaceable: its a war and losses are expected. Pilots are not so replaceable, to put it mildly; 2) For US Forces to be able to rescue that soldier for what is, surely the most hostile foe they faced in some time, in deep enemy territory, is a feat in itself, regardless of material losses; 3) I am utterly appalled by how many Europeans have sided with the baddies on this one. Then digging deep at their profiles, they´re connected to some left turd political party: so you have non-religious communism siding with mullah crazy religious dictatorships. You can´t make this up.
𝐍𝐢𝐨𝐡 𝐁𝐞𝐫𝐠 🇮🇷 ✡︎@NiohBerg

Imagine if European shitlibs ever get into another serious war. "I'm stuck behind enemy lines, please help!" "No, what if our plane gets damaged"

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M.Han
M.Han@mittchu·
@PJMatt Did you mean SEAD?
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Jonas Blane
Jonas Blane@SnakeDocTop·
@vcdgf555 Hindsight is 20/20: now I am thinking about the expediated launch of GPS 3-9, that was supposed to be mid 2026 and was pushed forward to Jan 27.
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Evergreen Intel
Evergreen Intel@vcdgf555·
CSAR moves are a big tell. Just sayin'.
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Kai - Briefing Block
Kai - Briefing Block@briefing_block_·
@sentdefender FYI the flyover lineup is officially eight aircraft: 2 B-1B Lancers (Ellsworth AFB), 2 F-15Cs (Fresno ANG), plus 2 Navy F/A-18E and 2 F-35C jets (NAS Lemoore)—two of each, overhead, timed to hit kickoff down-to-the-second too.
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OSINTdefender
OSINTdefender@sentdefender·
F-22 Raptors have been pulled from Sunday’s flyover for Super Bowl LX at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California by the U.S. Air Force due to “operational assignments,” according to Katie Spencer, the Sports Outreach Program Manager for the Department of the Air Force. Despite being recently pulled from the event, the F-22s can still be seen alongside an Air Force B-1B Lancer and F-15C Eagles, in addition to Navy F/A-18E Super Hornets and F-35C Lightning lls, on the commemorative flight suit patch for the Super Bowl released by the Air Force.
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M.Han
M.Han@mittchu·
@ClassicCodNjoyr @AeroSpaceShark Air strikes in Vietnam are precisely what drove the end of the war. The issue wasn't the capability of air power to achieve objectives, it was the lack of political will to implement it to the full potential.
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PiptheCowboy
PiptheCowboy@AeroSpaceShark·
I love seeing these posts from extremely mis-informed civilians thinking a force on force is a game of laser tag and not a combined arms training exercise for the entire formation. And I love it because I can actually EXPLAIN what the purpose of a giant force on force is, as they're often what's called a validation exercise (NTC, JRTC, JMRC). Hint, they all have training related names... The training isn't for the line infantry and tanks to duke it out and see who comes out on top. It's for the medics to receive casualties and process then. It's for the cooks to set up operations and feed a hungry army. It's for the mechanics to do repairs in the field, notional and real. It's for the signal soldiers to set up communications at a moments notice. Helicopter pilots doing runs, fuelers traveling over kingdom come to feed an army in motion- I could keep going on and on....this is why we tell them to chill the fuck out. Because it's not about them coming in and rolling over the line forces in a single pitched battle- it's about how our entire chain reacts to the results of the battle and prep for the next one. If we wanted to we could call in 100 notional airstrikes and call it won- but that's not the point. I've been involved in quite a few of these. First as Mech Infantry, now as Division Staff. I've seen both ends of the sword. What exercise organizers are looking for is how the other 90% of the formation is doing things, they generally could care less how the infantry or tanks handle their Frontline fights. What they care about is "Does everyone in this formation know their job and how to do it" they'll fail a DSB headquarters if their S6 isn't properly securing their computer screens. War is a process that involves way more than just Guy A shooting at Guy B.
Olena Rohoza@OlenaRohoza

The Finns were asked to stop defeating American troops. During the NATO exercise Joint Viking in northern Norway, U.S. service members experienced noticeable difficulties, The Times reports. The organizers of the maneuvers asked Finnish reservists, who were playing the role of the opposing force, to “go easy” on the American soldiers. The Finns were told to stop beating the Americans, as it was humiliating and had a demoralizing effect on them.

