
P-40 Warhawk -Flying Tigers
Curtiss P-40 Warhawk Flying Tiger airplane model. The P-40E Warhawk gained its greatest fame as the plane of the famed Flying Tigers. In the late 1930's Japanese forces were inflicting heavy losses on the Chinese. President Roosevelt promised the Chinese president that the United States would help, even though the US was not at war. The United States provided obsolete P-40B airplanes, but China didn't have the pilots to fly them. The U.S. Army, Navy and Marines asked for volunteers. They were released from duty and joined the "Chinese Air Force." They began training at Rangoon in Sep. 1941. Two of the three squadrons moved to Kunming, China to protect the Burma Road, the only ground route into China, and on Dec. 20, 1941, the Flying Tigers received their "baptism under fire" when they inflicted heavy losses on Japanese bombers attempting to attack Kunming. Months of combat followed and the A.V.G., greatly outnumbered in the air and operating under adverse conditions (such as no replace