Titled after the wartime nickname for the part of North Korea that was
the epicentre of a bitter struggle for air superiority over the Korean
Peninsula, MiG Alley offers an in-depth analysis of the US Air Force's
war in Korea, packed with interesting and exciting personal stories
based on first-person testimony from both American and Soviet sources.
Following the end of the Korean War, the prevailing myth in the West was
that of the absolute supremacy of US Air Force pilots and aircraft over
their Soviet-supplied opponents. The claims of the 10:1 victory-loss
ratio achieved by the US Air Force fighter pilots flying the North
American F-86 Sabre against their communist adversaries, among other
such fabrications, went unchallenged until the end of the Cold War, when
Soviet records of the conflict were finally opened.
Packed with first-hand accounts and covering the full range of US Air
Force activities over Korea, MiG Alley brings the war vividly to life
and the record is finally set straight on a number of popular
fabrications. Thomas McKelvey Cleaver expertly threads together US and
Russian sources to reveal the complete story of this bitter struggle in
the Eastern skies.