Straight on long shot from the ground, looking up as an O/A-10 assigned to the 706th Joint Reserve Base, New Orleans, Louisiana, dispenses flares to evade a simulated surface to air threat while acting as the Rescue Mission Commander (RMC), during a search and rescue operation. Desert Rescue is the premiere Search And Rescue (SAR), training conducted at the ranges of Fallon Naval Air Station, Nevada

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Straight on long shot from the ground, looking up as an O/A-10 assigned to the 706th Joint Reserve Base, New Orleans, Louisiana, dispenses flares to evade a simulated surface to air threat while acting as the Rescue Mission Commander (RMC), during a search and rescue operation. Desert Rescue is the premiere Search And Rescue (SAR), training conducted at the ranges of Fallon Naval Air Station, Nevada

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Summary

The original finding aid described this photograph as:

Subject Operation/Series: DESERT RESCUE

Base: Naval Air Station, Fallon

State: Nevada (NV)

Country: United States Of America (USA)

Scene Camera Operator: TSGT David Richards, USAF

Release Status: Released to Public
Combined Military Service Digital Photographic Files

The A-10 Thunderbolt has excellent maneuverability at low airspeeds and altitude and is a highly accurate and survivable weapons-delivery platform. Called the “Warthog” for its aggressive look and often painted with teeth on the nose cone, the A-10 Thunderbolt II is the U.S. Air Force’s primary low-altitude close air support aircraft best known for its GAU-8 Avenger 30mm Gatling gun designed to fire armor-piercing depleted uranium and high explosive incendiary rounds. In the 1970s the threat of Soviet armored forces and all-weather attack operations had become more serious. Six companies submitted aircraft proposals, with Northrop and Fairchild-Republic selected to build prototypes: the YA-9A and YA-10A, respectively. General Electric and Philco-Ford were selected to build and test GAU-8 cannon prototypes. First A-10 was delivered to the U.S. Air Force on 30 March 1976. By 1984, 715 airplanes had been built.

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Date

15/02/2000
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Source

The U.S. National Archives
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