Air Gallantry Cross

The Vietnam Air Gallantry Cross (Vietnamese: Phi-Dũng Bội-Tinh) was a military decoration of South Vietnam which was issued during the years of the Vietnam War. The Air Gallantry Cross was awarded for meritorious or heroic conduct while engaged in aerial combat. The decoration was comparable to the United States decoration of the Air Medal.

Vietnam Air Gallantry Cross
Air Gallantry Cross with Gold Wing
Awarded by  South Vietnam
TypeMilitary decoration
EligibilityMilitary personnel who were engaged in aerial combat
Awarded forMeritorious or heroic conduct while engaged in aerial combat
StatusNo longer awarded
Precedence
Next (higher)Gallantry Cross[1]
Next (lower)Navy Gallantry Cross[1]
RelatedThe American equivalent is the Air Medal

Gold wing ribbon

Silver wing ribbon

Bronze wing ribbon

The Air Gallantry Cross was occasionally awarded to members of foreign militaries, but only if an air combat action was performed which directly benefitted Vietnamese war efforts. Pilots of the United States Air Force were often awarded the Air Gallantry Cross.

Separate decorations, known as the Vietnam Gallantry Cross and Vietnam Navy Gallantry Cross, were also issued for general service and naval achievement. These were separate awards from the Vietnam Air Gallantry Cross which came in three different grades: with gold wings, silver wings, and bronze wings.

Recipients

gollark: In mine, the position to `i` to is modulusinated with the length, so it loops to the start or something.
gollark: How many bytes™? What language?
gollark: I'll golf it if someone actually makes a smaller competitor.
gollark: ```python if char == "i": h, g = list(range(pos + 1, l)), list(range(pos - 1, 0, -1)) for i in h + g if incr == 1 else g + h: if code[i] == "i": pos = (i + 1) % l break continue```
gollark: Mine passes all test cases but the test cases are bad.

See also

The Air Gallantry Cross was awarded to Naval Aviators operating off aircraft carriers in the Tonkin Gulf and to United States Marine aviators operating from bases in South Vietnam.

References

  1. Martin, Michael N. (2001). Warriors of the Sea. Turner Publishing Company. p. 61. ISBN 1-56311-663-4.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.