A British 4.5in anti-aircraft battery goes in to action at night - England 1940. The Predictor and the Rangefinder are in the foreground

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A British 4.5in anti-aircraft battery goes in to action at night - England 1940. The Predictor and the Rangefinder are in the foreground
GET THAT TONE…
U.S. Marines with 2nd Low Altitude Air Defense conduct a FIM-92 Stinger Missile live-fire range during exercise Formidable Shield 25 in Andoya, Norway, May 7, 2025. Formidable Shield 25 is a U.S. Navy live-fire and integrated air and missile defense exercise using NATO command and control reporting structures with NATO Ally and partner participation.
An 88mm antiaircraft gun fires during a night raid by Royal Air Force bombers
A random shot from an anti-aircraft battery, whose gunners accidentally let go with eight shells in the New York metropolitan area on March 13, 1942, hit the Equitable Building in the financial district in lower Manhattan. The shell hit the corner (center foreground), about 400 feet above the street, between the 37th and 38th floors, chipping the corner stonework just above the ledge and knocking loose a small piece of the cornice just below the ledge.
Photo: Anthony Camerano for the AP
U.S. antiaircraft missiles are the finest in the wo-- Wait, are some of those turning around and coming back? We’re all gonna die!
Life June 4, 1956
1918 War photographer Ariel Varges takes this photo, IWM Q 24781, of Jat Lewis gunner firing at enemy plane while the other Sepoys rush to funk pits for safety.
Colourized by Royston Colour
As other soldiers run for the cover of slit trenches, an Indian Lewis gun team engage an enemy aircraft, Mesopotamia 1918. During the long and arduous campaign along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, from Basra to Baghdad and beyond, over 29,000 Indian soldiers perished in what was their most significant contribution to the war effort.
The 320th Barrage Balloon Battalion, were the only entirely African American combat unit to participate in the D-Day landings. Their vital mission was to raise a curtain of hydrogen filled barrage balloons high over Omaha & Utah Beaches during the first wave of the assault. Floating barrage balloons over a specific area prevented enemy aircraft from flying close enough to target soldiers & landing craft from directly overhead with bombs or strafing fire. If an enemy aircraft was determined to attack, the balloons forced them to fly at higher altitudes over the balloons making them more susceptible to larger caliber anti-aircraft gunfire off shore. The balloons themselves could also destroy enemy aircraft, especially at night, the steel cables that anchored the balloons to the ground were very difficult to see and posed a risk to any aircraft that flew into them. An aircraft caught in a cable could be slowed down enough to stall or have a wing sheared off. A cable strike also triggered a small bomb attached just under the balloon that packed a potentially lethal punch for an ensnared aircraft. In addition to the men of the 320th, another 1,200 African American soldiers in other U.S. military units landed on the beaches on the 6th of June 1944 #ddaylandings #dday #1944 #WW2 #barrageballoon #history #320th #antiaircraft https://www.instagram.com/p/CBGLOFLDGIz/?igshid=k3ez6qys8nrc
Anti-Aircraft Barrage Net hangs suspended from balloons to defend London during World War I