Air America (book)

Air America is a 1978 non-fiction book by journalist Christopher Robbins. The book is a history of Air America, an airline covertly owned by the United States Central Intelligence Agency from 1950 to 1976.

Background

From the 1950s to the early 1970s, Indochina had been the landscape of major drug and military operations, conducted by many actors including European and communist countries. When US military involvement started, costs rose and new resources, especially for covert operations, were needed.

Anything, Anywhere, Anytime

Air America's pilots flew dangerous missions, those no one else would fly, frequently under enemy fire. Many missions were in fact aid-oriented missions to provide logistical support and food to allies who were fighting the war along with the South Vietnamese and the US. Most of the time, pilots did not know what they were delivering, just when and where, no matter what the weather was like, or whether it was day or night.[1]

gollark: They're moving important core Android services into their proprietary closed-source code.
gollark: No, they are doing the *opposite*.
gollark: Because it's not ridiculously device-specific.
gollark: BIOS ones no, but the *OS* will get updates.
gollark: x86 devices get at least basic working support basically *forever*, because they have things like "standards" and "not relying entirely on one manufacturer" and "partial updates".

References

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