Tuesday, July 14, 2026

TheList 7595



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Sent: Tuesday, July 14, 2026 at 10:48:43 AM PDT
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The List 7595

Good Tuesday morning July 14 2026 . Please see H Gram 100 from Admiral Cox.

Warm Regards,
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Sunday Morning July 14. Just a couple of years ago President Trump was wounded.
I am glad that former President Trump is still with us. He was probably only a couple millimeters away from being killed

Today, in rural Butler, Pennsylvania, during a Trump rally with many people in attendance, someone fired a number of shots at Trump.  Either one of the rounds, or a piece of debris from (a teleprompter?) clipped Trump on the ear.  The Secret Service immediately surrounded him and moved him to safety.  One person behind Trump was killed, and two others critically injured.  So far, that is all we know.  There may be others we learn of later.
Who  else could have provided 250 year celebration of our country like he just did and turn around and let Iran know that he is not anyone to try to push around.

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This Day in Navy and Marine Corps History:

This day in Naval and Marine Corps History (thanks to NHHC)
Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/.  Go here to see the director’s corner for all 100 H-Grams

1813  During the War of 1812, Lt. John M. Gamble becomes the first Marine to command a ship in battle, USS Greenwich, when she captures British whaling ship Seringapatam.
1853  Commodore Matthew C. Perry lands and holds the first meeting with the Japanese at Uraga, in which he delivers President Millard Fillmores request for a treaty to representatives to the Emperor. Allowing time for reflection and discussion, Commodore Perry returns in March 1854 and finalizes the Treaty of Kanagawa.
1945 In the first naval gunfire bombardment of the Japanese home islands, Task Unit 34.8.1 warships bombard ironworks plant at Kamaishi, Japan.
1952  The keel to the Navy's first supercarrier, USS Forrestal (CVA 59), is laid down.
1955  The first flight of jet-propelled Martin P6M seaplane is completed at Baltimore, Md.

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This Day in World History July 14
1223 In France, Louis VIII succeeds his father, Philip Augustus.
1430 Joan of Arc, taken prisoner by the Burgundians in May, is handed over to Pierre Cauchon, the bishop of Beauvais.
1456 Hungarians defeat the Ottomans at the Battle of Belgrade, in present-day Yugoslavia.
1536 France and Portugal sign the Treaty of Lyons, aligning themselves against Spain.
1789 Parisian revolutionaries and mutinous troops storm and dismantle the Bastille, a royal fortress and prison that had come to symbolize the tyranny of the Bourbon monarchs, on July 14, 1789. This dramatic action signaled the beginning of the French Revolution, a decade of political turmoil and terror in which King Louis XVI was overthrown and tens of thousands of people, including the king and his wife Marie Antoinette, were executed.
By the summer of 1789, France was moving quickly toward revolution. Bernard-René Jordan de Launay, the military governor of the Bastille, feared that his fortress would be a target for the revolutionaries and so requested reinforcements. On July 12, royal authorities transferred 250 barrels of gunpowder to the Bastille, and Launay brought his men into the massive fortress and raised its two drawbridges.
At dawn on July 14, a great crowd armed with muskets, swords, and various makeshift weapons began to gather around the Bastille. Launay’s men were able to hold the mob back, but as more and more Parisians were converging on the Bastille, Launay raised a white flag of surrender over the fortress. Launay and his men were taken into custody, the Bastille’s gunpowder and cannons were seized, and the seven prisoners were freed. Upon arriving at the Hotel de Ville, where Launay was to be arrested and tried by a revolutionary council, he was instead pulled away by a mob and murdered.
The capture of the Bastille symbolized the end of the ancien regime and provided the French revolutionary cause with an irresistible momentum. In 1792, the monarchy was abolished and Louis and his wife Marie-Antoinette were sent to the guillotine for treason in 1793.
1798 The Sedition Act is passed by the U.S. Congress.
1864 At Harrisburg, Mississippi, Federal troops under General Andrew Jackson Smith repulse an attack by General Nathan Bedford Forrest.
1900 European Allies retake Tientsin, China, from the rebelling Boxers.
1933 Nazi Germany promulgates the Law for the Protection of Hereditary Health--the beginning of the Euthanasia program.
1938 Howard Hughes and crew set a new world record for an around-the-world flight.
1940 A force of German bombers attacks Suez, Egypt, from bases in Crete.
1941 Vichy French Foreign Legionaries sign an armistice in Damascus, allowing them to join the Free French Foreign Legion.
1945 American battleships and cruisers bombard the Japanese home islands for the first time.
1951 The George Washington Carver National Monument in Joplin, Missouri becomes the first national park honoring an African American.
1964 The United States sends 600 more troops to Vietnam

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To All,

On17 November 2016 I received H-Gram 001. .I literally thought I had died and gone to History Heaven. Every one after that was like having a birthday present. With the recent receipt of H-Gram 100 it has been 10 years since the admiral set out on this epic journey to provide the history of our US Navy to all of us. With access to all of the historical documents he has access to it has been a monumental task but such a treat to all of us.

Thankyou Admiral Cox

New from Director Cox
In his H-Gram 100, Director Sam Cox recounts some of his initial experiences as a brand-new midshipman in the U.S. Naval Academy Class of 1980 during the academy's 1976 Plebe Summer. His highly readable account is insightful, poignant—and humorous.

On 6 July 1976, I joined the United States Navy with the US Naval Academy Class of 1980.&amp;nbsp;Over the last few months, I have had the privilege to participate with other classmates at “Another-Link-in-the-Chain” event, and to meet with parents and midshipman candidates of the Class of 2030.&amp;nbsp;As a result, I had the honor of a primo seat on the ramp leading from Tecumseh Court to Bancroft Hall as a guest of the superintendent for the induction ceremony for the Class of 2030. The superintendent, Lieutenant General Borgschulte, USMC, gave a rousing set of remarks heavily laced with history.&amp;nbsp;The best part, for me, was a call and response, wherein he called out Admiral Farragut’s famous order at the Battle of Mobile Bay, “Damn the Torpedoes!” to which the Class of 2030 responded with a roar, “Full Speed Ahead!!!”&amp;nbsp;I admit, seeing the induction ceremony was more emotional than I anticipated, as it dawned on me that this was a once-in-a-lifetime experience for the dozen of us Class of 1980 seated on the ramp.&amp;nbsp;So, for this H-gram, I thought I would be a bit self-indulgent and cover my experience that day 50 years ago—and I would note I wrote this (H-100-1) over 20 years ago, having no idea I would one day be the director of the Naval History and Heritage Command.

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H-100-1: Fifty Years—A U.S. Naval Academy Plebe in 1976—A Personal Reminiscence


