Thursday May 24th, 2012    Home  |   Topics  |   Most Popular  |   Media Bookings  |   About Us  |   Contact Us  |   Book Store  |   Support
Search & Archives
 
View All Authors
View All Topics
RSS 2.0 Feed
Atom 0.3 Feed
Font Size
[+] Increase
[−] Decrease
Reset
Receive PM in
daily digest form

subscribe
unsubscribe


Must-Read Columnists
Mitch Albom
Michael Barone
Dave Barry
Tony Blankley
Mona Charen
Linda Chavez
Greg Crosby
John Fund
Frank J. Gaffney
Jonah Goldberg
Jonathan Gurwitz
Victor Davis Hanson
Nat Hentoff
Jeff Jacoby
Paul Johnson
Ch. Krauthammer
David Limbaugh
Michelle Malkin
Bill O'Reilly
Clarence Page
Dennis Prager
Wesley Pruden
Jonathan Rauch
Cokie & Steve Roberts
Debra J. Saunders
Thomas Sowell
Mark Steyn
John Stossel
Cal Thomas
Bob Tyrrell
Diana West
George Will
Walter Williams
Mort Zuckerman
Cartoonists
Chuck Asay
Chip Bok
Dry Bones
Gary Brookins
Prickly City
John Cole
Cox & Forkum
J. D. Crowe
John Deering
Mallard Fillmore
Jake Fuller
Ed Gamble
Bob Gorrell
Joe Heller
Steve Kelley
Jeff Koterba
Doug Marlette
Michael Ramirez
Jeff Stahler
Wayne Stayskal
Gary Varvel
Monthly Archives
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006


Way to Go, Wings of Gold
By Peter Brookes (bio)

  • Tell a Friend
  • Printer Friendly
  • Font [+]
  • Font [–]

I feel the need . . . the need for speed.– Maverick, “Top Gun” (1986)

You can’t call yourself really alive if the flying scenes in “Top Gun” don’t put you on the edge of your seat, pulse racing, goose bumps forming, the hair standing on the back of your neck.

In fact, it’s kinda fitting that the 25th anniversary of the blockbuster film, which brought the living-on-the-edge world of the hotshot Navy jet jock to America’s attention, comes in the same year as the 100th anniversary of naval aviation.

Try landing a 30-ton fighter jet on the rolling deck of an aircraft carrier . . . on a moonless night . . . in bad weather . . . in the middle of the ocean . . . far from home.

No matter what anyone says: Nothing quite measures up. No wonder naval aviators are given “Wings of Gold.”

In fact, some equate a jet carrier landing to a “controlled crash,” going from 150 mph to full stop in two seconds. Take-off Gs push you back in your seat as the plane is hurled off the ship’s “pointy end,” accelerating from 0 to 150 mph just as quickly.

It’s not much better for prop cargo and surveillance planes that land on those 90,000 tons of sovereign US territory, or for the workhorse Navy helos that jump from one postage-stamp-like ship landing deck to another.

The Marines, who operate both from land and at sea in a variety of aircraft, provide unmatched nap-of-the-earth flying and close air support to their ground-pounding fellow warriors.

But it’s not just what the men and women of the Navy and Marine Corps are so bravely doing today. Naval aviation’s story isn’t just 100 years long, it’s deeply entrenched in the history of our great nation.

Way back in 1898, then-Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt recommended to his boss that they take a look at newfangled flying machines for their potential in war.

Of course, with ships being the Navy’s heart and soul, it wasn’t love at first sight. In 1910, Big Navy told the head of naval aviation those aeroplanes “don’t merit funding,” according to the Navy’s historians.

The fleet didn’t pay much attention; the same year, it launched a Curtiss “Hudson” Flyer off the armored cruiser USS Birmingham.

In 1911, the first landing was made aboard USS Pennsylvania while in San Francisco Bay — followed by a takeoff. Talk about guts!

Wasting no time, naval aviation saw combat in Mexico in 1914, when “flying boats” conducted patrols near Veracruz, where the Marines put ashore.

While on patrol, the aircraft took fire from the ground, riddling its fabric skin. Though the plane was unarmed, one flyboy shot back by reportedly throwing a bar of soap at the Mexicans below, or so the story goes.

Of course, there were no reports of Mexican casualties from what historians jokingly call the first naval “air-to-ground weapon.” Fortunately, naval air ordinance has improved significantly since then.

By the end of World War I, the Navy had more than 2,000 aircraft, including their first Ace as well as Medal of Honor winner. Shortly thereafter in 1922, the Navy commissioned its first “bird-farm,” USS Langley, a converted coal-carrier.

Carriers, of course, were indispensable in World War II in the Pacific, where the Battle of Midway proved to be the turning point in the fight with Japan.

It went on: Navy and Marine aviators were thick in the fights in Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm and still are in Iraq and Afghanistan — plus deterring bad guys across the globe during the Cold War and since.

But one of the toughest battles the Navy fought wasn’t in the sky but in the halls of the Pentagon in 1949 — when the newly independent Air Force insisted that naval aviation wasn’t needed in the strategic-bombing age.

Fortunately, in true Navy spirit, the admirals “revolted.” In the end, naval aviation prevailed — and thankfully so.

So, it makes perfect sense to take a moment to give a hearty “well done” — or Bravo Zulu — to those who have made, and are making, us the mightiest naval air power the world has ever known — or ever will.

Most important, we should remember they’ve selflessly done so on our behalf for a century — despite the well-known hazards of heading for the sky in audacious acts of aviation adventure.

These modern-day daredevils give up the comforts of home, their families’ affection and time with their friends to go in harm’s way for our national security. Tragically, some don’t return.

