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| Japanese airmen pose with natives in front of a Mitsubishi F1M2 floatplane on Rebata Bay, 1942. |
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| Mitsubishi F1M "Pete" with seaplane tender Kamikawa Maru’s 'ZII' tail code, c. 1940-41. |
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| Mitsubishi F1M "Pete" with seaplane tender Kamikawa Maru’s 'ZII' tail code, c. 1940-41. |
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| Mitsubishi F1M2 "Pete" reconnaissance floatplane on the Kamikawa Maru seaplane tender, c. 1942. |
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| "Petes" and "Rufes" on the beach somewhere in the South Pacific. The foreground F1M2 has the tail code "L2" of the seaplane tender Kunikawa Maru. |
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| Another view of the "Petes" and "Rufes" on the beach somewhere in the South Pacific. |
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| Mitsubishi F1M2 floatplane (Allied code name “Pete”) on ship’s catapult. |
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| Mitsubishi F1M2 “Pete” being hoisted by the crane of the seaplane tender Kimikawa Maru, 1943. |
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| Mitsubishi F1M2 “Pete” of the Kimikawa Maru, Horomushiro channel, Chishima, 1943. |
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| Tail of Mitsubishi F1M2 “Pete” on a catapult aboard the Kimikawa Maru. |
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| Mitsubishi F1M2s “Pete” await disposition by the occupation forces, Sasebo, September 1945. |
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| Mitsubishi F1M2s “Pete” await disposition by the occupation forces, Sasebo, September 1945. |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102b “Randy,” undergoing operational evaluation with the JAAF. Three versions were planned: the Ki-102a day fighter, Ki-102b ground attack and Ki-102c night fighter. |
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| Ki-102b, Kiyosu Airfield, near Nagoya, May 1945. |
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| Ki-102b. It was kept out of front line service because it was hoped that it would be the carrier of the Igo-1-B air-to-ground guided missile when the Allied invasion of Japan occurred. |
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| Ki-102b. |
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| Ki-102b. |
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| Ki-102a. |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102b “Randy.” |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102b and Ki-102c “Randy” (left to right). |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102b “Randy.” |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102b “Randy.” |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102b “Randy” cockpit. |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102b “Randy.” |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102b “Randy” nose-mounted cannon. |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102a “Randy.” |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102c “Randy.” |
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| Kawasaki Ki-102c “Randy.” |
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| Ki-64 prototype under construction. |
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| Ki-64. |
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| Ki-64. |
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| Ki-64. |
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| Ki-64 taking off on its initial flight, December 1943. |
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| Mitsubishi A7M Reppu (Hurricane), Allied code name “Sam.” |
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| Japanese paratroopers loading into a Kawasaki Ki.56 “Thalia.” |
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| Japanese paratroopers inside their Ki.56 transport ready for a jump. |
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| Japanese paratrooper exits the Ki.56 transport during a jump. Most likely the photo was taken while the plane was still on the ground as this would be a nearly impossible shot to get in the air. |
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| Ki.44-Ic, 85th Sentai, Jogai Airfield, Nanking, China, July 1943. |
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| Ki.44-Ic, 47th Fighter School. |
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| Nakajima Ki.44 Shoki, “Tojo.” |
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| Kawasaki Ki-61-I-Ko Hien (Flying Swallow) (Allied code name “Tony”) of the Akeno Hikoshidan Hikotai (Instructional Air Unit), Japanese Army Air Service, 1945. |
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| Captured Japanese A6M5 Zeros on board USS Copahee on their way to the US from Saipan, July 1944. |
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| Mitsubishi A6M Zero. |
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| Zero fighter production line. |
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| A “Zero” fighter caught by the gun camera of an American fighter as it begins smoking and begins its plunge into the ocean below. |

















