A Naval Academy midshipman first class marches with newly arrived plebes of the Class of 1980 at the end of their first day of in-processing, July 1976 (L39-10-07-02).
H-Gram 100, Attachment 1
Samuel J. Cox, Director NHHC
10 July 2026
I actually wrote this in 2003–2004, when I had time on my hands as a geo-bachelor in Newport, California, on the CNO Strategic Studies Group.
6 July 1976, Tecumseh Court, US Naval Academy (USNA), Annapolis, Maryland
“I, Samuel Cox, having been appointed a Midshipman in the United States Navy, do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic…”
Dazzled by the sea of new white uniform jumpers in the late afternoon sun, awash in conflicting emotions, and reeling from sensory overload on my first day at the Academy, I maintained enough presence of mind as I recited the oath of office to know that this would be a defining moment in my life. Nothing would ever be the same again. I’d felt guilty when I said good-bye to my mom because, although I knew I would miss her greatly, I also knew I didn’t feel nearly as bad as she did. I just had no doubt that it was time to leave home and go out into the world. Despite palpable apprehension, I also knew that there was no other place I wanted to be.
Why was I here? In the post-Vietnam period, it certainly wasn’t the most popular choice to go to a service academy, but the concept of serving my country was something I’d just been brought up with, and my father and grandfather were both Navy men. I’d wavered during my senior year in high school, almost choosing to go to Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service on an Army ROTC scholarship, but in the end, my family’s Navy heritage won out. My grandfather, Samuel J. Cox, was a Navy veteran, an enlisted battleship sailor on the USS Idaho at the very end of World War I, and later a Seabee chief petty officer and warrant officer during the Pacific campaigns of World War II. My father, Richard S. Cox, was an enlisted Navy veteran of the Korean War. Sometimes, I figured I went to Annapolis despite my father, who had offered his typically unsubtle advice as I’d wrestled with my decision, saying, “Son, you can go anywhere you want. But anyone who would turn down an appointment to the Naval Academy is a @#$damn fool!”
Nevertheless, it was my love of naval history that probably had the most to do with my decision, and that I owed to my father. At a very young age, I knew all about my grandfather’s experiences fighting the Japanese on New Georgia, Bougainville, and Guam. I knew of my father’s cousin, Bobby Ortiz, a US Marine Corps flame-thrower operator, recipient of a posthumous Navy Cross at Iwo Jima. My father had drilled me on homemade flash cards (he’d been a draftsman in the Navy) of World War II battleships and aircraft carriers. I could recognize the difference between the Yamato, Bismarck, Enterprise, and every capital ship in every navy of the world before I was in kindergarten. I remember sneaking off to the bushes during the second grade to look at the pictures and line drawings in my dad’s very expensive Jane’s All the World's Fighting Ships and getting in trouble because I couldn’t explain away how the dirt got in the pages. My dad owned the entire set of Samuel Eliot Morison’s History of United States Naval Operations in World War II, and by the third grade, I’d read all 15 volumes.
I loved any kind of history, but I was especially moved by the accounts of naval heroism: the sacrifice of Torpedo Squadron 8 at Midway, the horrific night battles in “Ironbottom Sound” off Guadalcanal, the exploits of the submarines USS Wahoo and USS Tang, and the charge of the American destroyers into certain destruction against the Japanese battleships off Samar during the Battle of Leyte Gulf, an action that saved MacArthur’s invasion force. Ernest Evans, commanding officer of USS Johnston, awarded a posthumous Medal of Honor at Samar, was my personal hero when other kids had sports heroes. But what fascinated me most were the naval aviators, such as Butch O’Hare, John Thach, Jim Flatley, and David McCampbell. More than anything, I wanted to fly fighter jets off aircraft carriers in defense of my country. Even at the time, I knew I didn’t join the Navy for the usual reasons. I didn’t join for the education, or the technical skills, or the medical or retirement benefits, and certainly not for the pay. I literally joined so that I could be a part of the history of this great institution, the United States Navy.
“…and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God.” As I finished the oath, I banished any thoughts from my mind of turning back. I assumed the only way I would survive the rigors of Plebe Year at the Academy was to be totally committed. I knew Plebe Year would be very hard, but I had only a vague comprehension of precisely what would make it so hard. I knew that attrition of up to one-third of an entering class was not uncommon.
I was comforted by all the memorabilia of naval history on display throughout the Yard, as the Naval Academy campus was called. Many of those monuments depicted those sailors who had made the ultimate sacrifice, and I reasoned that the commitment expected of me during Plebe Year would be far less by comparison. Nevertheless, my fear of the unknown was very real, and I was not alone.
I remember very clearly the last meal of the condemned: the evening meal after the induction ceremony and our last good-byes to our parents. Up until then, the midshipmen first class (seniors) who would be our leaders during Plebe Summer were not allowed to put any pressure on us. But the gloves would come off at the first “formation” after that evening meal. As I later understood, the “Firsties” relished this particular meal—big, meaty steaks and huge lobster tails, and a table full of new plebes all too nervous and scared to eat any of it. The Firsties gorged themselves on the “all-they-could-eat” surf and turf special.
July 1976, Bancroft Hall, USNA
“Unsat,” stated our company officer, Lieutenant Commander (LCDR) Caplinger (known also as “Crapslinger”). I started to hyperventilate.
It was our first formal room inspection since the start of Plebe Summer at the Naval Academy. My roommate, Kurt Baden from Rolla, Missouri, and I had spent hours getting our room ready, scraping soap film off the shower with a razor blade, cleaning tile grout with Q-tips, and folding every sock and piece of underwear and placing them on the shelves exactly in accordance with “the MHP” (the three-inch-thick book of regulations). We were confident we were ready for the inspection.
LCDR Caplinger entered the room followed by the midshipman company commander and sub-commander, both midshipmen first class. We snapped to attention and sounded off, “Midshipman Fourth Class Cox, Sir!” I was the designated ICOR (in-charge of room).
Without a word, LCDR Caplinger went straight to the sink and wiped his white glove on the counter. “No problem,” I thought. I’d dusted that.
“What's this, Mr. Cox?” he demanded. There was a light coating of blue fuzz on his glove.
I stammered out an, “I’ll find out, Sir!” It struck me as a really stupid response, but the only other three options we were allowed were “Yes, Sir;” or “Aye, Aye, Sir;” or “No excuse, Sir,” and none of them seemed to fit. (We weren’t permitted to say, “No, Sir” yet.) I could only figure that the dust was on his glove before he came in. Then, he opened the medicine cabinet, took out my electric razor, and pulled off the head. Sure enough, there were whiskers inside. I hadn’t thought of that.
“What's this?” He glared as he dumped the whiskers on the counter.
“I’ll find out, Sir!”
“Unsat!” he growled. Then he reached into the sink basin, twisted the drain cover, and pulled it out. I didn’t even realize it could come out. It was covered in slime. And again, the “What’s this?—I’ll find, out, Sir—Unsat!” cycle.
I was starting to feel a sense of panic. We were going to fail the inspection, even after all the work we’d put in. I’d never failed anything in my life!
Then, LCDR Caplinger pointed to a corner by the shower, saying, “What’s that?”
I couldn’t see anything.
“Come closer and take a look!”
Since we were standing at attention, I wasn’t sure how I was supposed to move and still stay at attention. I sort of waddled stiffly toward where he was pointing. I still couldn’t see anything, so I just responded with, “I’ll find out, Sir.”
“It’s dirt!” he snarled. As he started to rummage through my storage cabinet, I started waddling backward toward my original position. Kurt later said he saw it coming, but didn’t know how to communicate a warning.
I fell backward over my open safe drawer, landing with a thud on the floor. I popped back up more embarrassed than hurt, with a “No excuse, Sir!”
LCDR Caplinger decided at that point he’d seen enough of our room and left. The two Firsties then proceeded to tear the entire room apart, throwing the contents of drawers and shelves on the floor, ripping the sheets off the meticulously made beds, flipping the mattresses over and onto the floor. I was overcome with sheer rage and hate, but I dared not say anything. My heart was pounding and I was breathing as hard as if I’d just finished a fast mile. “Unsat!” they said, adding as they left, “and calm down, Mr. Cox.”
I was completely traumatized. Kurt and I remained frozen at attention for what seemed like a good minute. Then Kurt started to laugh. I looked at him like he was crazy, but as I surveyed the devastation in the room, the absurdity of the whole thing hit me. We both had to be crazy to even be here. I started to laugh. Kurt laughed harder. I laughed harder. Soon we were rolling on the floor laughing. I thought I was going to split a gut. I’d never laughed so hard in my life. We cleaned up our room, laughing late into the night. We did so many more times that summer. The worse things got, the more we laughed. I can’t explain it. It was just one of the things you had to live through to understand.
July 1976, Outside Luce Hall, USNA
Our column of 12 plebes marched directly at the construction wall ahead of us. There was nothing we could do about it. Already cowed into complete submission, we awaited orders. Perhaps the Firsty platoon leader was going to test us with some sort of tricky “First Squad, Left Oblique, March!” maneuver order before we reached the wall. None came.
The lead plebe in our column reached the green wooden wall, stopped, and started marking time in silence. The rest of us behind him did the same. The two columns to our right continued along in silence, except for one plebe belting out, off-key, one of the truly irritating cadence-keeping songs we were required to sing while marching: “Oh here we go. We’re at it again. We’re moving up. We’re moving in. We’re moving up and [pause] moving in [repeat].”  (Bawdy cadences had been banned since we were the first class in Naval Academy history to have female midshipmen.)
We’d been told we were the cream of American high school graduates, a collection of honor students, student council presidents, and star athletes. Only one out of 13 applicants was admitted. And not one of us could figure a way out of our predicament. We weren’t permitted to speak until spoken to, and we followed our orders.
The platoon commander had misjudged the distance from the wall. He had no idea that only two of his three columns were still following him as he led two-thirds of the platoon to dawn physical training. It took him over 150 yards to figure it out. He halted the rest of the platoon and walked back, shouting commands, “First Squad, Halt! Right, Face! Two steps forward, March! Left, Face! Forward, March!” His face was beet red in embarrassment. We could say nothing. But he knew that we knew that an illusion had been shattered. He knew we were all laughing at him inside. The Firsties were not invincible or infallible. In fact, they could be downright stupid, just like we Plebes.
The construction wall blocked off access to a hole in the ground. At some point in the distant past, somebody had determined that, due to the perpetual construction at the Academy, the number of holes in the Yard was a constant. This phenomenon was known as the “Law of the Diggers and Fillers,” or the “Law of Conservation of Holes.” For every hole filled, an equal and opposite hole would be created. This law had a corollary called the “Law of Conservation of Good Deals.”  For every good deal, there must be an equal and opposite screw job. This law, actually explained a lot about how the Navy really works.
August 1976, Outside Mitscher Hall, USNA
Still in three-column formation, our platoon ran back to Bancroft Hall from a strenuous daybreak physical training session, breaking into a sprint the last 200 yards to demonstrate how gung-ho and spirited we were. However, our platoon leader had misjudged again.
All of a sudden, the plebe directly in front of me zagged to the left. Only then did I see the fire hydrant dead ahead, too late to veer, stop, or jump. I hit the hydrant in full stride, wiping out on the decorative sidewalk slabs at the entrance to Mitscher Hall, basically medium-sized bits of gravel cemented into the pavement, much like a very rough grade of sandpaper. I don’t remember feeling any pain, or having any other thought but to rejoin my unit. I didn’t want to let my squad down by staying down. I bounced back up, finished the run, and stood in formation in silence, until my squad leader noticed that I was bleeding profusely from both wrists, both elbows, both knees, and one hip, at which point he ordered me to medical. Somewhat to my amazement, I broke no bones, but my hip still has scars from the gravel gouges.
August 1976, Bancroft Hall, USNA
One of my squad mates was ambushed right outside my door. Midshipman Fourth Class Lee Hall from Stayton, Oregon, was the most squared-away plebe in our 12-man squad, but today was not his day. The poor guy was probably just trying to go to the head.
I could hear the Firsties yelling and shouting. I heard, “Whiteworks Foxtrot! Go!” It was a command for Lee to run to his room and change from his current uniform into the designated one and run back. It was called a “uniform race.” If the victim wasn’t fast enough, he or she would be barraged with questions that, if answered incorrectly, would result in demerit points that had to be worked off by hours of marching. If the victim wasn’t fast enough, based on completely capricious standards, he’d have to change into yet another uniform, frequently ever more complex and sometimes nonsensical. “Dinner Dress Blue, with boondockers [boots], Go!” It also took teamwork to survive a uniform race. If your clothes weren’t folded and stowed properly, other Firsties could enter your room while you were gone and “fry” you (put you on report) for having “gear adrift.”
I knew Lee’s roommate was at some other scheduled event, along with mine. I don’t remember giving it much thought. One of my squad mates was in trouble and needed help. I left the comparative safety of my room, hoping they wouldn’t jump me too, ran across the open-air passage between the building wings, and then ducked into Lee’s room. I picked up and folded the clothes from his first uniform change that he’d left strewn about in his desperate rush to make it back in time. Then I stood by the window, where I could just barely hear the next uniform command.
By the time Lee ran back, I had the next uniform rigged and laid out. We had no time to talk. He was like a wild, hunted animal, but I saw in his eyes something like gratitude but not really explainable. We were just two guys helping each other survive. I knew from that look that he would have done the same for me. We repeated the cycle about four times.
I was looking out the window when I sensed a presence. I turned and faced Midshipman First Class Keith Munson, the most intimidating and fearsome of all the Firsties. He made movie versions of drill instructors look like wimps. The glare in his eye was pure evil. He’d obviously been expecting to find an empty “undefended” room to trash.
“What are you doing, Mr. Cox?” he said, in his typical quiet, menacing Texas twang.
I figured it was pretty obvious, since I held several hangers of different uniform combinations in my hands, but I answered, “Helping my classmate, Sir!”
I had a feeling of doom. That wasn’t one of the authorized responses, and I could see the wheels turning as he decided what to do about it.
“What's the menu for evening meal?” he asked.
I fumbled it badly, disconcerted by his piercing stare, forgetting the marinara sauce and dessert. I was sure he would “fry” me. He’d always been merciless. But he just glared in silence, turned and left without a further word. I could only figure that by sticking my neck out to help my classmate, I had done something that he respected.
We all thought that Keith Munson was hard-core Marine Infantry, but when service selection night came during second semester, he opted to enter the program to become a medical doctor.
Lee and I wound up as roommates for the next four years and lifelong friends. Even though our careers took us down widely divergent paths and we rarely saw each other over the years, I have no doubt that, to this day, either of us would go to great lengths to help the other if needed. 
August 1976, Bancroft Hall, USNA
I hadn’t shot worth a damn and had failed to qualify as an expert marksman with a .45 caliber pistol. But I had succeeded at my primary objective, which was to always keep another midshipman between any Firsty and me, so no Firsty would see that I hadn’t shaved, a “fry-able” offense.
Our alarm hadn’t gone off that morning. Kurt and I had awakened to the sound of the reveille bell—too late to do everything that needed to be done before having to be in morning formation. Later, the boat returning us from the shooting range was late. I only had a couple minutes to finally shave, change into a new uniform for inspection, memorize the menu and several new silly factoids (“rates”) from the book Reef Points (basically the plebe bible), read the required two newspaper articles—one from the front page and one from the sports page—and then make it to the noon meal formation in the required two minutes before the bell rang. I got it all done, except the sports page article.
As we stood at attention around the table waiting to start the noon meal, our squad leader announced that the company sub-commander, Midshipman Lieutenant Junior Grade Crowe, would be our guest at lunch.
The first thing the sub-commander said was, “Mr. Cox. What did you read in the sports page today?”
I answered with one of the authorized responses, “No excuse, Sir!”
“You didn't read the sports page?”
“No excuse, Sir!”
“Mr. Cox, you have embarrassed your entire squad by being completely unprepared. I can tolerate a lot. But I can’t tolerate someone who doesn’t read the paper.” The irony was that I completely agreed with him. I normally devoured the front page of the paper. It was about the only enjoyable thing I was allowed to do. I only read the sports page because they made me.
“Mr. Cox, I have no choice but to put you on report. Bring around a Form 2.” After the meal I would have to bring him a Form 2, which was the conduct offense report form.
“Aye Aye, Sir!”
“Five demerits, one hour’s marching,” he stated later as he filled out the form. It was the smallest punishment allowable, but it was the first time I’d been fried. I was crushed. I’d never been in trouble with authority in my entire life. Even worse, because of my failure, the sub-commander had lit into the rest of the squad, grilling them mercilessly until three more of us were on report.
Two days later, I went to the appointed location to march off my demerits in an inspection- quality uniform and with cleaned rifle. If these weren’t perfect, I’d get fried again, and I could expect to get grilled again on the day’s rates, another opportunity to get fried. Getting fried tended to result in a downward spiral of getting repeatedly fried.
I felt a sense of dread. I felt like a worthless criminal. Then, I turned the corner and almost burst out laughing. The passageway was lined end-to-end, shoulder-to-shoulder with plebes on report. There had to be 500 of us, fully half the class. Obviously, this was “the” place to be.
At the end of Plebe Summer, all demerits, including my five, were erased, and we started the academic year with a clean record. I never got another demerit my entire time at the academy, which is either a record, or tied with it. I certainly wasn’t a saint. A surprising number of times I benefited from the fact that, since I had no demerits, I would be let off with a warning. If I’d gotten fried a first time, it would have been downhill on the slippery slope afterward. I even owned a car a year ahead of when we were allowed, and I was regularly well beyond the seven-mile weekend liberty limit visiting my girlfriend in Towson, both 75-demerit “Black-N” offenses, the maximum. Three of those and you were out. But one of the things I learned best from the academy program was—how not to get caught.
August 1976,  Tecumseh Court, USNA
“White Christmas” blared out the window of some sadistic upperclassman’s room as all the plebes stood in formation in front of Bancroft Hall. Parents’ Weekend was over. It was the first time we’d been able to see our families since the start of Plebe Summer almost two months before, and it would be the last time until Christmas. It had never been my favorite Christmas song, but as I listened to the words I got a lump in my throat that felt like a baseball. Other plebes were choking up; many were crying. Parents were crying and weeping on the other side of the low wall. It was awful.
We’d also been warned by the Firsties that tonight would be a special night in hell for us. They weren’t kidding. As soon as the formation ended and the parents disappeared, they hit us with everything: mass uniform races, room trashing, marathon questioning, pushups, and running up and down the stairwells, accompanied by screaming and shouting late into the night.
At one point, we were ordered to put our carefully folded clothes into a laundry bag and return to the main passageway. Folding our entire uniform set was hours of work, so many plebes put the minimum amount of clothes in the bag. The Firsties knew that trick. We were all ordered to go back and put more into our bags, although they didn’t specify more of what. As we returned to the passageway, the Firsties went into our rooms and threw whatever clothes they found out into the passageway. Then, we were ordered to dump the contents of our bags in the middle of the passageway and mix everything up. For some reason I’ll never understand, the plebe next to me had stuffed a typewriter into his laundry bag.
We were then given five minutes to find our own stuff and put it in our bags. If you hadn’t marked every sock and piece of underwear with your “alpha code” (mine was 801416), you were SOL. It quickly became apparent that there was no way to find all your stuff in the time allotted, so we just started grabbing whatever we could and would sort it out later.
We finished the night with “carrier landings.” With the passageway wetted and soaped, each plebe would take a running start, dive headfirst onto the floor and slide for distance. The longest slider got to return to his room to clean it up. The rest had to slide again until no one was left and the night of hell was over. In our shared misery, we’d all forgotten how much we missed our parents.
Back to H-Gram 100 Overview
Published: Fri Jul 10 15:51:54 EDT 2026
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Rollingthunderremembered.com .

