From March 1965-December 1972 the United States carried out the longest sustained naval aerial bombardment campaign in the history of modern warfare.
From the aerial hellscapes of Nam Dinh, Vinh, Hanoi and Haiphong to the unforgiving jungles of Laos, each mission could very well be their last..
The result of more than four years of painstaking research and interviews, Across the Wing tells the Stories of the naval aviators who bravely flew these highly-dangerous Combat sorties during the long and bitter conflict.
Instead they were widely mocked, ridiculed and scorned.
When they returned home there were few heroic welcomes.
Even as losses mounted and public suport for the conflict plunged, these men continued to perform their duties to the best of their abilities.
Every cat shot, every mission and every recovery was a roll of the dice on whether they would live, die, or be taken prisoner and brutally tortured or mudered.
Many of those men remain missing, with their ultimate fates unlikely to ever be known.
By the time the conflict formally ended in January 1973 nearly 600 Navy aviators had lost their lives in Southeast Asia.
From March 1965-December 1972 the United States carried out the longest sustained naval aerial bombardment campaign in the history of modern warfare