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aerial photograph

View of Tengchong from B-25 Mitchell bombers during battle with Japanese ground forces, flying over Tengchung (Tengchong), near the China-Burma border in far SW China.
Image of a very odd explosion near Tengch0ng--out in the middle of a rice paddy. What this a bomb blast or an aircraft crash? Image taken from B-25 Mitchell bombers during battle with Japanese ground forces, flying near Tengchung (Tengchong), near the China-Burma border in far SW China.
Smoke rises after attack by B-25 Mitchell bombers during battle with Japanese ground forces, flying in the rough area of Tengchung (Tengchong), near the China-Burma border in far SW China.
Smoke rises on the ground after an attack by American B-25s in either SW China, Indochina, or the Burma area. This might be fairly close to Tengchong in China.
Railroad yards at Kwanshuishih, China, 75 miles north of Hankow on the Ping-Han R.R., were hit by B-25S of the Chinese-American Composite Wing's 'Avenger' Bomb Squadron with 88 percent of the bombs exploding on the target area. Tracks were completely destroyed and thirteen storage buildings were blown to bits with additional buildings receiving severe blast damage. Image courtesy of Tony...
5315th ITC Hostel at Guilin, Guangxi province, China, during WWII. US Army Signal Corps photo, provided by Donald M. Cook.
Aerial view of a railroad bridge just blown up by 22nd Bombardment Squadron in the CBI.
"Kweilin in aerial photo (land of a thousand breasts)." Flying over distinct karst formations in Guangxi province, near Guilin (Kweilin), in China during WWII.
Interdicted by the Flying Tigers since they evacuated on November 7, 1944, the former 14th Air Force advanced base at Liuchow (Liuzhou), vital railroad and highway junction in central Kwangsi (Guangxi) and in the path of general Japanese withdrawals from the Lung Valley and Siang corridor that end the Japanese dreams of a Greater East Asia land line from Singapore...