Rico's friend Kelley, also a history and airplane junkie, forwards this Yahoo article by Miki Toda with the note that 'it does not explain, however, why there's a gaijin flying it':
One of Mitsubishi's legendary World War Two fighter planes took to the skies over Kanoya, Japan recently.Rico says the gaijin is probably the only person certified to fly the damn thing...
The restored Zero (photo) made a brief flight to and from a naval base in southern Japan. Decorated former US Air Force pilot Skip Holm flew the aircraft.
Zeros were considered one of the most capable fighter planes in World War Two, rivaling the British Spitfire. Their long range allowed them to play a prominent role in the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawai'i. Only a few are still in operating condition.
While rented Zeroes have flown in Japan on occasion in the past, this was the first for the widely-used Model 22 A6M fighter with its round wingtips.
This particular plane was found decaying in Papua New Guinea in the 1970s. It was owned by an American, until Japanese businessman Masahiro Ishizuka purchased it and brought it to Japan last September. "I wanted for the people of Japan, especially young people, to know about this Zero airplane, as well as those who are old who remember the past," Ishizuka said. "Each of them should have different thoughts and perspectives on this, but I just want people to know how Japan has developed its technology."
The Japanese see the aircraft both as a symbol of their country's technological advance, and a reminder of the harrowing history of the war. In the last phase of the fighting, they were used for kamikaze attacks. Kamikaze pilots took off from the same airfield as Wednesday's flight, Kanoya Naval Air Base on the island of Kyushu.
Under its previous American owner, the plane made an appearance in the Hollywood movie Pearl Harbor, and at various events in the United States.
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