Yes indeed; Skyhawks played key roles in the Vietnam War, the Yom Kippur War, and the Falklands War.
the planes were the bombs and the terrorist wore fake bombs as a while on the plane
At the end of the Vietnam War, Congress refused to support South Vietnam any longer.
Unlikely.
Yes there is a statue located in Vietnam of Chathrapati Shivaji Maharaja. The statue is located in the capital of Vietnam.
Well, Firemen went round, putting out fires from the bombs and helping the wardens chuck away the unexploded bombs. Also, they stopped V bombs from spreading any more fire so they had quite an important job.
Yes indeed; Skyhawks played key roles in the Vietnam War, the Yom Kippur War, and the Falklands War. They were a superb low level strike aircraft and have used by many air forces around the world. In Vietnam they were used from US Navy carriers.
No hydrogen bombs were dropped on Vietnam. No nuclear weapons of any kind were used in Vietnam.
No, and his A4 Skyhawk was downed by a SAM (Surface to Air Missile).
No, the Japanese military did not drop any bombs on the USA after the atomic bombs were used on Japan. The bombs and pending invasion by the Soviets and the Americans (and allies) motivated the Emperor Hirohito to surrender to the Allied Forces.
No, there is no mechanism to attach them to the aircraft.
The U.S. sent sky raiders on a suprise attack to drop atomic bombs on Japan. This mission was known as the Dolittle mission. The soldiers were to drop bombs on any factories or war areas they could find
I have no intention of dropping nuclear bombs on Iran. As far as national governments go, it seems that if there will be any military strike on Iran, it will be with conventional weapons.
Americans dropped bombs on Laos. No guerrilla warfare occurred here.
"A citizen Skyhawk is a watch. These kinds of watches are beautiful, classy, expensive, and elegant to wear at any occasion. Their prices vary to $100 to even $530."
No. I don't think there is any connection.
Noplace, the US did not have any atomic bombs in 1944. Nobody had atomic bombs in 1944.
No. Sputnik was the "family name" for a series of satellites, and none of them dropped bombs on Earth. Not out of restraint, but because they didn't have any to drop. But the fear was that once someone had the technology to put things into orbit, then it'd be a small step to actually drop things from orbit as well.