July 14
Thanks to Dan Heller and the Bear
Links to all content can now be found right on the homepage http://www.rollingthunderremembered.com. If you scroll down from the banner and featured content you will find "Today in Rolling Thunder Remembered History" which highlights events in the Vietnam war that occurred on the date the page is visited. Below that are links to browse or search all content. You may search by keyword(s), date, or date range.
An item of importance is the recent incorporation of Task Force Omega (TFO) MIA summaries. There is a link on the homepage and you can also visit directly via https://www.rollingthunderremembered.com/task-force-omega/. There are 60 summaries posted thus far, with about 940 to go (not a typo—TFO has over 1,000 individual case files).
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Thanks to Micro
To remind folks that these are from the Vietnam Air Losses site that Micro put together. You click on the url below and get what happened each day to the crew of the aircraft. ……Skip

For Tuesday July 14


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This is  funny and good luck to see it work
Thanks to T.J.and RS

According to Candid Camera….
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Trying again…skip

thanks to RS

On 9/11, with the word that there was an errant airliner headed for DC, the Washington National Guard dispatched two unarmed F-16’s to bring it down if necessary … Here’s a great interview with Gen. “Sass” Sasseville (Maj. then) , and LT Heather “Lucky” Penney who flew that mission, after only a few minute briefing on how, unarmed, they might bring down an civilian airliner.

Heather’s dad, John Penney, was a United Captain who developed an interest in warbirds and brought many MiG’s into the country, checked me out in our MiG-15 and -17, and flew “Rare Bear” in the Reno Air Races Unlimited Category … I’d heard the story from John, but never to this detail …

If you have a “Smart” TV you can also find this on YouTube … This is the full CBS interview ...

Enjoy!

Rich




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Thanks to Interesting Facts
7 Amazing Facts About America’s Famous Founding Fathers

Few figures loom as large in American history as the Founding Fathers. Although wrapped in myth and shrouded in legend, these leaders lived fascinating lives molding a fractious colony into a new nation. Although their stories have been meticulously detailed — through their own writings as well as centuries of biographies and classroom textbooks — not everything about them is well known. Which famous general lost more battles than he won? Which two Founding Fathers died on the same day? Which one invented a strange musical instrument? Here are seven little-known facts about the men who created a nation.

1 of 7
John Adams and Thomas Jefferson Died on the Same Day
John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, bitter political rivals and, at times, close friends, died on the very same day — July 4, 1826, 50 years after signing the Declaration of Independence. The two were the last surviving of the original revolutionaries who helped forge a new nation after breaking with the British Empire. During their presidencies, the two diverged on policy and became leaders of opposing political parties, but at the urging of another founding father, Benjamin Rush, around 1812, Adams and Jefferson began a correspondence that lasted the rest of their lives. On his deathbed at the age of 90, Adams’ last words were reportedly “Jefferson still lives,” but he was mistaken — Jefferson had died five hours earlier in Monticello, Virginia.

2 of 7
James Madison Was the Shortest President in U.S. History
Although James Madison’s signature doesn’t adorn the Declaration of Independence, as the nation’s fourth President and chief architect of the Bill of Rights, he’s widely regarded as one of the most influential Founding Fathers. Madison had a large impact on early U.S. history even though he is also the country’s shortest President thus far, standing just 5 feet and 4 inches tall. That makes Madison a full foot shorter than America’s tallest President, Abraham Lincoln (and no, that height doesn’t include Lincoln’s signature stovepipe hat).

3 of 7
John Hancock Was Accused of Smuggling
Portrait of John Hancock.Credit: Stock Montage/ Archive Photos via Getty Images
On May 24, 1775, John Hancock became the presiding officer over the Second Continental Congress. A little more than a year later, his signature became famous when he wrote his name in grandiose letters, taking up some 6 square inches, on the Declaration of Independence. (Legend says Hancock wanted the king to be able to see it without spectacles.) However, Hancock was also known as an importer, and — at least when it came to British tea — was accused of being a smuggler. The British seized his sloop Liberty in 1768 because of suspected smuggling, which instigated a riot. Luckily, fellow founding father and lawyer John Adams cleared Hancock of all charges, and there was only flimsy evidence for the charges in the first place.

4 of 7
Sam Adams Might Never Have Brewed Beer
Sam Adams was the most influential member of the Sons of Liberty, a loosely organized political organization that formed in opposition to the Stamp Act in 1765. But to many Americans, he’s also the name behind one of the most successful beer brands in the U.S. The company says it picked the name because its founder, Jim Koch, “shared a similar spirit in leading the fight for independence and the opportunity for all Americans to pursue happiness and follow their dreams.” That’s good, because it’s not clear whether Sam Adams actually ever brewed beer. After his father’s death in 1748, Adams inherited his malt house, which is where grains are converted into malt that’s then sold to brewers. But within only a few years, the business was bankrupt and the malt house itself was crumbling; the whole family estate was then put up for auction. Adams proved more effective as a political firebrand than as a “maltster.”

5 of 7
George Washington Lost More Battles Than He Won
General George Washington embodies the phrase “losing the battle but winning the war,” because during the American Revolution, he lost more battles than he won. Despite some experience in the British army, Washington had little experience fielding a large fighting force, and the Continental Army was filled with soldiers who were far from professional fighters. However, Washington’s resilience, determination, and long-term strategy eventually won the day. According to Washington’s aide Alexander Hamilton, the plan was simple: “Our hopes are not placed in any particular city, or spot of ground, but in preserving a good army … to take advantage of favorable opportunities, and waste and defeat the enemy by piecemeal.” Washington, also aided by competent generals such as Nathanael Greene and assisted by the French Navy, decisively ended British ambitions in the colonies at the Battle of Yorktown in 1781.

6 of 7
Benjamin Franklin Invented a Musical Instrument Used by Mozart and Beethoven
In the mid-1700s, while serving as a delegate for the American colonies in Europe, Benjamin Franklin experienced a popular musical performance — singing glasses. Intrigued by the beautiful sound of a wet finger on glass, Franklin developed an instrument known as a “glass armonica” in 1761. Working with a glassblower in London, Franklin altered the thickness of glass bowls, interlocked along a rod, in order to produce a range of pitches.

Far from being one of Franklin’s odder ideas (like his failed phonetic alphabet), the glass armonica was an 18th-century sensation. Some of the era’s greatest composers, including Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven, wrote music for the instrument. However, it was largely forgotten by the 1820s — many musicians complained of dizziness and other symptoms after playing it, with some blaming lead poisoning or the instrument’s vibrations as the cause. Today, a few musicians still practice the subtle, ethereal art of the glass armonica.

7 of 7
Alexander Hamilton Was Captain of One of the Oldest U.S. Army Regiments in Existence
Alexander Hamilton is known for many things — he was the prolific writer behind the Federalist Papers, the first secretary of the treasury, the creator of the U.S. Coast Guard, and the inspiration for one of Broadway’s biggest musicals. What’s less celebrated about Hamilton is his military career, though when fighting broke out, the eager immigrant from Nevis island in the Caribbean joined the cause. On March 14, 1776, Hamilton was named captain of the New York Provincial Company of Artillery, and soon fought in the battles at Kip’s Bay and White Plains, among others. Hamilton slowly climbed up the military ladder, first serving as General George Washington’s aide and then as commander of a light infantry battalion at the decisive Battle of Yorktown. However, it’s his original artillery company that holds a singular distinction. Known today as 1st Battalion, 5th Field Artillery Regiment, Hamilton’s former artillery unit is one of the oldest active regiments still serving in the U.S. Army.

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Thanks to History Facts

Ancient Egyptians shaved their eyebrows when their cats died.
Though ancient Egyptians didn’t literally worship cats, they did see them and other animals as symbols of the gods’ divine qualities. They admired felines as much for their hunting prowess as they did for the way they nurtured their young, and both aspects factored into their reverence. Their devotion was so fierce, in fact, that they shaved their eyebrows when their own cats died — the beginning of a mourning period that didn’t end until their eyebrows grew back. Keeping a cat in one’s home was considered a way of both attracting good fortune and warding off evil spirits, and a cat’s passing was considered a significant loss — many Egyptians even mummified them.
This royal treatment began not with commoners but with the actual royalty, who let their cats eat from their plates in addition to adorning them in gold jewelry. Perhaps the most important feline deity was Bastet, a goddess of the home, fertility, childbirth, and, yes, cats themselves. Bastet was first depicted as a lioness before later being portrayed as a small domestic cat. Sekhmet, a lioness goddess of war who defended the sun god Ra from his enemies, represented the other half of cats’ most revered qualities. Statues of these “divine felines” remain to this day in museum collections.

By the Numbers
Estimated number of animals mummified in ancient Egypt
70 million
Deities in the Egyptian pantheon
2,000+
Length (in years) of the 18th dynasty of Egypt, the longest
250
Mummified cats discovered in 1890
200,000+

DID YOU KNOW?
Many ancient Egyptians didn’t name their cats.
Despite their love of cats, evidence suggests that many ancient Egyptians didn’t give their cats unique names, but rather referred to all kitties by the Egyptian word for “cat”: “miu,” an onomatopoeic reference meaning “he or she who mews.” There are notable historical exceptions, of course: The first known cat with a name was Nedjem, which means “sweet” or “pleasant.” Said feline belonged to the high priest Puimre, who lived during the reign of Thutmose III. People were even named after cats in some cases: The Egyptian name Ta-mitt comes from the word for female cat, and Pa-mitt comes from the word for tomcat.

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From the archives
A bit of humor from Carl
Some sophisticated observations offered by sports heroes.....
Don Meredith, Dallas Cowboys Quarterback once said: “Coach Tom Landry is such a perfectionist that if he was married to Raqel Welch he'd expect her to cook.”
Harry Neale, professional hockey coach: "Last year we couldn't win at home and we were losing on the road.  My failure as a coach was that I couldn't think of anyplace else to play.”
Reggie Jackson commenting on Tom Seaver: "Blind people come to the ballpark just to listen to him pitch."
Doug Sanders, professional golfer:  "I'm working as hard as I can to get my life and my cash to run out at the same time. If I can just die after lunch Tuesday, everything will be perfect."
Mickey Lolich, Detroit Tigers pitcher:  "All the fat guys watch me and say to their wives, 'See, there's a fat guy doing okay. Bring me another beer.'"
Tommy LaSorda , L A Dodgers manager: "I found out that it's not good to talk about my troubles. Eighty percent of the people who hear them don't care and the other twenty percent are glad I'm having them."
E.J. Holub, Kansas City Chiefs linebacker regarding his 12 knee operations: "My knees look like they lost a knife fight with a midget."
Vic Braden, tennis instructor: "My theory is that if you buy an ice-cream cone and make it hit your mouth, you can learn to play tennis. If you stick it on your forehead, your chances aren't as good.”
Walt Garrison, Dallas Cowboys fullback when asked if Tom Landry ever smiles: "I don't know. I only played there for nine years."
John Breen, Houston Oilers: "We were tipping off our plays. Whenever we broke from the huddle, three backs were laughing and one was pale as a ghost.”
Bum Phillips, New Orleans Saints, after viewing a lopsided loss to the Atlanta Falcons:"The film looks suspiciously like the game itself."
Al Hrabosky, major league relief pitcher: “When I'm on the road, my greatest ambition is to get a standing boo."
Paul Horning, Green Bay Packers running back on why his marriage ceremony was before noon:  “Because if it didn't work out, I didn't want to blow the whole day."
Lou Holtz , Arkansas football coach:  "I have a lifetime contract. That means I can't be fired during the third quarter if we're ahead and moving the ball."
Knute Rockne, when asked why Notre Dame had lost a game: "I won't know until my barber tells me on Monday."
Bill Walton, Portland Trail Blazers:  "I learned a long time ago that 'minor surgery' is when they do the operation on someone else, not you."
George MacIntyre, Vanderbilt football coach surveying the team roster that included 26 freshmen and 25 sophomores: "Our biggest concern this season will be diaper rash."
Rick Venturi, Northwestern football coach: "The only difference between me and General Custer is that I have to watch the films on Sunday.”

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This Day in U S Military History…….July 14

1825 – The visit of the Marquis de Lafayette to America in 1824-
1825 was in every sense a triumphal procession. The 2nd Battalion, 11th New York Artillery, was one of many militia turned out to welcome him. This unit decided to adopt the title “National Guard” in honor of Lafayette’s command of the Garde Nationale de Paris during the French Revolution. The 11th Battalion, later designated as the 7th Regiment, was prominent in the line of march on the occasion of Lafayette’s final passage through New York en route home to France. Taking note of the troops named for his old command he alighted from his carriage walked down the line clasping each officer by the hand as he proceeded. The 7th New York, with its designation “National Guard” went on to become one of the most famous of all Guard units well into the 20th century. Its nickname has come to represent all American militia for more than century.

1862 – Congress passed an act stating that: ” . . . the spirit ration in the Navy of the United States shall forever cease, and . . . no distilled spiritous liquors shall be admitted on board vessels of war, except as medical stores . . . there shall be allowed and paid to each person in the Navy now entitled to the ration, five cents per day in commutation and lieu thereof, which shall be in addition to their present pay.” Assistant Secretary of the Navy Fox and officers generally held that it was in the Navy’s best interest to abolish the spirit ration….and they thought that golf bags were only for Golf clubs……

1945 – Over 1000 US naval aircraft raid Hokkaido and the port of Kamaishi. Also, the American battleships South Dakota, Indiana and Massachusetts, as well as 2 heavy cruisers and 4 destroyers, bombard the Kamaishi steel works in the first naval gunfire directed against the Japanese home islands.

