C
rews at the National Museum of the US Air Force in Dayton, Ohio, have finished restoring a Vietnam War-era Martin B-57B Canberra bomber and a De Havilland C-7A Caribou transport aircraft and returned them to the museum’s Southeast Asia War exhibit area. The restoration work began last fall. Museum staff converted the Canberra from an EB-57B electronic countermeasures platform back to its original bomber configuration by reinstalling the weapons bay, removing antennae, and repainting it. They are currently installing napalm canisters while the aircraft sits on display. Museum staff repainted the Caribou, which had been on display outdoors in recent years. It now appears as one of the C-7As flown by Maj. Hunter Hackney on Aug. 25, 1968, when he flew several aerial resupply missions through intense enemy fire, earning the Air Force Cross. (Wright-Patterson release) (Museum website) (B-57B fact sheet, with more photos) (C-7A fact sheet, with more photos)
After years of describing to lawmakers and Pentagon leaders the nature of that threat and the key role spacepower plays in deterring conflict in the domain and enabling the rest of the joint force, Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman told reporters during AFA’s Warfare Symposium here that the message appears to…