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you can believe in whatever you wish! The fact is not gonna change if you are fed with the biased stories
btw, although iiaf.net is good in pictures and history, it is poor and out dated in terms of analysis and the guy (Maj. Nasirkhani whom I know personally) who wrote (read CUT AND PASTED) the stories on F-14A/F-4/F-5 has not lived in Iran since 1978 so the info he is providing can not be accurate. He copied and pasted those articles from another biased source. I do not know why and many many have written him to update and correct the info on their web site! www.acig.org is the only credible source on Iranian AF readiness for now. And I have provided xilion of links to back up my arguement and recommended 3 books to read, but seems they fell on deaf ears! BTW, I wonder why you insist on saying that our F-14As are not functioning well? |
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lol
ok! dream on! if he had time, he could edit those stupid pages! He has a business to run in Mission Viejo, California now rather than coming here and start debating you! LMAO www.acig.org is the only credible source on Iranian AF readiness for now. And I have provided xilion of links to back up my arguement and recommended 3 books to read, but seems you'd rather stay ill-informed or may be you are too arrogant to accept the truth!? why don't you join www.acig.org/forum to read a bitand learn more? that so-called major copied info from this page and pasted into his web page http://home.att.net/~jbaugher1/f14_6.html wordings, sentences... etc are all the same thing. He didnt write those stuff since he hasnt lived in IRAN since 1978. He has no credible info and insight into the readiness of the Iranian AF. I served in that god damn AF. My father is a retired Colonel of the same force and I know it very well. It is like that I keep telling you about the life in China! Hell you know more than I do about that! How can you back your argument up with bunch of biased links and sources? Those sites have no intentions in accepting the truth. You wanna know more, then read acig.org Now you can stay misinformed or uninformed while the reality is something else! |
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so whats your point?!
most of those people praise the pics! LoL.. Didn't you find my signature among them cuz I thanked them as well? that web site was last updated a year ago. I am again providing the very same links....... http://www.acig.org/artman/publish/cat_index_15.shtml http://www.acig.org/artman/publish/article_214.shtml http://www.acig.org/artman/publish/article_206.shtml http://www.acig.org/artman/publish/article_205.shtml http://www.acig.org/artman/publish/article_219.shtml ![]() http://www.acig.org/artman/publish/article_452.shtml http://www.acig.org/artman/publish/article_445.shtml ![]() Review by Peter B. Mersky, USNR (Ret.), in US Combat Naval Aviation News: PROFESSIONAL READING: Review of Iranian F-14 Tomcats in Combat Naval Aviation News (Washington) Sep/Oct 2005.Vol.87, Iss. 6; pg. 24 Iranian F-14 Tomcat Units In Combat (Osprey Combat Aircraft) (Paperback) by Tom Cooper, Farzad Bishop PROFESSIONAL READING: Review of Iranian F-14 Tomcats in Combat Naval Aviation News (Washington) Sep/Oct 2005.Vol.87, Iss. 6; pg. 24 Iranian F-14 Tomcat Units In Combat (Osprey Combat Aircraft) (Paperback) by Tom Cooper, Farzad Bishop Publisher: Osprey Publishing (UK) (October 15, 2004) Language: English ISBN: 1841767875 Undoubtedly one of the more unusual titles in Osprey's highly successful Combat Aircraft series, No. 49 presents a familiar U.S. Navy fighter in an unexpected venue, flying with the green-white-red roundels of the Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force (IRIAF) and desert camouflage. Before he was overthrown in 1979, the Shah of Iran bought 80 F-14A Tomcats, 79 of which were delivered, together with their AIM-54 Phoenix missiles. The bloody revolution saw many of the "Shah's pilots" thrown into prison. When the long and equally bloody conflict with Iraq began in September 1980, the religious leaders of Iran saw the merit of restoring these highly skilled aviators to the cockpits of these expensive planes. Despite long months of incarceration, most of the returning Tomcat crews of the newly formed IRIAF quickly demonstrated their collective skill and patriotism, eventually taking their F-14s through eight years of intense aerial combat. Although hard-pressed to maintain their fleet of American-built fighters, Iranian ground crews kept as many as 60 Tomcats mission capable throughout much of the war, despite a lack of parts, normal attrition, and dwindling supplies of material and munitions. Iranian F-14 crews clashed repeatedly with Iraqi MiGs and French Mirage F-Is as the Iraqis attacked Iranian oil platforms and storage facilities. The fact that many of these highly skilled, aggressive Iranian crews had been in prison after the revolution makes their story all the more remarkable. These crews are responsible for the only kills scored by the highly touted Phoenix missile, which, along with the AWG-9 nose-mounted radar, was at the heart of the F14's weapons system. Throughout the book, the Tomcat's capabilities are highlighted in a way not seen in accounts of U.S. Navy operations and are nearly too much to be believed. Iraqi MiG-21 and MiG-23 pilots didn't stand a chance against the big American swing-wing fighter. The equally large and powerful MiG-25-some flown by Soviet instructor pilots-had to rely on its eye-watering speed to disengage from a flight of IRIAF Tomcats. IRIAF Tomcats scored the F-14's first kills a full year before the U.S. Navy's Fighter Squadron 41 Libyan MiG killers, and if the book is to be believed, went on to gain more than 150 victories against the Iraqis. According to the list of individual kills in the book's appendices, there appear to be two or three IRIAF F-14 aces, one of whom scored at least nine confirmed kills. This book's photos and text abound with surprising details and accounts little known in the Western press, which the authors say was sadly misinformed as to the status and operational readiness of the IRIAF's Tomcat fleet. One unfortunately confusing aspect of the text is the authors' assertion that the names of the pilots whose experiences are featured in the text are not their true identities. Thus, as we read about a particular pilot's success or consult the appendices for details on Tomcat kills, we wonder who the Iranian aviator really was. However, I have since learned that the names given in the list of kills are the actual names. A little confusing, but at least we have some idea of these successful crews' identities. This work is an entertaining look at an air force and arena that have seldom seen any in-depth exposure. [Author Affiliation] By Cdr. Peter B. Mersky, USNR (Ret.) |
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The points are as follows.
1. You have no source to back up claims made here that counter the numbers of planes that were operational during the 1980's post revolution embargo. 2. You claim a site is bogus and not accurate while numerous bonafide Iranian veterans publicly sign their name and comment to the contrary. As for the rest I will wait for the Major to comment on your stories and claims. I am not an expert on Iran, never did claim this. I do however claim a very good working knowledge of english and a couple other languages and the ability to read and reason. I look forward to reading the words of a real Iranian veteran on this forum soon. Till then I will let this ride. ![]() From your own sources: Quote:
Edited for the reading impaired. |
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I m unsure if you can see tons of links I have given you so far! I am really amazed Btw, did you serve in our Air Force? I have served in a unit which was responsible to count the combat ready aircrafts of the Iranian AF every single morning and report it to the HQ. Sorry can't tell you more than this! Want to know more, go read the links I provided or read the books. I find your comments not worthy of responses any more! Sorry but this discussion is over! http://misc.kitreview.com/bookreviews/iranianf14bookreviewkb_1.htm http://www.internetmodeler.com/2004/november/new-releases/book_osprey-f14.php The history of Iranian F-14s was long thought to have been a short one, with the United States officially stating that lack of spares and training effectively grounded the fleet. This book proves otherwise, and in fact shows that not only was the F-14 not grounded, but it actually performed as advertised, racking up an impressive tally of 159 kills during the Iran-Iraq war. ![]() ![]() |
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