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Warplane

How the Military Reformers Birthed the A-10 Warthog

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The A-10 is the Air Force's unlikely success story, an airplane designed to support the Army, and one that ground troops came to venerate. Originally conceived with the express purpose of destroying Soviet tanks, the Air Force only developed it to keep funding away from the Army's response to the mission, the AH-56 Cheyenne helicopter. Inspired by the biography of a tank-busting German pilot in World War II, the engineering and design of the A-10 fell to Pierre Sprey, a precocious civilian who'd enrolled at Yale when he was just 15-years-old, and now, barely 30, wasexiled to a Pentagon backwater with little, if any, supervision. The end result was one of the finest military aircraft ever built, a plane essentially constructed around a 19.5-foot, 4,000-pound cannon that fired 30mm depleted uranium bullets at a blistering rate. Looking like it was built from discarded airplane parts, it was probably the ugliest combat aircraft ever built, thus the "Warthog" appellation. But it was also an incredibly reliable ground attack aircraft, beloved by ground troops from Iraq to Afghanistan. Despite repeated attempts to replace it with stealth aircraft and drones,over 280 A-10s remain in service today, serviced by dedicated and imaginative engineers and maintainers, and defended by a fervent cohort of advocates descended from the Military Reform movement. This is the story of intra-service rivalries, Pentagon obsessions with speed and stealth over tactical simplicity, and an aircraft that shows no sign of obsolescence as it nears fifty years in service.

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    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2023

      Debut author Sundt focuses this book on the Fairchild Republic A-10 Thunderbolt II, a single-seat, subsonic attack aircraft created to provide soldiers on the ground with effective, violent support against tanks and other ground opponents. It is commonly called the "Warthog," or simply "Hog" for its ungainly looks, toughness, and durability. The controversial concept of this fighter plane proved its worth in wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Sundt argues. The narrative of its development is a lively, insightful example of conflicting views on Pentagon expenditures (in the billions of dollars) to engineer designs that may--or may not--be valuable for certain aspects of national defense. The intricacies of Pentagon discussions, sometimes expressed via soul-deadening technical memos, are illuminated in this book. There are also entertaining profiles of the people who promoted a relatively cheap and effective ground-attack aircraft. Complex arguments about costs, effectiveness, and speed vs. battlefield utility are described in terms accessible to non-technical readers. VERDICT Likely to be of interest to military buffs, aeronautical designers, engineering companies, and legislators.--Edwin Burgess

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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