Boyd: The Fighter Pilot Who Changed the Art of War
Rate it:
Read between February 15 - February 26, 2015
1%
Flag icon
“Not many people are defined by the courts-martial and investigations they faced,”
2%
Flag icon
Boyd was more than a great stick-and-rudder man. He was that rarest of creatures—a thinking fighter pilot.
5%
Flag icon
Remember you have something no one else in the class has. You have principle and integrity. That means you will be criticized and attacked. But in the end you will win. Don’t let it bother you.”
5%
Flag icon
for the way to become men, Art Weibel was a magnetic figure. He was hard-nosed and rigidly disciplined, and believed that a man should give more than he gets.
8%
Flag icon
The only part that didn’t fit her image of him as a “big jock” was that he read so much.
11%
Flag icon
He considered himself ready for combat, and he believed that once the enemy pilots knew he was there, most of them would park their MiGs and go home.
13%
Flag icon
You don’t fly a fucking capsule, you sit in it and watch the instruments. You’re a passenger. To hell with space. Fighter pilots wanted to get on an enemy’s six and hose the sonofabitch.
37%
Flag icon
Boyd did not miss a beat. “General, I’d pull the wings off, install benches in the bomb bay, paint the goddamn thing yellow, and turn it into a high-speed line taxi.”
38%
Flag icon
These were heady days for Boyd. His name was becoming known throughout the Air Force, and not just as a fighter pilot, but as a thinker, as a theoretician, as the man who developed a radical new theory. Even the Navy was using his E-M Theory. They took his name off it, and they did not call it E-M, but it was
40%
Flag icon
Boyd was so intense in evaluating the air-to-air combat that he forgot he was in a movie. Finally he could take no more. He stood up, waved both arms, jabbed one hand toward the screen, and shouted at the top of his lungs, “You missed the goddamn shot! Hose him, you stupid bastard!” Christie shook his head in dismay. Not for Boyd, but for those in the Pentagon. They were bureaucrats. Boyd was a warrior.
43%
Flag icon
Boyd was a man possessed.
44%
Flag icon
smart juice
44%
Flag icon
“Stroking the bishop. You’re just stroking the bishop.”
44%
Flag icon
“You are the dumbest son of a bitch God ever made” or “You don’t know what the fuck you’re talking about” or “You stupid fuck. That will never work.”
44%
Flag icon
“I have found the dripping cock.”
44%
Flag icon
He said the general in charge of Research and Development for the Air Force was so angry that he was about to transfer Boyd to Alaska.
44%
Flag icon
“Major Boyd, I have just one question,” the general said. “Did you tell that colonel at Wright-Pat he was a lying fucker?”
45%
Flag icon
“Tiger, I’ve got to have accurate information,”
45%
Flag icon
“Goddamnit, general, you need more accidents,” he said. “You need to kill some pilots.”
45%
Flag icon
But in every war there are bigger-than-life men whose exploits are so far beyond what most mortals can accomplish that they are in a separate category.
46%
Flag icon
Razz says Boyd was the father of that great victory as surely as if he had led the mission.
46%
Flag icon
“Goddamn F-4 is a Navy airplane; it’s not a fighter. They give us shit for airplanes and we win anyway.”
48%
Flag icon
“Goddamn, Tiger, you should have been there. I hosed those sons of bitches. I stacked those goddamn generals up like cord wood.”
48%
Flag icon
By 1968, people in the Building did not know if Boyd was a genius or a wild man.
48%
Flag icon
While Boyd was within his rights to ask for written orders, his doing so infuriated generals. It clearly indicated he thought the general was wrong.
48%
Flag icon
“I just thought of a new E-M iteration” or “Something just occurred to me” or “I just got the answer to something I’ve been working on for several weeks.”
48%
Flag icon
“If you take off all the nonkill horseshit—everything not necessary to kill another aircraft—you can’t believe how the performance goes up.”
