PING!
Ping.
I saw it back in the 80s. I was fortunate, I had jet engines to rebuild and didnt have to deal with the BS.
Same thing happened with Chuck Yeager.
Read a book recently about the air war over the north, something about one plane shot up losing fuel. They did not want to eject over enemy territory.
Another pilot somehow managed to get underneath and push him enough to get him away from danger so they could eject when the fuel ran out. They ejected and were rescued.
Of course, the brass wanted to punish the innovative pilot that had saved the crew. His using unorthodox maneuver was intolerable.
Robin Olds quashed that and got the guy a medal. He was a fighter pilot's pilot.
In the day when senior officers put country before career. How nice it would be to have a smidgen of that now.
Met Robin back around ‘04. Really nice, humble guy.
Yeager was there, too. Full of Yeager. No longer a fan.
bookmark
Look up OPERATION BOLO
Shot down half the North Vietnam force of Mig 21 January 1967
BG Olds wrote a book called MIG Hunters detailing the air war in Vietnam, its an excellent read.
No mention of “Black Man and Robin”.
Robin Olds was Commandant of Cadets when I was at the Air Force Academy.
I had the distinct honor of meeting General Olds when he came to my base when I was in pilot training. He had long since retired, however, our Wing Commander knew him in Vietnam and invited him to fly with us and talk with us. He was everything people imagine he was. And heres something else: while I was still trying to learn the ropes of the T-38, we watched Gen Olds climb in one, gaze around the cockpit, start engines, and take off. Afterwards, we learned he had not flown a T-38 for 15 years. But that was his piloting skill.
He spoke about combat, leadership, and patriotism. He walked around the flight rooms like a god, and we were amazed by him. That day, a student failed his T-38 formation check ride. We saw Gen Olds, meeting with him and encouraging him. The student passed the check ride 2 days later.
Years later, a General who I will not name here told a gathering of officers and enlisted that the Clinton administration was scape goating the Khobar Towers affair, and Gen Fogelman was probably going to resign because of that and the way Congress and the Clintons had politicized the Kelly Flynn case. General Fogelman did resign, and his resignation was completely lost on Congress and the American people. They seemed to not even care.
I saw General Fogelman and his wife about a year and a half ago. He became a millionaire in retirement through various business ventures. One was a porta-potty business that he launched that was wildly successful. I related to him that he encouraged and spoke to our squadron when we were flying missions into Bosnia, and he said he was grateful to have had those opportunities. He is a man of principle and integrity - just like Gen Olds.
Two years ago, Air Force members (on their own accord) launched Mustache March. Many officers and enlisted grew out of regulation mustaches as a tribute to General Olds.