1950 – The week long Battle of Taejon begins. This was an early battle between American and North Korean forces during the Korean War. Forces of the United States Army attempted to defend the headquarters of the 24th Infantry Division. The 24th Infantry Division was overwhelmed by numerically superior forces of the Korean People’s Army (KPA) at the major city and transportation hub of Taejon. The 24th Infantry Division’s regiments were already exhausted from the previous two weeks of delaying actions to stem the advance of the KPA. The entire 24th Division gathered to make a final stand around Taejon, holding a line along the Kum River to the east of the city. Hampered by lack of communication, equipment and shortage of heavy weapons to match KPA firepower, the American forces being outnumbered, ill-equipped and untrained were pushed back from the river bank after several days before fighting an intense urban battle to defend the city. After a fierce three-day struggle, the Americans withdrew. Although they could not hold the city, the 24th Infantry Division achieved a strategic advantage by delaying the North Koreans, providing time for other American divisions to establish a defensive perimeter around Pusan further south. The delay imposed at Taejon probably prevented an American rout during the subsequent Battle of the Pusan Perimeter. During the action the KPA captured Major General William F. Dean, the commander of the 24th Infantry Division, and highest ranking American prisoner during the Korean War.

1952 – Laying of keel of USS Forrestal, the first 59,900 ton aircraft carrier.

Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day

HIBSON, JOSEPH C.
Rank and organization: Private, Company C, 48th New York Infantry. Place and date: Near Fort Wagner, S.C., 13 July 1863, Near Fort Wagner, S.C., 14 July 1863; Near Fort Wagner, S.C., 18 July 1863. Entered service at: New York, N.Y. Birth: England. Date of issue: 23 October 1897. Citation: While voluntarily performing picket duty under fire on 13 July 1863, was attacked and his surrender demanded, but he killed his assailant. The day following responded to a call for a volunteer to reconnoiter the enemy’s position, and went within the enemy’s lines under fire and was exposed to great danger. On 18 July voluntarily exposed himself with great gallantry during an assault, and received 3 wounds that permanently disabled him for active service.

HOLTON, CHARLES M.
Rank and organization: First Sergeant, Company A, 7th Michigan Cavalry. Place and date: At Falling Waters, Va., 14 July 1863. Entered service at: Battle Creek, Mich. Born: 25 May 1838, Potter, N.Y. Date of issue: 21 March 1889. Citation: Capture of flag of 55th Virginia Infantry (C.S.A.). In the midst of the battle with foot soldiers he dismounted to capture the flag.

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“This Day in Aviation History” brought to you by the Daedalians Airpower Blog Update. To subscribe to this weekly email, go to https://daedalians.org/airpower-blog/.

July 12, 1976
The Navy retired the last C-117 Skytrain.

July 13, 1977
A pilot in an F-4J Phantom II from NATC Patuxent River, Maryland, made the first landing using the microwave landing system at the FAA Test Facility, Atlantic City, N.J. The system was designed to reach out electronically, catch target aircraft, and fly them to safe landings without the pilots touching the controls.

July 14, 1922
Daedalian Life Member Brig. Gen. Robin Olds, a fighter pilot and triple ace with 16 official aerial victories in two wars, was born on this date as Robert Oldys Jr., at Luke Field Hospital, Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii. He was the first son of Daedalian Founder Member #12856 Capt. Robert Oldys, Air Service, United States Army, and Eloise Wichman Nott Oldys. In 1931, the family name was legally changed from Oldys to Olds. As a child, Robert Jr., became known as “Robin,” a dimunuitive of Robert. Learn more about this member of the National Aviation Hall of Fame HERE. .

July 15, 1939
The Army Air Corps acquired performance rights to the song “Wild Blue Yonder” by composer Robert Crawford. It subsequently became the official U.S. Air Force song.
July 16, 1969
Apollo 11, crewed by Neil A. Armstrong, Col. Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., USAF, and Lt. Col. Michael Collins, USAF, launched from John F. Kennedy Space Center, Florida. On July 20, Armstrong and Aldrin in lunar module Eagle separated from command and service module Columbia and descended to the moon. “Houston, Tranquility Base here — the Eagle has landed,” Armstrong reported to mission control when the lunar module touched down on the moon at 1618 EDT. At 2256 EDT, a naval aviator became the first person to walk on the moon when Armstrong stepped onto the surface. Collins, who retired as a major general in the Air Force Reserve, is a Daedalian Life Member.
July 17, 1989
The first Northrop B-2A Spirit, 82-1066, took off from Air Force Plant 42, Palmdale, California, on its first flight. The crew was Northrop Chief Test Pilot Bruce J. Hinds and Col. Richard Couch. The top secret “stealth bomber” prototype landed at Edwards AFB, California, 1 hour, 52 minutes later. After completing the flight test program, -1066 was placed in storage until 1993, awaiting upgrade to the Block 10 operational configuration. In 2000 it was again upgraded to the Block 30 standard. It is now named Spirit of America and assigned to the 509th Bomb Wing at Whiteman AFB, Missouri.
July 18, 1980  NASA astronaut Charles Conrad Jr. became the 12th naval aviator enshrined at the National Aviation Hall of Fame in Dayton, Ohio. Conrad, who died in 1999, was a Daedalian Life Member.

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for July 14,  FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD “PHIL” MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY

14 July
1914: Dr. Robert H. Goddard received a US patent for a liquid-fueled rocket. (21)
1922: Aeromarine Airways began a flying boat service from Detroit to Cleveland. (24)
1943: Comiso Airfield was the first airfield recaptured in Sicily. Afterwards, a German JU-88 landed amid US flak shots. The pilot climbed out, shook his fist at the flak battery, and much to his surprise, became a prisoner. Later, two German ME-109s also landed, believing the airfield to be in German hands. They were also taken prisoner. (4)
1944: Navy PB4Y Liberators flew from Saipan to make the first strike on Iwo Jima by shore-based planes. (24)
1945: From Hollandia, A-20s set fire to Japanese oil fields at Boela, Ceram. They used rocket bombs for the first time in the Southwest Pacific. (24)
1948: Through 20 July, in the first West-East transatlantic flight of jets, 16 F-80s flew from Selfridge Field to Scotland. The trip across the Atlantic took 9 hours 20 minutes. (16) (26)
1950: KOREAN WAR. The 35th Fighter-Interceptor Group (FIG) moved from Japan to a new airfield at Pohang, thus becoming the first USAF fighter group to be based in S. Korea during the war. The 6132d Tactical Air Control Squadron, the first tactical air control unit in the war, activated at Taegu AB to provide forward, ground-based air control for aircraft providing close air support of UN forces. (28)
1951: KOREAN WAR. In one of the more spectacular night strikes of the war, a single B-26 of the 452 BG attacked two enemy convoys north of Sinanju in the early morning hours, claiming sixty-eight destroyed or damaged vehicles. Additionally, the first KB-29P flying boom refueling took place over enemy territory when a RB-45C was refueled over North Korea. (18) (28) Boeing delivered the first KC-97E tanker (number 51-183) to SAC’s 306 AREFS at MacDill AFB. (1)
1952: The Ground Observer Corps started its Skywatch program under a nationwide air defense effort. (16) (24)
1958: The USAF decided that the flying boom delivery system would be its standard for air refueling aircraft. (18)
1960: Operation SAFARI. The Congo Airlift started from Evreux, France. (24)
1965: Launched on 28 November 1964, Mariner IV, came within 5,500 miles of Mars. It relayed the first photos of Mars taken from a spacecraft over 134 million miles to earth. (21)
1970: The C-5A Galaxy completed its first transpacific flight of 21,500 miles, inaugurating service to Hickam AFB, Andersen AFB, Clark AB, and Kadena AB. (16) (26)
1974: Gen Carl “Tooey” Spaatz, the first CSAF, died at Walter Reed General Hospital at age 83.
1980: From Vandenberg AFB, the 394th ICBM Test Maintenance Squadron launched the last Block 5D-1 Defense Meteorological Satellite. A Thor booster failed to place it in orbit. (6)
2001: A prototype Minuteman ICBM interceptor targeted and destroyed an unarmed Minuteman II ICBM over the central Pacific. Ten minutes after launch, the interceptor destroyed the warhead, traveling some 15,000 mph at more than 140 miles in altitude above the Earth. The 30th Space Wing at Vandenberg AFB and the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization conducted the Ground-based Midcourse Defense Segment, formerly called the National Missile Defense Program, test. (AFNEWS Article 0961, 17 Jul 2001)
2005: An FA/22 Raptor flown by an AFFTC pilot dropped its first 1,000-pound GBU-32 JDAM at supersonic speed. The test significantly increased the Raptor’s operational capabilities. (3)

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Monday, July 13, 2026

TheList 7594

7594

Good Monday morning July 13 2026 . It was cloudy and cool when I got up and it is supposed to start clearing around 10 and climbing to 87 around 3 and they have extreme heat watch in place. 
Classes tonight and fortunately we have A\C .
A bit to unpack this morning.
Peruse at your leisure there is no test at the end

Warm Regards,
skip


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Thanks to \Al

Monday Morning Humor--World Cup

    After his team was eliminated from the World Cup, the Nigerian captain personally offered to refund all expenses that fans of his country paid for to travel to the USA.  According to sources close to the player, he just needs their bank details and pin numbers to complete the transactions.

What do you call an American in the world cup final.
Ref


Germany sent a strong team to the World Cup.  Unfortunately, it's the drinking team.


    With the bribery and corruption scandal surrounding the World Cup, I want to remind everyone that money can't change someone's mind.  But it seems some are willing to try.


    An Argentinian walks down the street, where he bumps into a Swiss and asks, “How are you, what are you up to?"
    The Swiss replies, "Ah, nothing much, playing the Croatians in the World Cup tomorrow!"
    "What a coincidence...?! We're playing them on Sunday!"


    Two fans are arguing in a sports bar.  One says, “My team has the best striker in the world.”
    The other replies, “If he’s so good, why does he spend half the game rolling on the grass?”


Soccer players are the only people who get hurt and immediately check if the referee noticed.


Some captions seen on Instagram during World Cup:
•    “Emotionally unavailable until the final whistle.”
•    “Running on snacks, caffeine, and soccer stress.”
•    “Game-day mode: activated.”
•    “Some people watch casually. I yell professionally.”
•    “No VAR needed. That was clearly a goal.”
•    “Current mood: screaming at referees.”
•    “90 minutes. Unlimited drama.”
•    “Just here for the chaos and corner kicks.”


Some funny tweets:
•    “I’d survive a zombie apocalypse if my team played during it.”
•    “My neighbor just celebrated louder than I did at my wedding.”
•    “Penalty shootouts should count as a medical condition.”
•    “I don’t even support this team anymore, but now I’m emotionally trapped.”


    I find it amazing that Americans call it soccer until the World Cup starts—then suddenly they’re football experts.


Only four games left.  Have a great week,
Al

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This Day in Navy and Marine Corps History:

This day in Naval and Marine Corps History (thanks to NHHC)
Here is a link to the NHHC website: https://www.history.navy.mil/.  Go here to see the director’s corner for all 100 H-Grams

July 13
1812
The frigate, USS Essex, commanded by Capt. David Porter, captures the merchant brig, Lamprey, in the Atlantic.
1854
The sloop of war, USS Cyane, bombards San Juan del Norte (Greytown), Nicaragua, in retaliation for ill-treatment of U.S. citizens. Marines and Sailors also seize weapons and powder in retribution for an attack on U.S. Consular officials for U.S. refusal to pay reparation.
1939
Rear Adm. Richard Byrd is appointed to command the 1939-1941 U.S. Antarctic Service Expedition. Under objectives outlined by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Byrd establishes an east and west base and holds a wide range of scientific observations until international tensions end the expedition in early 1941.
1943
TBF aircraft (VC 13) based on board USS Core (ACV 13) sinks German submarine U 487, 720 miles south-southwest of Fayal, Azores.
1943
The Japanese are intercepted from landing reinforcements in the Solomon Islands, resulting in the night Battle of Kolombangara. During the battle, the U.S. Navy loses USS Gwin (DD 433).
1991
USS Kentucky (SSBN 737) is commissioned at Groton, Conn., the third Navy vessel to be named after the Bluegrass state. The thoroughbred of the Fleet is an Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine.

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Today in World History: July 13
1099 The Crusaders launch their final assault on Jerusalem.
1534 Ottoman armies capture Tabriz in northwestern Persia.
1558 Led by the Count of Egmont, the Spanish army defeats the French at Gravelines, France.
1585 A group of 108 English colonists, led by Sir Richard Grenville, reaches Roanoke Island, North Carolina.
1643 In England, the Roundheads, led by Sir William Waller, are defeated by Royalist troops under Lord Wilmot in the Battle of Roundway Down.
1754 George Washington surrenders Fort Necessity to the French, leaving them in control of the Ohio Valley.
1787 Congress, under the Articles of Confederation, enacts the Northwest Ordinance, establishing rules for governing the Northwest Territory, for admitting new states to the Union and limiting the expansion of slavery.
1798 English poet William Wordsworth visits the ruins of Tintern Abbey.
1832 Henry Schoolcraft discovers the source of the Mississippi River in Minnesota.
1862 Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest defeats a Union army at Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
1863 Opponents of the draft begin three days of rioting in New York City.
1866 The Great Eastern begins a two week voyage to complete a 12-year effort to lay telegraph cable across the Atlantic between Britain and the United States.
1878 The Congress of Berlin divides the Balkans among European powers.
1939 Frank Sinatra records his first song, "From the Bottom of My Heart," with the Harry James Band.
1941 Britain and the Soviet Union sign a mutual aid pact, providing the means for Britain to send war materiel to the Soviet Union.
1954 In Geneva, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China and France reach an accord on Indochina, dividing Vietnam into two countries, North and South, along the 17th parallel.
1971 The Army of Morocco executes 10 leaders accused of leading a revolt.

