 
Sights on
Airman 1st Class Dylan Stefani, front, looks through the sights of his M4 carbine at Hill Air Force Base, Utah, Nov. 28, 2012. The augmentee Airmen use the M4 carbine with M68 Close Combat Optic reflex sight to qualify at the combat arms training and maintenance range. (U.S. Air Force photo/Airman 1st Class Justyn M. Freeman)
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Sights on
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Posted: 12/6/2012
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66 percent of Pacific air force assets destroyed in hours
A burned U.S. B -17C after the Empire of Japan attacked Wheeler Air Field Dec. 7, 1941. The attack well known for crippling the U.S. Pacific Naval Fleet also left approximately 700 U.S Airmen killed or wounded and 66 percent of the Air Force strength in Hawaii decimated. The Japanese lost only 29 pilots from more than 350 planes launched from aircraft carriers north of Hawaii. (Courtesy Photo/Tai Sing Loo, Pearl Harbor's main cameraman 1918 to 1948)
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66 percent of ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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Wheeler, Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941
Resourceful aircrews remove parts from a P-40 destroyed in the Dec. 7, 1941 attack on Wheeler Air Base for us on other repairable aircraft.
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Wheeler, ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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Wheeler, Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941
Wrecked planes on Wheeler Air Field flight line, with Hangar 2 in background and (on the right) tent quarters where many enlisted men were killed Dec. 7, 1941.
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Wheeler, ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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Wheeler, Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941
This hastily constructed gun emplacement in front of Hangar 5, Hickam Air Field, was manned shortly after the raid Dec. 7, 1941 by Pvt. 1st Class Raymond Perry (left, with binoculars) and Cpl. Howard Marquardt of South Dakota. A burned-out aircraft engine, sand bags, table, and debris from the attack made up the construction material for this bunker.
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Wheeler, ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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Wheeler, Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941
Members of the Hawaiian Air Force's Headquarters Squadron, 17th Tow Target Squadron and 23d Materiel Squadron watch Japanese high-Ievel horizontal bombers heading toward Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941. (John W. Wilson)
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Wheeler, ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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Wheeler, Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941
A report entitled “7 December 1941: The Air Force Story” compiled by the Pacific Air Forces Office of History obtained this photo of Wheeler Air Field taken by a Japanese Empire pilot to record the battle damage to the U.S. Air Forces Dec. 7, 1941.
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Wheeler, ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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Hickam Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941
Airmen with other personnel man a gun emplacement set up in a bomb crater between Hangars 11-13 and 15-17, Hickam Field, Dec. 7, 1941.
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Hickam Hawaii, ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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Hickam Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941
The first bombs to strike Hickam Field Dec. 7, 1941 were dropped on Hawaiian Air Depot buildings and the hangar line, causing thick clouds of smoke to billow upward. (Courtesy photo, John W. Wilson)
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Hickam Hawaii, ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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Old Glory Dec. 7, 1941
Old Glory waves over Hickam Field, bearing silent witness to the brutality of the Japanese attack Dec. 7, 1941. This same flag later flew above the United Nations charter meeting in San Francisco, over the Big Three conference at Potsdam, and above the White House Aug. 14, 1945 when the Japanese accepted terms of surrender. It was part of a historical display at the Air Force Academy until returned for permanent display at Hickam Air Force Base in 1980. (Air Force Photo)
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Old Glory Dec. ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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Airman creates important database
Airman 1st Class Chris Sharlow, 436th Operations Support Squadron Aircrew Flight Equipment journeyman, performs an inspection on a parachute at Dover Air Force Base, Del. on Nov. 30, 2012. He is the creator of a new computer program used to easily track thousands of accountable aircrew equipment items. Sharlow's program is known as the Flight Equipment Automated Records Systems (FEARS) and is being used to ensure tracking and on-time inspections of items critical to safe, efficient mission accomplishment. (U.S. Air Force photo by Greg L. Davis)
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Airman creates ...
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Posted: 12/5/2012
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