No but army pilots took army B25 bombers off of the the deck of the navy aircraft carrier Hornet to bomb the homeland of the Japanese in April of 1942.
Yes but these military planes are flown by navy pilots or military pilots.
there was a total of 1200 pilot planes missing or gone in world war 2
Japanese navy suicide pilots means "Divine Wind" in Japanese also called ShinpuJapanese Army suicide pilots called Tokkotai "court beautiful death"Japanese pilots who flew their planes on suicide missions against ships .
Navy, army, the US pilots and the FBI
Army and Navy. The Marines were a smaller unit then and a part of the Navy. The Coast Guard was part of the Treasury Department in peace, and part of the Navy in war. The US Army had military pilots, but no equivalent to an air force until after World War 1. [In 1917-18 US pilots flew for the French.]
Yes but these military planes are flown navy pilots or military pilots.
Yes but these military planes are flown by navy pilots or military pilots.
there was a total of 1200 pilot planes missing or gone in world war 2
Japanese navy suicide pilots means "Divine Wind" in Japanese also called ShinpuJapanese Army suicide pilots called Tokkotai "court beautiful death"Japanese pilots who flew their planes on suicide missions against ships .
There are up to 200 navy planes at the bottom of Lake Michigan today(2009) from WW II training of pilots. George Bush was trained here.
The army doesn't have any planes, only helicopters. The Air Force has all the planes. The army does not have fighter planes, but they do have transport planes. The navy has planes as well. All fixed wing aircraft that carry army service members are piloted and owned by the air force. But yes, the navy does have a variety of planes based off of aircraft carriers.
Navy, army, the US pilots and the FBI
The Army does not fly planes. The Marines, Air Force, Navy, National Guard, and Coast Guard do.
Army and Navy. The Marines were a smaller unit then and a part of the Navy. The Coast Guard was part of the Treasury Department in peace, and part of the Navy in war. The US Army had military pilots, but no equivalent to an air force until after World War 1. [In 1917-18 US pilots flew for the French.]
US Navy Aircraft Carriers normally operated US Navy aircraft flown by US Navy pilots; however sometimes during WW2 these aircraft carriers had US Army Air Force or US Marine Corps aircraft on-board to be flown-off by Army or Marine pilots. This was for ferrying operations. These aircraft would take off from the carriers but land on an airfield. Army pilots were not trained to land on carriers, neither were the Army aircraft equipped for carrier landings. US Marine pilots & Marine aircraft could operate from carriers if necessary, until they could be established at an airfield.
Absolutely not - there are far more planes in the Navy than there will ever be Academy graduates who are on a flight career path.
There are no active Navy SEAL pilots except for those who left the SEALs and joined separate army or navy programs.