Versuchen GOLD - Frei
ENEMY PILOTS SPEAK Voices from the other side
Flight Journal
|November - December 2025
All too often American students of air warfare forget that enemy aircraftwhether Messerschmitts or MiGs-were flown by human beings with the same motivations and traits as Allied airmen. More often than not, the only difference between friend and foe was the paint on the airplane and where they landed. Therefore, we've assembled a variety of accounts from WW II Axis fighter pilots, men who were more than simply targets.
JAPAN'S MASTER OF THE ZERO
In 1971, the American Fighter Aces Association hosted a delegation from the Zero Fighter Pilots Association in San Diego. Undisputed star of the Japanese entourage was Saburo Sakai, then 55 years old, bearing visible wounds inflicted by American machine gun fire at Guadalcanal in 1942. During a session at the hotel bar (where else would fighter pilots gather?), one of the American aces approached a translator traveling with the Zero pilots. Dr. Clayton K. Gross had been a Ninth Air Force ace, a member of the 354th Fighter Group that introduced the Merlin-powered P-51 to combat. Then a practicing dentist, Kelly Gross retained a serious interest in air combat. He nodded to Sakai and addressed the translator. "Please tell Saburo that I read his book, and the emotions that he described in aerial combat were just the same as I experienced in Europe."
Sakai’s classic 1956 memoir, “Samurai,” contains passages that appeal to airmen of every nation and culture. In part, Sakai wrote, “In the Imperial Japanese Navy I learned only one trade—how to man a fighter plane and how to kill enemies of my country. This I did for nearly five years, in China and across the Pacific. I knew no other life; I was a warrior of the air."With the surrender, I was thrown out of the Navy. Despite my wounds and my long service, there was no possibility of a pension. We were the losers, and pensions or disability payments are received only by the veterans of the victor nation.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November - December 2025-Ausgabe von Flight Journal.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Flight Journal
Flight Journal
ELLIPTICAL ELEGANCE
Flying and evaluating the Seafire Mark III
4 mins
November - December 2025
Flight Journal
IRON DOG
Fighting the Pacific and the P-39 at the same time
14 mins
November - December 2025
Flight Journal
Fighter Pilots: A Warrior Clan
TAKE A HARD LOOK at the two young men in these photos. Do they look as if they were bent on killing one another? On the left we have a young, unknown enlisted Japanese pilot standing in front of a Nakajima Ki-27 \"Nate,\" one of Japan's earliest monoplanes that led to the much vaunted Zero.
3 mins
November - December 2025
Flight Journal
KEN WALSH THE FIRST CORSAIR ACE
Medal of Honor pilot's combat adventures
12 mins
November - December 2025
Flight Journal
Big Chief's Little Chief
Thunderbolt action with the Wolf Pack
11 mins
November - December 2025
Flight Journal
ENEMY PILOTS SPEAK Voices from the other side
All too often American students of air warfare forget that enemy aircraftwhether Messerschmitts or MiGs-were flown by human beings with the same motivations and traits as Allied airmen. More often than not, the only difference between friend and foe was the paint on the airplane and where they landed. Therefore, we've assembled a variety of accounts from WW II Axis fighter pilots, men who were more than simply targets.
11 mins
November - December 2025
Flight Journal
FLYING THE FW 190
A legend gets checked out in the Butcher Bird
15 mins
November - December 2025
Flight Journal
DOUBLE-THEATER ACE
The fearless missions of legendary fighter pilot Col. John D. Landers
12 mins
November - December 2025
Flight Journal
WARBUG IN THE PACIFIC
Surviving combat in a Stinson OY-1/L-5
10 mins
September - October 2025
Flight Journal
WINGS OF THE FLEET
Celebrating the U.S. Navy's 250-year legacy
9 mins
September - October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

