Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Samurai SURVIVOR
Flight Journal
|November - December 2022
Zero ace Saburo Sakai
Saburo Sakai was a samurai, tracing his warrior-caste linage back to sword-swinging feudal forebears who had invaded Korea in the 16th century. Raised on a small farm near the city of Saga, Japan, he learned to scorn money and to endure resultant poverty rather than stooping to accepting servitude in exchange for currency. His family still proudly wore the twin sabers-emblazoned emblem of the abolished samurai order, and stoically, pridefully endured the harshness of their lot.
His iron constitution helped him stand out in the Navy Fliers' School. His abilities were many and marked. Instructors were impressed as they watched him swim 50 meters in well under 30 seconds, hold his breath underwater for two and a half minutes, hang by one hand from the top of a pole for more than half an hour, and effortlessly snatch flies out of the air. In 1937, he graduated at the head of the 38th NonCommissioned Officers Class. Seventy-five meticulously selected applicants had started the course, and Sakai finished first among the 25 still there at the end.
Serving in China during the Sino-Japanese War, he immediately gained note for his daring aerial exploits, downing Chinese and Dutch aircraft with monotonous regularity. Once, after being caught on the ground and wounded in a surprise air raid, he staggered to his Zero, pursued the attacking formation, and crippled a bomber before returning to base half dead from loss of blood. Based in Formosa at the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor, he participated in the initial strikes on American forces in the Philippines and was responsible for the first B-17 Flying Fortress ever lost in combat, downing the bomber on December 11, 1941.
Bu hikaye Flight Journal dergisinin November - December 2022 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Flight Journal'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Flight Journal
DESPERATE MEASURES
Volksjäger, the Luftwaffe's last hope
10 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
THE Fairey Swordfish
Antiquated, yet devastatingly effective
14 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
Tuskegee RED TAILS
The men, the machines, the missions
11 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
THE HIGH-VELOCITY RAPTOR
The F-22A thrust vectoring system is the “bread and butter” of the Raptor's incredible maneuvering capability.
14 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
Mitchells over the Mediterranean
Wavetop warfare: skip-bombing and big guns
13 mins
January - February 2026
Flight Journal
MUSTANGS OVER IWO
Inside the 506th Fighter Group's long-range missions
10 mins
January - February 2026
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
Translate
Change font size