July 13 1943 The largest Tank Battle in History ends
There is a great book out there that details all the things on each side including the vulnerability of the German Tiger tanks that the Russians took advantage of to win this one..  skip
The Battle of Kursk, involving some 6,000 tanks, two million men, and 5,000 aircraft, ends with the German offensive repulsed by the Soviets at heavy cost.
In early July, Germany and the USSR concentrated their forces near the city of Kursk in western Russia, site of a 150-mile-wide Soviet pocket that jutted 100 miles into the German lines. The German attack began on July 5, and 38 divisions, nearly half of which were armored, began moving from the south and the north. However, the Soviets had better tanks and air support than in previous battles, and in bitter fighting Soviet antitank artillery destroyed as much as 40 percent of the German armor, which included their new Mark VI Tiger tanks. After six days of warfare concentrated near Prokhorovka, south of Kursk, the German Field Marshal Gunther von Kluge called off the offensive, and by July 23 the Soviets had forced the Germans back to their original positions.
In the beginning of August, the Soviets began a major offensive around the Kursk salient, and within a few weeks the Germans were in retreat all along the eastern front.

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Rollingthunderremembered.com .

July 13
Thanks to Dan Heller and the Bear
Links to all content can now be found right on the homepage http://www.rollingthunderremembered.com. If you scroll down from the banner and featured content you will find "Today in Rolling Thunder Remembered History" which highlights events in the Vietnam war that occurred on the date the page is visited. Below that are links to browse or search all content. You may search by keyword(s), date, or date range.
An item of importance is the recent incorporation of Task Force Omega (TFO) MIA summaries. There is a link on the homepage and you can also visit directly via https://www.rollingthunderremembered.com/task-force-omega/. There are 60 summaries posted thus far, with about 940 to go (not a typo—TFO has over 1,000 individual case files).
.
Thanks to Micro
To remind folks that these are from the Vietnam Air Losses site that Micro put together. You click on the url below and get what happened each day to the crew of the aircraft. ……Skip

For Monday July 13


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. From the archives

. Thanks to Mots
In response to yesterday’s flat spin article my thanks to Mots who was my RIO and one of the best. The only thing he hated was when I said OH! Chit and did not tell him right away what had happened up front. He would always find a way to get me back and one night he flew us into a thunderstorm while flying a missile profile at mach for the small boys. We took a lightning hit and the St. Elmo’s fire was coming down the canopy rails and I looked in the mirror and Mots had his arms on the rails and the St. Elmos fire was going down his arms and he was happy…..skip
Thumper,
As an instructor in the RAG, and as a RIO, I had to do this same maneuver with a student more than once, until this accident and they stopped doing it as part of a syllabus hop. On two occasions one or the other engines encountered a compressor stall and flames and smoke came up out of the intake and I would tell the student to pull that engine to idle and then to shut it down. In a calm voice, god-like as you put it, I would immediately then tell the student to put his feet flat on the deck and to let me see both hands. After several flips and whifferdills around from back to right side up and sometimes never going onto its back, the plane would fly out of it on its own with plenty of altitude to spare. I would be calling out altitude and airspeed and telling the pilot to, “Just relax, let the plane do its thing. It’s going to fly out." Once I saw the nose drop and 250-300kts I would tell him to start flying the airplane and then once level and we had 350-400kts, restart the engine that was shut down. I never encountered a tail slide that lasted very long. Usually the plane fell off one way or the other or onto its back and then kept on rolling until it was right side up. They were never the same. I’m glad to this day that I survived this and that I never have to do that again! It was definitely not a fun hop!

As a RIO instructor in the RAG, and flying with new pilots, I can honestly say that some of those flights scared me more than night landings on a pitching and/or rolling deck. RAG Carrier quals were also sometimes exciting. The smoothest CARQUAL with a F-14 newbie that I did was with Admiral Gillcrist. He just knew what he was doing and how to fly an airplane. I was in VF-51 then and he used one of our planes to bounce and qual. He flew the whole syllabus of flights.

As a RAG instructor I believe that I only gave out 2 pink slips in 2 years but not for this hop. It was usually because the guy didn’t know how to navigate or did something stupid like go belly up and blind while doing a rendezvous. These things are making me nervous to talk about. I better stop now.

Mots

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. From the archives
Thanks to Dan
Here is some more VHPA Data that Pete LaChat just forwarded to me:
From: Jack Gale <jackgale@gmail.com>
Subject: Copied from HAL-3
Date: July 10, 2022 at 9:24:02 PM PDT

These statistics are right from the U.S. Government. We had a VERY hazardous job over there.
The Vietnam Helicopter Pilots Association (VHPA) estimates that over 100,000 helicopter pilots and crew members served during the Vietnam War. Over 4,800 helicopter pilots and crew members were killed in action, and more than 300 are buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
How many helicopters were shot down during the Vietnam War?
11,846 helicopters
According to the Vietnam Helicopter Pilots Association, a total of 11,846 helicopters were shot down or crashed during the war, resulting in nearly 5,000 American pilots and crew killed.
What was the casualty rate of helicopter pilots in Vietnam?
Over 10% of all combat and combat support deaths in Vietnam occurred in helicopter operations, a total of 6,175 (2,202 pilots, 2,704 aircrew and 1,269 passengers).
What was the deadliest job in Vietnam?
Overall, the U.S. military used nearly 12,000 helicopters in Vietnam, of which more than 5,000 were destroyed. To be a helicopter pilot or crew member was among the most dangerous jobs in the war.
And we only lost 44 men. I don't know the number for the choppers.

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. From the archives

Thanks to Carl…..This is awesome
(Prepare yourself to be awed by the vastness of the universe!)

Breaking Down NASA Webb Space Telescope's First Images of the Invisible Universe The JWST delves into nebulas, colliding galaxies, an active black hole, and even provides a breakthrough look at an alien world.
July 12, 2022 9:22 a.m. PT

It's not often that the sequel is as good as the original, but the JWST's second image release certainly lived up to expectations set by the jaw-dropping deep field released on Monday evening. In fact, it surpassed it by leaps and bounds.



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. Thanks to History Facts
5 Ways Albert Einstein Changed the World
PHYSICIST ALBERT EINSTEIN
German-born physicist Albert Einstein (1879-1955) was so influential, his very name has become synonymous with genius. While working as a patent clerk in 1905 at the age of 26, Einstein submitted four papers to the German journal Annalen der Physik that changed humanity’s perception of time, gravity, and light. Today, historians mark the year as Einstein’s annus mirabilis, or “miracle year” — and he was just getting started.

Much of Einstein’s work is famously dense. Few people other than physicists need to fully comprehend the mind-bending ideas behind the general theory of relativity and Einstein’s other theories, but these discoveries form the bedrock of technologies the rest of us enjoy every day. Here are five ways Einstein’s ideas changed the world, and continue to provide a roadmap for humanity’s future.

GPS Would Be Impossible Without the General Theory of Relativity
Some 10,900 nautical miles above our heads, 31 satellites orbit Earth as part of the Global Positioning System (GPS) — but if it wasn’t for Einstein, those satellites would be little more than space junk. The very foundation of GPS is accurate timekeeping, as satellites need to keep time to correctly log the distance from a ground-based receiver (such as your smartphone). GPS satellites are so precise, the atomic clocks on board are accurate to within three-billionths of a second, a feat impossible without Einstein’s special and general theories of relativity. The special theory of relativity states that time flows differently depending on velocity. Because satellites travel at 8,700 miles per hour, they “lose” 7 microseconds per day compared to Earth-based receivers. Additionally, Einstein’s general theory of relativity — an idea published in 1915 that basically elaborates on his previous theory by throwing gravity in the mix — similarly states that distance from a source of mass, in this case the Earth, also affects the flow of time. This means that technically speaking, your head ages slightly faster than your feet because your feet are closer to the Earth (on time scales that are ultimately negligible). Today, GPS takes into account this “time dilation,” so satellites always know where you are when you open Google Maps.

The Explanation of Photoelectric Effect Helped Make Modern Solar Power Possible
It probably comes as no surprise that Einstein won the Nobel Prize for physics in 1921, but what many people don’t realize is that the award wasn’t honoring the wunderkind’s groundbreaking general theory of relativity, but rather his revolutionary yet often overlooked explanation of the photoelectric effect. The initial discovery of the photoelectric effect came in 1887 from German physicist Heinrich Rudolf Hertz (yes, that Hertz), who noticed that when ultraviolet light hit a metal plate, it created sparks. What was puzzling was that different metals required different frequencies to produce the same effect. Then, in 1905, 26-year-old Einstein solved this conundrum by introducing a new conception of light, which he published in his first paper submitted to Annalen der Physik. He argued that light wasn’t just a wave, as some scientists suggested, but also a stream of particles, later known to science as “photons.” Einstein posited that these photons contained a fixed amount of energy depending on their frequency, and his theory — though derided for years — successfully explained the photoelectric phenomenon. Though solar cells predated Einstein’s discovery by dozens of years, it wasn’t until Einstein’s theory that scientists understood why they worked, which helped make solar panels even more efficient.

Lasers Were Developed Thanks to Einstein’s Quantum Theory of Radiation
Lasers (an acronym for “Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation”) scan your groceries at the supermarket, make self-driving cars possible, and form the backbone of optical communication. And yes, we can thank Einstein for this one, too. In 1917, Einstein published a paper detailing his quantum theory of radiation. The theory basically states that atoms can be stimulated to change energy levels when hit with a specific frequency. If that excited atom is hit with another photon of the same frequency, it’ll produce two coherent photons (traveling in the same direction) while the atom’s electron returns to its ground state. This means you can artificially create a sudden burst of coherent light as atoms discharge in a chain reaction, otherwise known as “stimulated emission of radiation” (the “ser” in “laser”). It wasn’t until after World War II that scientists found a use for Einstein’s discovery; the laser was developed by using mirrors to create light amplification.

The E=MC2 Equation Formed the Scientific Basis for the Nuclear Bomb
The final discovery of Einstein’s “miracle year” was the concept that light and energy are equivalent, and that their relationship can be explained with the elegantly simple equation E=MC2, meaning energy equals mass times the speed of light squared. Describing mass as essentially super-dense energy, Einstein’s equation shows how even small amounts of mass at atomic levels can produce a tremendous amount of energy when multiplied by the speed of light squared — and you probably see where this is going. This process explains how a neutron fired from a uranium atom splits it into smaller atoms while releasing a tremendous amount of energy. It’s known as nuclear fission, and when the process is controlled, it provides low-emission nuclear energy. When released in an uncontrolled state, it can be used to produce an atomic bomb. Einstein himself never worked on the Manhattan Project, the secret government program to make the first nuclear bomb, but he rubber-stamped the idea in a 1939 letter to Franklin D. Roosevelt that argued for the U.S. to make the bomb before Nazi Germany. Einstein later regarded that letter as the “one great mistake in my life.”

The E=MC2 Equation Could Point to the Future of Energy
As previously described, nuclear fission works by breaking apart an element such as a heavy uranium-235 atom into two smaller atoms (krypton and barium). However, something interesting also occurs: If two light nuclei (i.e., hydrogen) can overcome electrostatic repulsion, they fuse together to form a heavy helium-4 atom — sort of like fission but in reverse. Similarly, following the E=MC2 equation, this process produces a tremendous amount of energy and heat. This is known as nuclear fusion, and it’s the atomic science that is the energy-producing engine of stars. On paper, nuclear fusion could provide the answer to humanity’s expanding energy needs. There’s no enriched material involved; nuclear proliferation with fusion reactors isn’t a worry; a meltdown is scientifically impossible; there’s no radioactive material produced as a byproduct; it’s completely carbon-free; and fusing atoms together releases 4 million times more energy than the chemical process of burning coal. There’s just one catch: Building a fusion reactor is immensely complicated. That’s never stopped people before, though. An international coalition of scientists and agencies is hard at work creating the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, or ITER, which is set to go online in 2025.


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Thanks to American Facts

Animal masonry 101
.
Bees, Ants & More—Check Out These 12 Amazing Animal-Built Homes!

From forests to backyards, America is full of incredible animal-made structures that rival—and sometimes even surpass—human architecture. Bees craft intricate hexagonal hives, ants build elaborate underground colonies, and many other creatures create amazing structures without using any kind of blueprint. Take a look at these 12 remarkable constructions and be inspired by their ingenuity.
.

Beehives
The first entry on the list goes to perhaps the most famous and finest example of animal architecture: the beehive. Built by incredibly industrious insects, beehives are among the most efficient structures in nature.

The regular hexagons provide the least-perimeter way to enclose infinitely many unit areas in the plane: the best way to separate the surface of their hives in equal parts all around, using the least possible total perimeter, thus reaching 100% efficiency in design.
.

Ant colony
If beehives aren’t the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about animal architecture, there’s a good chance you’re thinking of ant colonies.

Ants build the elaborate colony structure by hollowing out the area with their mandibles, grain by grain, without a blueprint, without a leader, and in total darkness. Unless the soil dries out dramatically, the chambers will keep their form.
.

