• =?UTF-8?Q?Read_about=2c_in_Ukrainian_AF_-_=e2=80=98The_Ghost_of_Kyi?= =

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 26 11:05:57 2022
    XPost: soc.history.war.misc

    On Facebook, I read this:

    Jim Lyons
    Feb

    Ukraine’s Air Force says a pilot flying a Ukrainian Sukhoi
    Su-27 downed two Russian Su-30s in a dogfight. Unconfirmed,
    but apparently the Russians are using some Soviet era planes.
    The Sukhoi is a later generation of fighter plane.

    Hmmm, I did find this:
    https://taskandpurpose.com/analysis/ghost-kyiv/

    ‘The Ghost of Kyiv’ is the first urban legend of Russia’s invasion
    of Ukraine
    I want to believe.

    BY JARED KELLER | PUBLISHED FEB 25, 2022 12:27 PM

    A Ukrainian MiG-29 fighter jet. (Task & Purpose photo illustration)
    SHARE
    As Russian missiles burned across the horizon and military aircraft
    prowled the skies above Kyiv, digital whispers of a lone airborne hero
    among the Ukrainian resistance began to emerge online. His name and his
    history are shrouded in mystery, but his exploits are already the stuff
    of modern military lore: that, with six air-to-air kills, the heroic
    pilot of a Ukrainian MiG-29 became the first air combat ace over
    European soil since World War II.

    They call him ‘the Ghost of Kyiv’ — and despite thousands of digital prayers to the contrary, he is in all likelihood a work of fiction.

    Based on digital activity, the first mention of the ‘Ghost of Kyiv’
    appears in a series of three tweets showing a lone Ukrainian fighter jet operating over the capital:

    These original videos were retweeted thousands of times, many of which
    contain messages citing ‘reports’ of a Ukrainian fighter downing several Russian fighters in air-to-air combat. Like most modern urban legends,
    the story was further propagated online by tech bros and lawyers-turned-Twitter-muses with large social media followings. The
    story only grew from there, so much so, in fact, that Spanish newspaper
    Marca claimed that the Ghost of Kyiv had downed two SU-35 fighters, a
    SU-27 fighter, a MiG-29 fighter, and two SU-25 aircraft. Even the
    Ukrainian Ministry of Defense appeared to feed into the story, posting
    footage of a MiG-29 besting a Russian aircraft that was later revealed
    to be from a flight simulation program.

    At the moment, however, official confirmation of an air ace — the term
    for shooting down more than five enemy aircraft — from the Ukrainian government is, for lack of a better term, extremely sketchy. While the Ukrainian MoD on Friday hyped the story of an “air avenger” above Kyiv,
    the Ukrainian military’s projected Russian losses in the first two days
    of conflict only amounted to a reported 10 aircraft, many of which were
    likely downed by Ukrainian air defenses with the exception of two
    Russian aircraft that the Ukrainian Air Force claimed were downed by a Ukrainian SU-27 in a dogfight. ​​Indeed, a senior U.S. defense official told reporters on Friday that Russia had not yet achieved air
    superiority, and that Ukrainians “still have air and missile defense capability, including aircraft … in the air that continue to engage and
    deny air access to Russian aircraft.” This makes the possibility of a
    sole air ace out of Ukraine’s potentially 98-strong fleet of combat
    aircraft highly unlikely.

    In addition, it’s worth noting that air-to-air kills are a relatively
    rare occurrence in modern warfare. The most recent known instance was
    the shootdown of an ​​Armenian SU-25 warplane by a Turkish F-16 fighter
    jet amid clashes between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces over
    breakaway territory Nagorno-Karabakh in September 2020. Three years
    prior, a U.S. Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet shot down a Syrian SU-22
    fighter-bomber above Syria in the U.S. military’s first air-to-air kill
    since 1999. Sure, there hasn’t been a major war on European soil since
    the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s, but the idea of a lone fighter scoring
    six air-to-air kills in a single day (and in the first day of fighting,
    no less!) for the first time since World War II seems extremely far-fetched.

    Here’s the problem with the Ghost of Kyiv. Every atom of my body tells
    me that this story is 99.9% bullshit, an ingenious piece of organic
    digital storytelling that morphed into a convenient grassroots
    propaganda narrative. But amid horrific images and videos of Russian
    aircraft allegedly firing missiles at civilian populations, I want to
    believe — and I know I’m not the only one.

    Every conflict gets the heroes it deserves, and that goes for legends as
    well — like that the 19th-century pirate Jean Lafitte was a battlefield
    hero for the United States during the Battle of New Orleans in the War
    of 1812, or that Mr. Rogers was a deadly sniper in Vietnam (He, in fact,
    was not). As the conflict in Ukraine stretches on, it’s clear that this
    war will be no different. The Ghost of Kyiv may be a specter of our imagination, conjured into being from three disjointed tweets, but that doesn’t make what he represents to the people of Ukraine any less real: defiant resistance in the face of certain doom. Perhaps, in that sense,
    the Ghost of Kyiv is real enough — for now.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)