49%
Flag icon
“Yes, Sir, we have. The Air Force does not believe a variable-geometry wing is the answer. In fact, we believe the fixed-wing aircraft is a superior design. The F-X will be a fixed-wing aircraft.”
50%
Flag icon
Sprey was fascinated by Hans Rudel, the legendary tank-killing German pilot of World War II who still is considered the greatest CAS pilot of all time. Sprey insisted that everyone on the A-X project read Stuka Pilot, Rudel’s wartime biography that told how he flew 2,530 missions and destroyed 511 tanks.
51%
Flag icon
Boyd laughed. “We don’t care what the Russians are doing. We only care about what the Navy is doing.”
51%
Flag icon
Christie knew Boyd liked Wagner so he played “Ride of the Valkyries.” Boyd’s eyes widened, he stopped talking, and suddenly was transported.
52%
Flag icon
But Boyd was about to prove that fortune indeed favors the bold.
52%
Flag icon
People in Boyd’s office wondered what was going on with him. Several days a week for month after month he did not come to work until almost noon. He yawned and gulped smart juice, trying to awaken. And every time his boss asked why he was late, Boyd said, “I was doing the Lord’s work last night.” Then he took a big drink of coffee, lit a Dutch Master, looked around, and said, “And goddamned good work it was.”
52%
Flag icon
“Tiger, we’re gonna do some good work.”
53%
Flag icon
“If you insist on getting credit for the work you do, you’ll never get far in life. Don’t confuse yourself with the idea of getting credit.”
53%
Flag icon
“No more goddamn memos. I don’t want you to write anybody about anything.”
54%
Flag icon
“Fuck a wind tunnel,” Boyd roared. He pointed up. “The biggest wind tunnel in the world is up there. It’s called reality. This is not reality.”
54%
Flag icon
“I had NASA check you people out. They can’t duplicate your performance claims.”
54%
Flag icon
Boyd stood up and pointed to the door. “You people are lying to me. Get the fuck out of my office.”
54%
Flag icon
Boyd loved to tell the story of what happened. He looked at the drag curves and shook his head in apparent awe. “This is amazing,” he said. “I just can’t believe this.”
54%
Flag icon
“That means when it is on the ramp with all that thrust, even with the engine turned off, you got to tie the goddamn thing down or it will take off by itself.”
54%
Flag icon
“Goddamn airplane is made out of balonium.”
54%
Flag icon
“Take your best shot, you son of a bitch,”
55%
Flag icon
Too risky, they said—a pilot can’t go from the cockpit of one new airplane to the cockpit of another. Boyd laughed.
55%
Flag icon
Maybe you Edwards pukes can’t, he said, but fighter pilots can.
55%
Flag icon
Boyd told Sprey, “Tiger, they are gonna use what they see as the lack of range to try to kill this airplane. Let ’em. Let that be their main focus. At the right time we will tell them otherwise and they will have nothing left. We will hose them.”
55%
Flag icon
It would be several years before the Air Force realized that the lightweight fighter not only had greater range than the F-15 but had greater range than any other fighter in the Air Force. That knowledge would cause more than a dozen generals to explode in anger. Keeping secret the range of the lightweight fighter was one of Boyd’s greatest cape jobs.
56%
Flag icon
“The most amazing thing just happened. I was with…”—he named the colonel—“… when he got a phone call. Then all at once he fell out of his chair and began foaming at the mouth. I thought he was dying.”
56%
Flag icon
Afterward the incident became known as the “air-to-rug maneuver,” and the Acolytes shook their heads in amazement that even on the telephone Boyd could cause a Blue Suiter to fall out of his chair. The story of the air-to-rug maneuver became a favorite at happy hour, especially after the colonel became a four-star and then the Air Force chief of staff.
57%
Flag icon
On the back is the pièce de résistance, a coiled, bright yellow garden hose and written underneath, also in bright yellow, THE HOSER.
« Prev 1 3 4