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Steve Ritchie became the last United States Air Force pilot to achieve ace status in aerial combat—52 years ago, and nobody has matched him since. Flying an F-4D Phantom over North Vietnam in 1972, Ritchie shot down five MiG-21 fighters in just five months using AIM-7 Sparrow radar missiles exclusively. This made him unique among Vietnam War aces: no gun kills, only missiles that most pilots considered unreliable. The AIM-7 Sparrow had an abysmal 8% success rate early in the Vietnam War. Pilots hated it. Ritchie's personal success rate was 100%—five missiles fired, five kills confirmed. His back-seater Charles DeBellevue operated the radar while Ritchie perfected tactics that defeated North Vietnamese countermeasures. They fired Sparrows from angles other crews avoided, maintaining radar locks through maneuvers that normally broke them. But Ritchie's August 28, 1972 ace-making kill contains a mystery: American records confirm the engagement, but Vietnamese People's Air Force records show no losses that day. One side is wrong. Fifty years later, the discrepancy remains unexplained. No USAF pilot has become an ace since Ritchie. Desert Storm produced no aces despite 38 air-to-air kills. Modern air combat doctrine, beyond-visual-range missiles, and total American air superiority have made ace-making scenarios obsolete. Ritchie's F-4D Phantom (tail number 66-7463) now sits in the National Museum of the US Air Force in Dayton, Ohio—a weathered artifact representing the end of an era in fighter combat. #ColdWar #VietnamWar #F4Phantom #FighterAce #MilitaryHistory #AviationHistory #AirCombat #USAF #MiG21 #SparrowMissile #SteveRitchie #LastAce #AerialWarfare #MilitaryAviation #ColdWarHistory PRIMARY SOURCES Books: Fighter Pilot: The Memoirs of Legendary Ace Robin Olds (relevant for VPAF tactics and F-4 operations context) Vietnam Air Losses: United States Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps Fixed-Wing Aircraft Losses in Southeast Asia 1961-1973 by Chris Hobson Red Eagles: America's Secret MiGs by Steve Davies (contains declassified intelligence on VPAF operations) Clashes: Air Combat Over North Vietnam 1965-1972 by Marshall L. Michel III The Hanoi Commitment by James A. Donovan (contains pilot accounts and kill confirmation procedures) Military Documents: USAF Historical Research Agency: Linebacker operations mission reports, May-August 1972 Declassified USAF kill confirmation board records, 555th TFS, 1972 Project CHECO (Contemporary Historical Examination of Current Operations) reports on air-to-air combat, 1972 After-action reports from 432nd Tactical Reconnaissance Wing, Udorn RTAFB Vietnamese Sources: Lich Su Khong Quan Nhan Dan Viet Nam (History of the Vietnam People's Air Force) - partial English translations available through academic sources Post-war VPAF pilot interviews conducted by István Toperczer (published in various aviation history journals) Interviews/Oral Histories: Steve Ritchie oral history, USAF Historical Research Agency Charles DeBellevue interviews (various aviation publications, 1970s-1990s) Technical Documentation: AIM-7 Sparrow technical manuals and performance data (declassified portions) F-4D flight manual and weapons delivery procedures Westinghouse APQ-120 radar system specifications