Prairie dog town
These cute creatures excavate their homes by digging burrows into the ground, primarily in the Great Plains of North America. The region experiences extreme seasonal weather variations from season to season, requiring their homes to be built to withstand extreme temperatures, floods, and fires.

These underground "towns" have nursery rooms, pantries, living quarters, and temporary refuges—each smartly separated to serve a specific purpose.
.

Beaver dam
Another famous animal architect, the beaver, uses felled trees to build dams. These dams create still ponds where beavers can construct their winter homes, called lodges.

These creatures prepare for winter by covering their lodge with a fresh coat of mud, which hardens to create a barrier against the cold and predators.
.

Caddisfly larvae case
Caddisfly larvae construct protective cases using silk and whatever materials are available, such as sand, small stones, and plant debris.

These cases camouflage the larvae from predators and can be remarkably diverse in appearance, reflecting their creativity and resourcefulness.
.

Octopus den
It’s no secret that octopuses are incredibly intelligent animals, and their dens are proof of it. These clever mollusks use shells, stones, and even discarded human objects to reinforce their homes. Some species go a step further, decorating their dens with seaweed and other found materials.
.

Bagworm silk tent
Bagworms construct silk tents around themselves using bits of leaves, twigs, and other debris. These tents serve as mobile homes, providing protection as the insect feeds and grows.

Some species even camouflage their bags to blend into the environment, helping them avoid predators.
.

Osprey nest
Ospreys build massive nests in tall trees or on human-made structures near bodies of water. These nests are carefully constructed with sticks and lined with softer materials, creating a sturdy platform that can last for multiple breeding seasons.
.

Coral reef
Coral reefs are massive structures built by tiny coral polyps. These marine architects secrete calcium carbonate to form hard skeletons, gradually creating vast and complex habitats for a myriad of marine species. They are often referred to as the "rainforests of the sea" due to their biodiversity.
.

Spider web
Another famous architect from the animal kingdom, the spider, creates webs that serve as both homes and hunting tools. The silk used in these webs is incredibly strong, and different species produce a variety of designs, including sheets, orbs, and funnel shapes.
.

Swallow nest
Swallows build cup-shaped nests that can house entire colonies, using mud pellets, usually attached to vertical surfaces like cliffs or man-made structures.

The construction is precise and stable, providing protection for their young against predators and environmental elements.


Burrowing owl burrow
As their name suggests, burrowing owls make their homes underground, often taking over burrows abandoned by prairie dogs or other mammals.

They use these subterranean homes to protect their young and hide from the heat of the day.


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Thanks to Brett

The economics of illegal immigrants

A shocking analysis by the Federal Reserve revealing the true cost of the illegal immigration during the Biden administration. The fed is supposedly apolitical so maybe we can have a degree of faith in these numbers. 

Source: Blue State Blues News The Federal Reserve Just Confirmed What Bidens Border Crisis Actually Cost You - Blue State Blues News


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Thanks to Bill S. …
More on the F-16’s launched on 9/11..

Thanks, Rich.

Sass and Lucky tell a great story! Good to see it out there in video now.

In 2002, I interviewed both of them for a series of stories Aviation Week ran about the “Military Response on 9/11”. Heather did NOT want to be interviewed, but Sass ordered her to talk to me. I was only allowed to use her call sign, because there was concern for ALL U.S. pilots’ safety, at the time. (Terrorist sleeper cells were the threat.)

Before I talked to her, Heather had been interviewed by a local TV reporter, whose story was all ga-ga about “a female fighter pilot risking her life to save America!”. Lucky was still PO’ed about that report.

I don’t have a scan of the final product, but for techie detail, here’s the story I filed in ’02.

Cheers,

Bill


SUBJECT: DCGUARDq

BOB - DCGUARDq (scott) - 3 images on CD; UPDATED 8-30

{{Precede}}
This is Part 3 of an ongoing special report covering how the military responded to terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Earlier stories were featured in the June 3 and June 10 issues. For this segment, one D.C. Air National Guard F-16 pilot chose to not have her name used, so is identified only by her call-sign.

ANDREWS AFB, MD.
Within minutes of American Airlines Flight 77 hitting the Pentagon on Sept. 11, three Air National Guard F-16s took off from here in response to a plea from the White House to "Get in the air, now!" Those fighters were flown by three pilots who had decided, on their own, to ram a hijacked airliner and force it to crash, if necessary. Such action almost certainly would have been fatal for them, but could have prevented another terrorism catastrophe in Washington.

    One of those F-16s launched with no armament--no missiles and no usable ammunition in its 20 mm. gun. The other two "Vipers" only had a full load of 20 mm. "ball" or training rounds, not the high-explosive incendiary (HEI) bullets required for combat, and no air-to-air missiles.

    The Andrews-based 121st Fighter Squadron was not standing alert on Sept. 11, because the Air National Guard (ANG) unit was not assigned to the North American Aerospace Defense Command (Norad) air defense force. Norad had already scrambled two F-16s from their alert base at Langley AFB, Va., but they were still approximately 12 min. from Washington when the Pentagon was struck at 9:37 a.m. (AW&ST June 3, p. 48).

    The 121st squadron's day had started normally. Three F-16s were flying an air-to-ground training mission on a range in North Carolina, 180 naut. mi. away. At Andrews, several officers were in a scheduling meeting when they received word that the World Trade Center (WTC) had been hit by an aircraft.

    Minutes later, after United Airlines Flight 175 slammed into the second WTC tower, a squadron pilot called a friend in the Secret Service "to see what was going on. He was told some bad things were happening. At that time, we weren't thinking about defending anything. Our primary concern was what would happen to the air traffic system," said Lt. Col. Marc H. "Sass" Sasseville, the current 121st FS commander. On Sept. 11, he was the director of operations and Air Operations Officer--the acting operations group commander under the 113th Wing.

    Soon thereafter, the Secret Service called back, asking whether the squadron could get fighters airborne. The unit's maintenance section was notified to get several F-16s armed and ready to fly.

    Anticipating such an order, Col. Don C. Mozley, the 113th Logistics Group Commander, had already ordered his weapons officer to "break out the Aim-9s and start building them up." The missiles had to be transported from a bunker on the other side of the base, which would take awhile.

    "After the Pentagon was hit, we were told there were more [airliners] coming. Not 'might be;' they werecoming," Mozley recalled.

    Sasseville grabbed three F-16 pilots and gave them a curt briefing: "I have no idea what's going on, but we're flying. Here's our frequency. We'll split up the area as we have to. Just defend as required. We'll talk about the rest in the air." All four grabbed their helmets, g-suits and parachute harnesses, and headed for the operations desk to get aircraft assignments.

    Another call from the Secret Service commanded, "Get in the air now!" Almost simultaneously, a call from someone in the White House declared the Washington area "a free-fire zone. That meant we were given authority to use force, if the situation required it, in defense of the nation's capitol, it's property and people," Sasseville said.

    He and his wingman, “Lucky”, sprinted to the flight line and climbed into waiting F-16s armed only with "hot" guns and 511 rounds of "TP"--non-explosive training rounds. "They had two airplanes ready to go and were putting missiles on Nos. 3 and 4. Maintenance wanted us to take the ones with missiles, but we didn't have time to wait on those," Sasseville said. Maj. Dan "Raisin" Caine and Capt. Brandon "Igor" Rasmussen climbed into the jets being armed with Aim-9s, knowing they would takeoff about 10 min. behind Sasseville and “Lucky”.

    "We had two air-to-air birds on the ramp...that already had ammo in them. We launched those first two with only hot guns," said CMSgt Roy Dale "Crank" Belknap, the 113th Wing production superintendent. "By then, we had missiles rolling up, so we loaded those other two airplanes while the pilots were sitting in the cockpit."

    Inside, at the operations desk, Lt. Cols. Phil "Dog" Thompson and Steve "Festus" Chase were fielding a flood of calls from the Secret Service and the FAA's two area air traffic control facilities--Washington Center and Washington National Approach Control. Thompson is chief of safety for the 113th Wing, and Chase is now commander of the new Air Sovereignty Detachment here. By then, Brig. Gen. David F. Wherley, Jr., the 113th Wing commander, was on-site, trying to determine whether the unit had authorization to launch fighters.

    "By this time, [commercial] airplanes were landing, but there were still several unidentified ones flying. One was in the northwest [area], basically coming down the [Potomac] River," Thompson said. Later, they would learn that the FAA and Norad's Northeast Air Defense Sector (NEADS) were tracking the hijacked United Flight 93, and feared it was coming towards Washington. Thanks to intervention by passengers, the aircraft ultimately crashed in Pennsylvania.

    Maj. Billy Hutchison and his wingmen had just landed after being recalled from their training mission in North Carolina. When Hutchison checked in via radio, Thompson told him to take off immediately.

    "Billy had about 2,400-lb. of gas; the other two [F-16s] were too light," Thompson said. "I told Billy to take off, but don't use afterburner to save gas. He took off with nothing--no weapons. I told him to 'do exactly what ATC asks you to do.' Primarily, he was to go ID [identify] that unknown [aircraft] that everybody was so excited about. He blasted off and flew a standard departure route, which took him over the Pentagon."

    According to now-official accounts, an armed Norad-alert F-16 from Langley AFB, flown by Maj. Dean Eckmann of the 119th Fighter Wing (Fargo, N.D.), was the first defender to overfly the Pentagon. At the time, Hutchison and his fellow "Capital Guardians"--as the 121st FS is known--were unaware that other fighters were over the city.

    Minutes later, Sasseville and Lucky were in the air, roughly 6 min. after they had reached their F-16s. "I was still turning things on after I got airborne. By that time, the [Norad alert] F-16s from Langley were overhead--but I didn't know they were there," Sasseville recalled. "We all realized we were looking for an airliner--a big airplane. That was [United] Flight 93; the track looked like it was headed towards D.C. at that time."

    The DCANG was not in the Norad or NEADS communication and command loops, so its pilots weren't on the same frequencies as Norad air defense fighters. The Andrews-based F-16s were launched by the Secret Service and someone in the White House command center, not Norad. At the time, there was no standing agreement between the Secret Service and the 113th Wing for the latter to provide fighters in response to an attack on Washington.

    Hutchison made two loops up the Potomac, reversing course near Georgetown and the Pentagon, flying at 500-1,000 ft. above the terrain. Sasseville and Lucky were at 5,000-6,000 ft., "because I didn't want to get too low for a good radar angle, and not too high, so we could get somewhere fast," Sasseville said. He later conceded he was "making things up on the fly." Obviously, there was no precedent to draw upon. All the pilots were relying on their training and ability to think under pressure.

    Hutchison was probably airborne shortly after the alert F-16s from Langley arrived over Washington, but 121st FS pilots admit their timeline-recall "is fuzzy." But it's clear that Hutchison, Sasseville and Lucky knew their options were limited for bringing down a hijacked airliner headed for an undetermined target in the capitol city. Although reluctant to talk about it, all three acknowledge they were prepared to ram a terrorist-flown aircraft, if necessary. Indeed, Hutchison--who might have been the first to encounter Flight 93 if it had, indeed, been flying low and fast down the Potomac--had no other choice.

    Sasseville and Lucky each had 511 rounds of ammo, but that only provided roughly a 5-sec. burst of the 20 mm. gun. And where should they shoot to ensure a hijacked aircraft would be stopped? Sasseville planned to fire from behind and "try to saw off one wing. I needed to disable it as soon as possible--immediately interrupt its aerodynamics and bring it down."

    He admits there was no assurance that a 5-sec. burst of lead slugs could slice an air transport's wing off, though. His alternative was "to hit it--cut the wing off with my wing. If I played it right, I'd be able to bail out. One hand on the stick and one hand on the ejection handle, trying to ram my airplane into the aft side of the [airliner's] wing," he said. "And do it skillfully enough to save the pink body...but understanding that it might not go as planned. It was a tough nut; we had no other ordnance."

    Still unaware that Norad's on-alert F-16s were overhead, patrolling at a higher altitude, Sasseville initially split the airspace into four sectors. He swept the northwest area of Washington--where the hijacked United Flight 93 was expected to be--and had Lucky guard the northeast area.

    Approximately 10 min. after Sasseville and Lucky took off, Caine and Rasmussen launched, the first Andrews-based F-16s to carry both hot guns and live Aim-9 missiles. They worked the city's southern sectors. Soon, F-16s from Richmond, Va., and Atlantic City, N.J., as well as F-15s from Langley AFB, were arriving. The air picture was confused, at best, and radio frequencies were alive with chatter.

    "The FAA controllers were doing their best to get us information [about unidentified aircraft], but we were used to working with AWACS and their weapons directors and controllers," Rasmussen said. Eventually, Washington's Reagan National Airport was designated "Bullseye," and fighters were given range and bearing to targets from there.

    Possibly the highest-ranking pilot in the area, Sasseville "essentially declared myself the CAP [combat air patrol] commander and set up deconfliction altitudes so we didn't run into each other. There really wasn't time for niceties." For the rest of the day, a dozen or so fighters rotated in and out of the region, running intercepts on myriad helicopters and light aircraft.

    "They were snapping to targets everywhere," Thompson said. "A lot of light aircraft fly under the [controlled] airspace here, and they had no idea what was going on. What really scared us was Washington Approach broadcasting, 'Anyone flying within 25 mi. of the Washington TACAN is authorized to be shot down.' We kind of winced at that, because there are plenty of hard reasons to not shoot somebody down. We were really in an ID posture--and trying to really be careful."

