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Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

author:Orange Words Literary History
Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

Three U.S. troops are shooting in the trenches, already in 1951.

Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

Several American artillerymen are shelling the opposite battlefield, a scene that occurred during the summer offensive in August 1951, when the weather was very hot, and the artillery was shirtless, and the backs of the reloaded soldiers had been blackened.

Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

The photograph shows the US military sending bombers to bomb the positions of the Sino-DPRK coalition forces in 1951, when the US military firmly held the air superiority of the Korean Peninsula and bombed the Korean Peninsula day and night.

Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

The moment American bombers dropped their shells

Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

A little boy sitting alone in the rubble of a home destroyed during the war may have blown up his home, and his relatives may have died in the war.

Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

U.S. airborne troops are using air superiority to carry out raids, and a large number of U.S. soldiers have fallen from the air.

Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

The US military used helicopters to transport the wounded, and the US military used air superiority to the extreme in the Korean battlefield, and they had a large number of bombers, fighter jets, reconnaissance planes, and a large number of transport aircraft and helicopters responsible for logistics.

Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

The U.S. military's bombing of Wonsan Port, an important north Korean port, was filled with smoke in the sound of the explosion.

Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

The photo shows Incheon, where the U.S. military turned the tide on the Korean Peninsula, where U.N. troops were transporting supplies and four U.S. landing ships remaining on the water.

On September 15, 1950, under the command of MacArthur, the U.S. Tenth Army, under the cover of more than three hundred American and British warships and more than five hundred aircraft, successfully landed from here, cutting off the KPA on the Korean Peninsula.

Historical old photo: U.S. forces in the Korean War, air superiority at a glance

Pictured here are Turkish soldiers from the Middle East, the fourth most so-called Un military in addition to South Korean troops, and they sent more than 5,400 people to the Korean War.

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