Archive for April, 2009

India used Airforce to attack its own people

On the afternoon of March 4 1966, a squadron of jet fighters hovered over Aizawl and dropped bombs leaving a number of houses in flames and number of people dead. The next day, more excessive bombing took place for several hours which left most houses in Dawrpui and Chhingaveng area in ashes and hundreds were killed. According to local records, Hunter and Toofani fighters were deployed for the Aizawl bombardment, which became the first and only aerial attack a country had carried out against its own people. In the first wave of attack the planes used machine guns and later on used bombs. The attack came in three waves, on the second day the attack lasted for about five hours. The fighters came from Tezpur, an IAF air base in Assam. Apart from Aizawl, Tualbung and Hnahlan villages in northeast Mizoram were bombarded. The great and powerful Indian Government a terror to Pakistan and a threat to China on March 5, 1966 used Jet Fighters, something they had never done against China and Pakistan, bombed it’s own people.

United States Airforce endroses Pentagon's plan to end F-22 production

At more than $143 million apiece, not including development costs, the F-22 has become a focus of a debate about hedging for large-scale wars versus fighting wars in places like Iraq and Afghanistan. Until April 2009 F-22 has not been used in a war. Air Force Secretary Michael Donley and General Norton Schwartz have hinted of transition from F-22 to F-35. Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter is designed to avoid detection by radar but has less weapons payload capacity and smaller range. The multi-role F-35 is being co-developed with eight countries. Lockheed Martin stopped short of saying whether it would give up its lobbying effort to keep the F-22 production line going. Key F-22 subcontractors include Boeing Co, Northrop Grumman Corp and United Technologies Corp’s Pratt amp; Whitney unit, which supplies the engines. The Air Force’s push to buy up to 381 F-22s had been a major irritant inside the Pentagon. Last June, Gates forced the resignations of then-Secretary Michael Wynne, and General Michael Moseley, then the Air Force chief of staff, amid strains over their drive to buy more for potential conflicts. In February, Schwartz, the Air Force’s current chief of staff, said the service was trimming its request from 381 based on more recent studies. But he said he would not dispute a statement in December by Admiral Michael Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, that it still argued it needed 60 more. All odds are going against F-22, there will be many job loses if F-22 production is stopped.