In 1948 the USAF; Marine Corps and US Navy were concentrating on converting over to an all-jet force. When the Korean War started in June 1950; the USAF had built up a sizable jet force in the Far East; while the US Navy was in the early stages of getting F9F Panthers operational as replacements for its piston-engined F8F Bearcats. At about this time; the Marine Corps had also begun using the Panthers in limited numbers. Operating from aircraft carriers off the Korean coast; F9Fs helped stop the North Korean invasion within two weeks of the communists crossing the 38th Parallel. The Panthers; escorting carrier-based AD Skyraiders and F4U Corsairs; penetrated as far north as Pyongyang; where they bombed and strafed targets that the North Koreans thought were out of range. The Panthers also took the battle all the way to the Yalu River; long before the MiG-15s became a threat. The F9F's basic tasking was aerial supremacy and combat air patrols; but they also excelled in bombing and strafing attacks. The Marine Corps; with its two Panther squadrons; was also involved in close air support and interdiction near the frontlines. There were a total of 32 Panther squadron deployments during the war; along with several special detachments that operated the F9F-2/5P unarmed photo-reconnaissance versions.
#225404 in Books I. B. Tauris 2013-04-15 2013-04-15Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 11.05 x .89 x 5.69l; .70 #File Name: 1780764766304 pages
Review
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful. Exceptional!By DimitriosThis book ranks amongst the very best military history I have ever read. It incorporates a detailed account of Charles XII's campaign that led his army deep into Ukraine; the action at Poltava; clear portraits of the main actors and moving accounts of what happened to so many of the ordinary Swedish soldiers (the wealth of information that the writer has for such an old battle is really astonishing). As it says on the cover; it pulls no punches about fighting. It makes an excellent starting point for delving into warfare of the era. I was especially impressed by the descriptions of the artillery fire and its consequences; the terrible fate of the wounded; the sacrifices made by the Swedish soldiers in order to save their king and the paradox ethics of warfare at that time. The book is mainly focused on the Swedish side with the Russians mentioned in a general and not so analytical way. Thus the subtitle on the cover should rather be "Potlava and the Demise of the Swedish Empire".2 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Braving the grapeshot...By Eric Moss"The Battle That Shook Europe" is for sure the only real definitive account of the Battle of Poltava. Peter Englund has written a riveting story that gives us a lens to peer into this incredible era of warfare. Not only does he send you to that hot Ukrainian battlefield in the boots of the Swedish soldier; he also provides valuable insight into the battle tactics of the time. I can think of no better book that truly puts the characteristics of 17th and 18th century warfare into perspective for the modern reader. Englund does fill a few pages with dry statistics of casualties and also the regimental structures of the Tsarist and Carolean army; but this should not deter the reader; For this only testifies to the impeccable scholarship shown by Englund.The author does not write about the battle and the Great Northern War solely in textbook fashion; he also brings out the human face of war. The descriptive re-telling of the iron-disciplined Swedish infantry unflinchingly marching to the Russian line under stupefying volleys of cannon round-shot and grapeshot then finally the vaunted mass of musketry; is by itself enough reason to read this. Englund includes a variety of personal accounts from the Swedish side; and does not at all glorify the ugly reality that the rank and file experienced on campaign and in combat. War crimes and massacres are not left out; and the gruesome after-effects of battle are descriptively told throughout. I read every page of this book with pleasure; and will no doubt come back to it again in the future.4 of 6 people found the following review helpful. Highly Readable Account of an Obscure but Important BattleBy Rodney J. SzaszFirstly it must be said that this narrative is told from a distinctly Swedish perspective. The Russian forces are largely faceless and there nowhere near the same degree of detail about the Russian forces of Peter the Great as there is those of Charles the XII.Englund starts with detailed analysis of force organisation. How did such a small country with a combined population of a little over a Million become the major power in Northern Europe? Some clues are found in the revolutionary way of raising the Swedish Army and the skilful leadership of Charles XII. The Swedes were also not the lovable pastey-faced ideoluges of peace and understanding as we know them today; they were ruthless in their suppression of enemy popultions and their rapacious behaviour in cowing almost all of central Europe. Moreover they highly motivated by territorial incentives. Peter the Great's Russia was unfortunate enough to be the nearest and most logical enemy to attack with Sweden traditionally controlling almost all of the modern-day Baltic states as an advanced glacis to both protect and launch offensives against Russia.Englund dwells very little on the political motives for war and plunges right in with the march of the Armies from Livonia and modern-day Poland into the heart of Russia. We follow this army as Russia eventually draws is deeper and deeper into Sweden trading land for time and letting the elements of Russia eat away at the invader. In the hot summer sun the Battle of Poltava is really the only military option that Charles had and although it may have been successful one is always amazed at the plan to battle through a line of heavily armed forts; reform on the other side and then wheel to attack the main Russian force; also heavily entrenched. But Englund gives us a breath of adventure and dash in the movements of the Swedes and we hope that they will somehow pull if off...The fighting is as desperate and intense as in any war; but as with the Germans over 300 yrs later; there is a particularly frightening shadow of being isolated and cut off by the Russians with no hope of reuniting with your main force.... all the time being deep in the Russian hinterland.We follow the army as it turns and tries its getaway. Compressed within the ends of the Dnieper it eventually gives way; but our redoubtable Charles XII escapes. Englund leaves us there; there is nothing more about the remarkable adventure of Charles from that point; or his further attempts to dominate Europe; all crushed eventually. Poltava ended a 100 year dominance of the Swedes as the greatest land army in Europe; unbeatable until Poltava; but never really challenging the heartland of Russia.