Colombian Air Force KFIRS

Some years ago two Colombian Air Force Kfirs Intercepted two Russian Air Force Tupolev TU-160 White Swans over the Colombian air space over the Caribbean Sea. Both TU-160 where flying from La Guaira, Venezuela to Managua, Nicaragua.




 
A-4 Skyhawk

A-4-wilcox.jpg
 
39334590474_2d597503d1_h.webpLot-7409-6 by Photograph Curator, on Flickr

WWII: Paintings of Army Medicine. “Men with God” Artwork by Robert Benny. Artwork shows soldier receiving last rites. Abbott Laboratories. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

19590345211_fb503b659e_h.webpLot 3124 by Photograph Curator, on Flickr

Lot 3124: Paintings of Naval Aviation during World War II: Abbott Collection. #25: “Satisfaction Plus” Artwork by Joseph Hirsch. “There are no severer critics of squadron performance than men who constitute Navy ground crews. When performance is high, it is the ground crew which exudes self-satisfaction. This trio of Navy Machinist’s Mates put on expressions of pleased smugness as they critically observe fighter squadrons wheels aloft in formation. Their job is done; every engine purrs like a cat.”

26171899808_c4819e2694_h.webpLot-7409-14 by Photograph Curator, on Flickr

WWII: Paintings of Army Medicine. “Fracture Ward”. Artwork by Peter Blume. Abbott Laboratories. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

19399636799_23188d4dec_h.webpLot 3124-12 by Photograph Curator, on Flickr

Paintings of Naval Aviation during World War II: Abbott Collection. #85: “Task Force Hornets”. Artwork by Lawrence Beall Smith. “The operations island is a grim gray redoubt against the sky, this aircraft carrier steams behind her task force screen with a swarm of fighters at ready on the flight deck. To be first off, planes of fighter squadron stand at Fly One, the take-off spot. Behind them, in order, will be the dive bombers and the torpedo bombers. Meanwhile, as signal pennants snap from the truck, handling crews and pilots await the orders which will send these Grumman fighters snarling into the air.

17907140566_54f293a99c_h.webpLC-DIG-PGA-03907 by Photograph Curator, on Flickr

Destruction of the US Navy battleship USS Maine (ACR-1) in Havana Harbor, February 15, 1898. There are inserts of the recovery mission and head-and-shoulders portraits of Rear Admiral Montgomery Sicard and Captain Charles D. Sigsbee. Created by Kurz & Allison, 1898. Courtesy of the Library of Congress.
 
My thoughts are either author's ignorance cause he clearly tried to depict WWI or he simply liked it this way more. Maybe a fantasy WWI-ish setting.

Actually there were gas mask in WWII. Not as widely used as in WWI.


German gas mask;



German WWII M-38 Gas Mask & Filter
 
The Miracle of Empel (Milagro de Empel in Spanish) was an unexpected Spanish victory on 8 December 1585 near Empel, in the Netherlands, as part of the Eighty Years' War, in which a surrounded Spanish force miraculously won against an enemy who exceeded them in number.

MOE.webp

By Augusto Ferrer-Dalmau.
 

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