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M.Han retweetledi
Jason Kenney 🇨🇦🇺🇦🇮🇱
He was 💯 right. Every single word. When I was Minister of Defence, we shared critical satellite intelligence with the Ukrainians *over the objections* of the Obama Administration.
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OSINTtechnical
OSINTtechnical@Osinttechnical·
Ukrainian Air Force MiG-29 Fulcrum escorting a strike package of two Su-25 Frogfoots, late 2022.
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Patricia Marins
Patricia Marins@pati_marins64·
Low FryOver If there is one common aspect on both sides of the war in Ukraine, it is that they have each lost over 100 aircraft. Any pilot attempting to fly above 300 feet will last only days or few weeks. There is no room for NATO doctrines applied in Iraq or Libya. It is a front filled with air defense systems, where the Russians are only capable of launching FAB bombs because Ukraine lacks mobile defense systems near the front. The shortage of SHORADs is a serious problem in the West.
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Preston Stewart
Preston Stewart@prestonstew_·
Meet the Ukrainian pilots intercepting Russian drones. A new age of air defense.
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Harry 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
@MrBaddog7676 If Wilson starts then it’s surely a sign than Daboll has given up on his job. It’s clear he doesn’t trust him so why start him over someone who at least showed last year he can win games?
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BaddogSports
BaddogSports@MrBaddog7676·
Needs to be the starter on Sunday
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Bricktop_NAFO
Bricktop_NAFO@Bricktop_NAFO·
They hate this man because he represents everything that they're not. He represents everything that the good people of this world strive to be. He represents everything that they try to suppress and kill. Long Live Zelensky and Slava Ukraine.
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M.Han retweetledi
KC-10 Driver ✈️ 👨‍✈️ B-737 Wrangler
Ralph “Kid” Hofer was known for his long hair, football jersey & lack of discipline. He served in the “Mighty Eighth” Air Force, and gained some notoriety for downing an enemy on his first combat sortie. He became the second highest-scoring fighter pilot to be killed in action during WWII. He was dead by the age of 23. Hofer was something of a drifter, and had happened upon a Canadian Air Force recruiter on one of his adventures. He seized the opportunity, not because he’d always wanted to, but because it was just the next thing in front of him. He eventually ended up in the UK, but saw no real action. He transferred to the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1943. After training in the P-47, he went on his first mission as a wingman, escorting B-17s. The Germans showed up in Me-109s, and a fight ensued. Hofer’s job was to stay on his flight lead & keep the tail clear, but he got separated. The fight largely went on without him, as he tried to re-engage. Then, he witnessed a P-47 being chased by an Me-109 at low level. He rolled toward them, and watched the P-47 get shot down. He managed to get into a shooting angle, though, and fired his guns, bringing down the enemy. He went back to base alone, unable to rejoin his squadron. On landing, his crew chiefs were surprised; the tapes that cover the guns (to improve aerodynamics) were broken. He’d fired the guns…it was uncommon for new pilots to do so. Older pilots were skeptical, but the gun camera footage revealed he had, indeed, shot down an enemy on his first combat sortie. He wore the football jersey over his uniform, blue, with the number 78. The dog pictured is his, “Duke”, who he adopted after his prior owner was shot down. Duke became famous…Hofer would leave his parachute behind to make room for the dog to come on flights with him. Hofer enjoyed crouching down as he “buzzed” other unsuspecting pilots, giving them the impression the dog was flying the plane. Hofer would often get separated from his squadron, only to turn up at base days later with an amazing tale and - incredibly - the gun camera footage to prove it. He was lost well away from his squadron, and his fate remained a mystery for many years. It was eventually concluded that he’d been brought down by enemy ground fire, possibly while attempting to strafe enemy aircraft at a German airfield. “Kid” Hofer was among a breed known as “Screwball Aces”…pilots that didn’t fit the mold & didn’t quite do as told, but managed big victories.
Voices of WW2@VoicesofWW2

(30.5 kills) Lt. Ralph Hofer. Hofer was killed in this Mustang shortly after this photo while he was strafing a German airfield (Mostar Sud) in Yugoslavia. An AA gun opened up on him shooting him down. He was about 500km away from his target area. He was described by many as reckless, impulsive, undisciplined, lucky, fearless, and also as one of the most successful fighter pilots in the history of the U.S. Army Air Forces

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Go Air Force
Go Air Force@AToastToTheHost·
It’s a great Friday to say…
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Rick Baum
Rick Baum@Falcon8fan·
Go Air Force‼️⚡️🏈🇺🇲
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Air Force Football
Air Force Football@AF_Football·
There’s only one mission tomorrow 𝐒𝐈𝐍𝐊 𝐍𝐀𝐕𝐘
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