    A miracle of the post-attack hours on Sept. 11 was that no aircraft was shot down accidentally, a credit to the training and discipline of U.S. fighter crews. That fact is even more impressive when one considers many of those pilots had little or no experience with air defense techniques and protocols.

    "We really didn't know the intricacies of Norad's mission--how it works," Thompson explained. "We've never been an air defense unit. We practice scrambles, we know how to do intercepts and other things, but there's a lot of protocol in the air defense business. We obviously didn't have that expertise, but it worked out fine. For the first three days, everybody seemed to be reasonably happy with our orchestrating the D.C. CAP. By day-four, we'd pretty much turned into a national asset" as Norad assumed control of CAPs nationwide.

    On that first day, many of the pilots flying CAP over Washington, New York and other U.S. cities were faced with the very real possibility of having to shoot down or ram their fighter into an air transport filled with innocent passengers.

    "I was asking myself, 'Is this when I have to make the million-dollar decision on my own?' But with smoke billowing out of the Pentagon...," Rasmussen said. "That's what we get paid to do, though. When young guys sign up, they may not see that the 'guts and glory' of fighter-flying may cost you your life. That day brought everything into focus."

    In the afternoon, Sasseville and Lucky were flying their second mission of the day--armed with Aim-9 missiles now--when they were told to contact an AWACS aircraft in the area and "expect special tasking." They were directed to fly a 280-deg. heading for 140 naut. mi.--almost due west of Washington. Unable to communicate by secure or encrypted means, the AWACS controller lowered his voice and told Sasseville via radio they were going to "escort Air Force One," President Bush's aircraft.

    Two Langley F-15s offered to go along, and Sasseville concurred. Soon, an AWACS controller reported a fast-moving, unidentified aircraft southwest of Air Force One, approximately 60 naut. mi. away, but on a "cutoff vector" to the president's Boeing 747. It was above 40,000 ft. and the 747 was "in the 20,000-ft. range," but Sasseville sent the F-15s to intercept the unknown aircraft. It was a Learjet that hadn't yet landed after aircraft nationwide had been ordered out of the air.

    Sasseville and the two F-15s later joined on Air Force One, while Lucky positioned her F-16 about 10 naut. mi. in front of the 747. With the SADL datalink system, she was able to monitor her position relative to Sasseville's SADL-equipped F-16 positioned on Air Force One's left wing. Another flight of F-16s from Ellington AFB, Tex., were positioned about 5 mi. in trail. They had escorted the president from Offutt AFB, Nebr., according to 121st FS officers.

    Why the D.C.-based F-16s were sent to shadow the president's aircraft back to Andrews AFB has not been disclosed. Apparently, someone in the Norad or Secret Service command loop had received information about a potential threat to the 747, prompting a request for additional armed escorts.

    Surrounded by fighters, Air Force One descended rapidly towards its home base. Lucky made a clearing pass over the airfield, pulled up, circled back and joined on Sasseville's wing. All of the fighters remained with the 747 until the latter landed, then climbed and established a CAP over Andrews.

    Despite being short of aircrews the next few days (see p. 76), the 121st flew continuously for about 63 hr., maintaining protective CAPs over Washington. They were aided by fighters from other ANG, Reserve and active-duty units, as well.

    "We were generating airplanes faster than they could put 'em up," remarked "Crank" Belknap. "And we still are."

Regards, Scott

——————————————————————

On Jul 12, 2026, at 9:16 AM, Richard Sugden, MD <rsugden@tmcwy.com> wrote:

On 9/11, with the word that there was an errant airliner headed for DC, the Washington National Guard dispatched two unarmed F-16’s to bring it down if necessary … Here’s a great interview with Gen. “Sass” Sasseville (Maj. then) , and LT Heather “Lucky” Penney who flew that mission, after only a few minute briefing on how, unarmed, they might bring down an civilian airliner.

Heather’s dad, John Penney, was a United Captain who developed an interest in warbirds and brought many MiG’s into the country, checked me out in our MiG-15 and -17, and flew “Rare Bear” in the Reno Air Races Unlimited Category … I’d heard the story from John, but never to this detail …

If you have a “Smart” TV you can also find this on YouTube … This is the full CBS interview ...

Enjoy!

Rich




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This Day in U S Military History…
July 13
1861 – Union General George B. McClellan distinguishes himself by routing Confederates under General Robert Garnett at Corrick’s Ford in western Virginia. The battle ensured Yankee control of the region, secured the Union’s east-west railroad connections, and set in motion the events that would lead to the creation of West Virginia. Two days before Corrick’s Ford, Union troops under General William Rosecrans flanked a Confederate force at nearby Rich Mountain. The defeat forced Garnett to retreat from his position on Laurel Hill, while part of McClellan’s force pursued him across the Cheat River. A pitched battle ensued near Corrick’s Ford, in which Garnett was killed—the first general officer to die in the war. But losses were otherwise light, with only 70 Confederate, and 10 Union, casualties. The Battle of Corrick’s Ford was a significant victory because it cleared the region of Confederates, but it is often overlooked, particularly because it was overshadowed by the Battle of Bull Run, which occurred shortly thereafter on July 21. However, the success made McClellan a hero, even though his achievements were inflated. Two weeks later, McClellan became commander of the Army of the Potomac, the primary Federal army in the east. Unfortunately for the Union, the small campaign that climaxed at Corrick’s Ford was the zenith of McClellan’s military career.
1863 – Rioting against the Civil War military draft erupted in New York City; about 1,000 people died over three days. Antiabolitionist Irish longshoremen rampaged against blacks in the deadly Draft Riots in New York City in response to Pres. Lincoln’s announcement of military conscription. Mobs lynched a black man and torched the Colored Orphan Asylum.
1866 – Great Eastern began a two week voyage to complete a 12-year effort to lay telegraph cable across the Atlantic between Britain and the United States. Massachusetts merchant and financier Cyrus W. Field first proposed laying a 2,000-mile copper cable along the ocean bottom from Newfoundland to Ireland in 1854, but the first three attempts ended in broken cables and failure. Field’s persistence finally paid off in July 1866, when Great Eastern, the largest ship then afloat, successfully laid the cable along the level, sandy bottom of the North Atlantic. As messages traveled between Europe and America in hours rather than weeks, Cyrus Field was showered with honors. Among the honors was this commemorative print referring to the cable as the Eighth Wonder of the World.
1866 – Colonel Henry Carrington begins construction on Fort Phil Kearny, the most important army outpost guarding the Bozeman Trail. In 1863, a Georgia-born frontiersman named John Bozeman blazed a wagon road that branched off from the Oregon Trail and headed northwest to the gold fields of western Montana. The trail passed through the traditional hunting grounds of the Sioux, and Chief Red Cloud attacked several wagon trains to try to stop the violation of Indian Territory. Despite the questionable legality of the Bozeman Trail, the U.S. government decided to keep it open and began building a series of protective army forts along the route. Colonel Henry Carrington was assigned the task of designing and building the largest and most important of these outposts, Fort Phil Kearny. A talented strategist and designer, Carrington planned the fort with care. He selected a site in northern Wyoming that was near a source of water and commanded a view over a good section of the Bozeman Trail. He began building on this day in 1866, setting up a timbering operation and sawmill to supply the thousands of logs needed for construction. By fall, Carrington had erected an imposing symbol of American military power. A tall wooden palisade surrounded a compound the size of three football fields. Inside the walls, Carrington built nearly 30 buildings, including everything from barracks and mess halls to a stage for the regimental band. Only the most massive and determined Indian attack would have been capable of taking Fort Phil Kearny. Unfortunately, Carrington’s mighty fortress had one important flaw: the nearest stands of timber lay several miles away. To obtain the wood essential for heating and further construction, a detachment had to leave the confines of the fort every day. The Indians naturally began to prey on these “wood trains.” In December, a massive Indian ambush wiped out a force of 80 soldiers under the command of Captain William Fetterman. Despite this weakness, Fort Phil Kearny was still a highly effective garrison. Nonetheless, the U.S. Army found it nearly impossible to halt completely the Indian attacks along the trail. In 1868, the government agreed to abandon all of the forts and close the trail in exchange for peace with the Indians. Immediately after the soldiers left, the Indians burned Carrington’s mighty fortress to the ground.
1943 – The 10 Mountain Division came into being on July 13, 1943, at Camp Hale, Colorado as the 10th Light Division (Alpine). The combat power of the Division was contained in the 85th, 86th, and 87th Infantry Regiments. The Division’s year training at the 9,200 foot high Camp Hale honed the skills of its soldiers to fight and survive under the most brutal mountain conditions.

The Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day
ADRIANCE, HARRY CHAPMAN
Rank and organization: Corporal, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 27 October 1864, Oswego, N.Y. Accredited to: Massachusetts. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: In the presence of the enemy during the battle near Tientsin, China, 13 July 1900, Adriance distinguished himself by meritorious conduct.
BREWSTER, ANDRE W.
Rank and organization: Captain, 9th U.S. Infantry. Place and date: At Tientsin, China, 13 July 1900. Entered service at: Philadelphia, Pa. Birth: Hoboken, N.J. Date of issue: 15 September 1903. Citation: While under fire rescued 2 of his men from drowning.
COONEY, JAMES
Rank and organization: Private, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 27 July 1860, Limerick, Ireland. Accredited to: Massachusetts. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: In the presence of the enemy during the battle near Tientsin, China, 13 July 1900, Cooney distinguished himself by meritorious conduct.
FOLEY, ALEXANDER JOSEPH
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 19 February 1866, Heckersville, Pa. Accredited to: Pennsylvania. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: In the presence of the enemy in the battle near Tientsin, China, 13 July 1900, Foley distinguished himself by meritorious conduct.
LAWTON, LOUIS B.
Rank and organization: First Lieutenant, 9th U.S. Infantry. Place and date: At Tientsin, China, 13 July 1900. Entered service at: Auburn, N.Y. Birth: Independence, lowa. Date of i55ue: 11 March 1902. Citation: Carried a message and guided reinforcements across a wide and fireswept space, during which he was thrice wounded.
MATHIAS, CLARENCE EDWARD
Rank and organization: Private, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 12 December 1876, Royalton, Pa. Accredited to: Pennsylvania. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: In the presence of the enemy during the advance on Tientsin, China, 13 July 1900, Mathias distinguished himself by meritorious conduct.
SUTTON, CLARENCE EDWIN
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Marine Corps. Born: 18 February 1871, Middlesex County, Va. Accredited to: Washington, D.C. G.O. No.: 55, 19 July 1901. Citation: In action during the battle near Tientsin, China, 13 July 1900. Although under heavy fire from the enemy, Sutton assisted in carrying a wounded officer from the field of battle.
*VON SCHLICK, ROBERT H.
Rank and organization: Private, Company C, 9th U.S. Infantry. Place and date: At Tientsin, China, 13 July 1900. Entered service at: San Erancisco, Calif. Birth: Germany. Date of issue: Unknown. Citation: Although previously wounded while carrying a wounded comrade to a place of safety, rejoined his command, which partly occupied an exposed position upon a dike, remaining there after his command had been withdrawn, singly keeping up the fire, and obliviously presenting himself as a conspicuous target until he was literally shot off his position by the enemy.
PITTS, RYAN M.
Rank and Organization: Sergeant, U.S. Army, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry, 173d Airborne Brigade. Place and Date: July 13, 2008, Wanat ViIlage, Kunar Province, Afghanistan. Entered Service At: Boston, MA. Accredited To: . Born: 1985 , LOWELL, MA. G.O. Number: . Date of Issue: 07/21/2014. Departed: No. Citation: Sergeant Ryan M. Pitts distinguished himself by extraordinary acts of heroism at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as a Forward Observer in 2d Platoon, Chosen Company, 2d Battalion (Airborne), 503d Infantry Regiment, 173d Airborne Brigade during combat operations against an armed enemy at Vehicle Patrol Base Kahler in the vicinity of Wanat Village, Kunar Province, Afghanistan on July 13, 2008. Early that morning, while Sergeant Pitts was providing perimeter security at Observation Post Topside, a well-organized Anti-Afghan Force consisting of over 200 members initiated a close proximity sustained and complex assault using accurate and intense rocket-propelled grenade, machine gun and small arms fire on Wanat Vehicle Patrol Base. An immediate wave of rocket-propelled grenade rounds engulfed the Observation Post wounding Sergeant Pitts and inflicting heavy casualties. Sergeant Pitts had been knocked to the ground and was bleeding heavily from shrapnel wounds to his arm and legs, but with incredible toughness and resolve, he subsequently took control of the Observation Post and returned fire on the enemy. As the enemy drew nearer, Sergeant Pitts threw grenades, holding them after the pin was pulled and the safety lever was released to allow a nearly immediate detonation on the hostile forces. Unable to stand on his own and near death because of the severity of his wounds and blood loss, Sergeant Pitts continued to lay suppressive fire until a two-man reinforcement team arrived. Sergeant Pitts quickly assisted them by giving up his main weapon and gathering ammunition all while continually lobbing fragmentary grenades until these were expended. At this point, Sergeant Pitts crawled to the northern position radio and described the situation to the Command Post as the enemy continued to try and isolate the Observation Post from the main Patrol Base. With the enemy close enough for him to hear their voices and with total disregard for his own life, Sergeant Pitts whispered in the radio situation reports and conveyed information that the Command Post used to provide indirect fire support. Sergeant Pitts’ courage, steadfast commitment to the defense of his unit and ability to fight while seriously wounded prevented the enemy from overrunning the Observation Post and capturing fallen American soldiers, and ultimately prevented the enemy from gaining fortified positions on higher ground from which to attack Wanat Vehicle Patrol Base. Sergeant Ryan M. Pitts’ extraordinary heroism and selflessness above and beyond the call of duty are in keeping with the highest traditions of military service and reflect great credit upon himself, Company C, 2d Battalion (Airborne), 503d Infantry Regiment, 173d Airborne Brigade and the United States Army.