No doubt, it’s a great honor and blessing to be able to call these proud patriots: family, friends and fellow Americans. Fly Navy!

Digg this

Have PoliticalMavens.com delivered to your inbox in a daily digest by clicking here

Posted by Peter Brookes on July 6th, 2011
Permanent link: Way to Go, Wings of Gold
PM Fellows
Dan Ackman
Arnold Ahlert
Robert Alt
Sheryl J. Anderson
Jeff Andrus
Bob Asahina
Thomas Fox Averill
Gerard Baker
Jeff Ballabon
Anne Bayefsky
Arnold Beichman
Ralph Kinney Bennett
Claire Berlinski
Brendan Bernhard
William Beutler
Chip Bok
Jerry Bowyer
Joe Bob Briggs
Peter Brookes
Frank Buckley
Dennis Byrne
Colleen Carroll Campbell
Amb. Richard Carlson
Charles Robert Carner
Ron Cass
Jim Ceaser
Lauren Chapin
Lionel Chetwynd
Ron Christie
Andrew Colarik
Phil Cooke
Seth Cropsey
Greg Crosby
Stanley Crouch
Monica Crowley
Gordon Cucullu
Keith Curtis
Lee Casey & David B. Rivkin, Jr.
Mark Davis
Sam Dealey
Brad Dickson
Alan W. Dowd
Political Mavens Editor
Paul Eidelberg
Steven Emerson
Tucker Eskew
Amitai Etzioni
Karen Feld
Robert Ferrigno
Danny Fontana
Peter Fox
Cory Franklin
Ilana Freedman
Will Friedwald
Doug Gamble
Daveed Gartenstein-Ross
Jeff Gedmin
Robert A. George
Dan Gerstein
George Gilder
Benjamin Ginsberg
Malibu Rules Girl
Mark Goffman
John Steele Gordon
Julia Gorin
Lloyd M. Green
Paul Greenberg
Cynthia Grenier
Jennifer Grossman
Judy Gruen
Allen C. Guelzo
Michel Gurfinkiel
Jonathan Gurwitz
Dennis Hale
Karen Hall
Eldon L. Ham
Earl Hamner
Matthew P. Harrington
Aaron Keith Harris
Betsy Hart
Sam Haskell, III
Jacob Heilbrunn
Mark Hemingway
David Henderson
Scott Hennen
Amb. G. Philip Hughes
John Hughes
Patrick Hurley
Blake Hurst
Susan Isaacs
Donovan Jacobs
Dallas Jenkins
Marianne Jennings
Bridget Johnson
Melodie Johnson Howe
Brian C. Jones
Mark Joseph
Mark Judge
Stefan Kanfer
S. T. Karnick
Jeff Katz
William Katz
Jonathan Kay
Terry Kelhawk
Jack Kelly
Paul Kengor
Larry Kenny
Andrew Klavan
Judith A. Klinghoffer
Elizabeth Koch
Eugene Kontorovich
Dave Kopel
Elie D. Krakowski
Michael Krauss
Josh Larsen
Leslie S. Lebl
Norman Lebrecht
Michael LeGault
Eli Lehrer
Allan Leicht
Michael Levine
Nathan Lewin
Phil Liberatore
Amy Linker
Herbert London
Mike Long
Laura Lorson
Douglas MacKinnon
Harvey Mansfield
Stephen Mansfield
Rich Markey
Josh Marquis
Dana Marshall
Craig Mazin
David McFadzean
John Meroney
Herbert E. Meyer
Richard Miniter
Howard Mortman
Gerald Nachman
Noam Neusner
Anna Nimouse
Cyrus Nowrasteh
sambo
Mackubin Owens
Kathleen Parker
Marilyn Penn
David D. Perlmutter
Phil Perrier
Peary Perry
Eric Peters
Paul Petersen
Walid Phares
Lisa Pinto
Everett Piper
John J. Pitney,Jr.
Steve Pomerantz
Steve Pressfield
Arch Puddington
Jeremy Rabkin
Rachel Raskin-Zrihen
David Reinhard
Lisa Reitman-Dobi
Richard Riordan
Heather Robinson
Dave Rosner
Evan Sayet
Felice Schachter
Abby Wisse Schachter
Richard Schifter
William Schmidt
Sam Schulman
Sherwood and Lloyd Schwartz
Peter Schweizer
Todd Seavey
Jeremy Shane
Neal M. Sher
Dave Shiflett
Marvin Silbermintz
Max Singer
Curt Smith
Scott Stantis
Steve Stark
Harry Stein
Neil Steinberg
The Stiletto
Glenn Sulmasy
Joel Surnow
Seth Swirsky
Steven L. Taylor
Keith Thibodeaux
Bruce Thornton
Kelly Jane Torrance
Prof. Bob Turner
Cynthia Vance
Laura Vanderkam
Chris Warren
Ben Wattenberg
Ken Weinstein
Barry Weiss
Gary Weiss
Claudia Wells
Diana West
Christine B. Whelan
John O Whitaker Jr
Kaitlyn Wilkins
William Wintersole
Kate Wright
Meyrav Wurmser
Toby Young
Bryce Zabel
Robert Zelnick
John Ziegler
Spread Political Mavens
yahoo
myaol
mymsn
rojo
google
sub-bloglines
sub-feedster
newsgator
newsburst
pluck
delicious
furlit
searchfox
jrants
 
Home  |  Advertise  |  Privacy Policy  |  Subscribe

Copyright (c) 2006 POLITICAL MAVENS. All Rights Reserved.