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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for July 13, FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD “PHIL” MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY
13 July
1911: Glenn Curtiss flew the Navy’s second aircraft, the A-2, at Hammondsport for the first time; Lt Thomas G. Ellyson flew the second flight. (24)
1916: The 1st Aero Company, from New York’s National Guard, became the first Guard unit to be mobilized into Federal Service in answer to the border crisis with Mexico. The unit trained at Mineola, but did not deploy to the border. (21)
1918: The 1st Marine Aviation Force left Miami for Philadelphia, where the Marines boarded the De Kalb Navy Transport for France. They disembarked at Brest on 30 July. (10)
1921: KEY EVENT. Brig Gen William “Billy” Mitchell’s Martin MB-2 and Handley Page bombers sank several ships off the Virginia Capes. The tests studied the use of bombs on ships to suggest how ship design could counter an air attack. The bombers sank a German sub, the destroyer G-102, the light cruiser Frankfurt, and the battleship Ostfriesland on 21 July to prove that unopposed aircraft could sink capital ships. (5) (18)
1948: The first of three Consolidated Vultee rocket research test vehicles built under a cancelled research contract with the US AAF launched successfully. (6)
1950: KOREAN WAR. An Air Weather Service RB-29 led the first strategic bombing strike from Japan against North Korea. The FEAF Bomber Command sent 49 B-29s from the 22 BG and 92 BG to attack oil refineries and marshalling yards at the port of Wonsan. (1) (2) (28) The 3 ARS began flying SB-17s off the Korean coast to drop rescue boats to downed B-29 crews. (28)
1952: KOREAN WAR. Far East Air Forces initiated a new general warning leaflet drop program over enemy territory. The new leaflet identified specific towns and targets to be destroyed by air attacks. (28)
1959: PROJECT SKYHOOK. The Office of Naval Research sent a “record-sized” plastic balloon to 139,500 feet in altitude. (24) The 4530th Combat Crew Training Wing at Williams AFB, Ariz., graduated the last active duty F-86F class (60A). Operation HERCULES ARK. The 4440th Air Delivery Group airlifted 20 calves donated by businessmen in Waco, Texas, to Colonel Dean Hess's Orphans Home of Korea. (11)
1965: SAC issued a requirement for a mobile ICBM. (6)
1967: DISTINGUISHED FLYING CROSSES. Nine Air Force, eight Navy, and one Marine astronaut received DFCs for their Mercury and Gemini space flights. (16)
1968: An FB-111A bomber successfully completed a 30-minute maiden flight from Carswell AFB.
1972: At Eglin AFB, the GAM-72A Quail missile completed its last operational test in an overwater flight. (6) 1

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From the archives in case you did not know of this
Thanks to Brett
I never knew the extent of what happened here
Geopolitical Futures:                                                     
Daily Memo: The Bitter Legacy of French Colonization of Algeria
The conflict has returned as a new Algeria takes shape.
By: Hilal Khashan
July 13, 2023
Algerian-French relations have never been normal. They’ve never been governed by the principles and customs of traditional diplomacy between countries. The Algerians’ collective consciousness is traumatized by the historical memory of unbridled occupation. More than 60 years after the end of the Algerian war, the wounds are still open on both sides despite the occasional symbolic gesture by France, which refuses to express regret or apologize. French President Emmanuel Macron angered Algeria two years ago by accusing the its military-political establishment of writing an official history of the colonial period based on falsehoods and of inciting hatred toward France. However, attestations by senior French military officers who fought in Algeria about how they commanded their troops contradict Macron’s claims.
Occupation of Algeria
France has intended to occupy Algeria since the time of Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1808, he assigned engineer Vincent-Yves Boutin to prepare a study on the Algerian coast and to craft a detailed map of the best landing site for the French army. However, these plans were put on hold after Napoleon’s disastrous defeat in the 1812 Russian campaign, subsequent losses at Leipzig and elsewhere, and eventual abdication after the Treaty of Fontainebleau in 1814. Following a diplomatic incident in 1827, the French blockaded the port of Algiers, made easy by the destruction of the Algerian fleet during the Battle of Navarino. In 1830, King Charles X ordered an invasion of Algeria partly to deflect attention from his domestic difficulties. The French occupation of Algeria lasted from 1830 to 1962 and was the most prolonged and heinous colonial occupation in modern history.
During its colonization of Algeria, France sought to erase the country’s culture and dismantle its society through genocide. France discouraged the use of Arabic and forced the Algerians to use French. It impoverished them by seizing arable land, giving it to the French colonialists, and stealing natural resources like as oil and gas. It implemented draconian policies toward the indigenous population, including impoverishment, displacement, bloodshed and the monopolization of Algeria’s markets. French officers often gave peasants a choice between providing food or suffering extermination. They pointed their guns at villages while the villagers walked toward them carrying eggs, sheep, chickens and honey. French-colonized Algeria provided all means of livelihood for the new settlers from France and the rest of Europe, entitling them to own Algeria’s most fertile land. The first European settlement goes back to 1836, and by the end of the 19th century there were 1 million settlers in Algeria, mostly French but also Italians and Spaniards. France was keen on strengthening Europe’s presence in Algeria and on eradicating its Arab and Islamic identity in favor of Christianizing the country. France used Algeria as a springboard to the rest of North Africa, the Sahel and Africa’s Atlantic territories.
Genocidal Massacres
The French did not seize Algeria quickly. Algerians put up fierce resistance, prompting the French army to use unusual cruelty. By 1849, they succeeded in subduing the country, especially in the north, two years after Emir Abdelkader surrendered to Gen. Louis Juchault de Louis Juchault de Lamoricie. Before pacifying Algeria, France committed systematic killings, torture and crimes against humanity. In 1960, France conducted its first 17 nuclear tests in southern Algeria. Three years ago, France returned to Algiers the skulls of 24 Algerian fighters killed and beheaded by the French army during the battle of Zaatcha in 1849. The French army sent the skulls to Paris as war trophies. For Algerians, the skulls – part of the Museum of Mankind’s 18,000-skull collection – attested to French colonial barbarism and fascination with decapitation that goes back to inventing the guillotine in 1792.
Marshall Thomas Bugeaud said the objective of the French campaign against Algeria was to occupy it with the sword and the plow: “The sword is on the necks of the Arabs, and the plow is in the hands of the French colonizer.” In November 1830, the French garrison in Blida, southwest of Algiers, massacred the civilian population to avenge a rebel attack, killing an untold number of the downtown residents. They did not spare babies, slitting their throats in their mothers’ arms. Describing a separate massacre at El Ouffia, southeast of Algiers, Gen. Anne Jean Marie Rene Savary said French soldiers rode on horseback and carried human heads on the blades of their swords as onlookers gazed at the slaughtered women with their severed forearms and ears. Commenting on the massacre, the French commander-in-chief congratulated his forces for the enthusiasm and intelligence they showed on that occasion. Gen. Nicolas Changarnier said the only entertainment he allowed in the winter to his troops, stationed in Wadi El Harrach and Bourkika, was marauding the tribes in the area.
In 1844, the French turned the Ketchaoua Mosque, one of Algeria’s most famous historical mosques, into an armory and a residence for bishops. When thousands of Algerian protesters sat inside it, the French soldiers killed them all. Gen. Eugene Cavaignac’s troops committed some of the most gruesome atrocities during his deployment in Algeria in the 1830s. He believed that excessive violence against Algerians was unavoidable on the path to civilizing them. In one instance in 1845, a French army commander ordered fumigating more than 750 Algerians who sought shelter in a cave and refused to surrender. Col. Lucien de Montagnac proudly declared that he cut off heads – not artichoke heads, but many human heads. He said some of the soldiers told him that their officers urged them not to leave any Arab alive, and he added that the soldiers he was honored to command were afraid that their officers would order their flogging if they brought in a living Arab. French soldiers committed many crimes against civilians – executing raids that were frequently referred to as “razzias” – by killing and displacing them and stealing their possessions and sources of livelihood, which became a source of food for the troops.
Francois Canrobert, celebrated for his spectacular bravery as a light infantry battalion commander, wrote in his memoirs that his unit burned the villages of the Amazigh Beni Snous tribe. The soldiers did not hesitate to kill the elderly, women and children because no one could defend them. The most brutal act was the killing of women after raping them. Razzia spread among the soldiers of the French army. It was a method of systematic destruction, sparing neither people nor property. The generals of France’s Army of Africa, whether royalists, republicans or Bonapartists, considered their actions to be glorious. The first phase of the occupation of Algeria involved reducing the population so that it would no longer threaten the French forces. Between 1830 and the beginning of the French Third Republic in 1870, the local population decreased by about 875,000.
The French promised the Algerians self-rule if they fought alongside them. The number of Algerian soldiers who fought with the Free French Forces in World War II reached 175,000, of whom 26,000 died during the war. Algerian soldiers were always in the first ranks of the war, forming shields for the French troops. When the war ended, the Algerians protested peacefully to express their joy, hoping France would keep its promises. Instead, the French military and pied-noir settlers killed at least 45,000 Algerians in the Setif and Guelma demonstrations on May 8, 1945. France reneged on its promises, paving the way for the 1954 Algerian War of Independence. In Vietnam, Algerians in the Foreign Legion saw what happened in the Battle of Dien Bien Phu and how a Third World irregular military force defeated the vaunted French army. They decided to rise to arms to gain Algeria’s independence, which they did six months later.
On Oct. 17, 1961, the French police committed a massacre by order of the Paris police chief, Maurice Papon, against Algerians who participated in a peaceful demonstration, killing at least 200 demonstrators. More than 800 others disappeared, and reports claim that the police officers threw them into the sewers and the Seine River. Although Charles de Gaulle knew what happened, he kept the officers responsible for the massacre in their positions.
Discrimination, Resistance and Betrayal
The 1870 Cremieux Decree granted French citizenship to Algeria’s Jewish community and denied it to Muslims. Their exclusion from the naturalization law was a prelude to the 1881 Indigenous People Law, which required them to obey Europeans unthinkingly. A list of 41 punishable acts included opening a school without a permit, refusal to work on European farms, delay in paying taxes, assembly of more than five persons and uttering anti-French phrases. The law gave the governor-general unfettered power to impose punishments without trial in the interest of public security. It also entitled him to adopt the principle of collective responsibility in response to personal offenses and authorized administrators and mayors to imprison people and confiscate their property without a judicial ruling. Gen. Charles de Gaulle repealed the law in 1944, giving Algerian Muslims French rights.
In 1827, the French minister of war, comte de Clermont-Tonnerre, said in his report to the French Cabinet that the occupation of Algeria would lead to its people’s civilization and Christianization. In 1904, the French governor-general of Algeria issued a decree banning the opening of Arabic-language schools without a license from the military authority. The license stipulated allegiance to France and a pledge to refrain from teaching about Islam or the history of Algeria and the Arab world. However, France failed to erase the Islamic identity of the Algerian people despite the intensity of missionary activity and its fight against the Arabic language, prompting exasperated French lawmakers to accuse the Algerians of living on the margins of history.
The French government did not express interest in allowing its Algerian collaborators, known as Harkis, to immigrate to France. However, French officers who commanded them helped about 10 percent of them to make it to France in violation of official instructions. In France, they lived in squalid camps, and scores of children died of disease and poor medical care. Those who stayed behind endured reprisals and defamation.
The Rift Deepens
Algeria’s current president, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, said a sweet word could not erase 132 years of French colonization. A protest movement from 2019 to 2021 raised demands to expel France and the French language from Algeria. Tebboune identified with the matter because of the intractable differences with France and its refusal to apologize for its colonial past. The Algerian government tightened the screws on the French language, which had dominated all aspects of life. The Ministry of Culture also told its departments and institutions to revert to using the Arabic language in transactions and activities in compliance with the provisions of the Constitution. Some Algerians said the measure reflects the Algeria the people want, and although it came late, it is good. Many described this long-awaited decision as equivalent to the departure of the last French soldier from Algeria.
Relations between Algeria and France have recently hit a new low. Tebboune issued a decree in June requiring the full performance of the Algerian national anthem on official occasions. The anthem contains the lines: “Oh, France, the day of reckoning is coming, so get ready and take the answer from us.” This prompted angry statements from French officials. A new banknote issued last year and featuring text in both English and Arabic also sparked outrage in France. Algeria has also started teaching English at the primary school level instead of French as part of the dispute with Paris over cultural memory.
The colonial legacy of the political disharmony between Algeria and France became an ideological struggle. The conflict has returned in the context of divergent interests between Macron and the new Algeria led by Tebboune, as well as French pressure on Algeria to halt its political, economic and cultural transformation. The crimes committed by France against the Algerian people left deep wounds that have not yet healed, primarily because of the unresolved history between the two countries. Algeria insists that France take political and legal steps to do justice to memory and history. France rejects Algerian demands, arguing that memory belongs to historians. French historian Benjamin Stora said history unites Algerians and French, but memory separates them.

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