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Ogawa found that the B-29s were more vulnerable when they were maintaining level flight in their bombing runs and could not employ evasive maneuvers. Exploiting this weakness during night actions, he shot two of the bombers down by frontal attack, firing at the nose. He continued with his aerial
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successes and by August 1945 when the war ended, he had built up a confirmed score of seven B-29 bombers downed, as well as two P-51 Mustang fighters. This made him the highest scoring pilot against B-29s in the 70th Sentai, his air group. By the order of
General
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Makoto Ogawa stands next to his fighter aircraft marked with two stylized eagles, indicating his first two aerial victories, in 1945
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Toward the end of 1941, Ogawa was sent to
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in his home prefecture. After a few years, he enrolled in the
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to living soldiers who demonstrated exceptionally valorous action in combat.
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After the war Ogawa became a businessman and lived in Tokyo.
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This article is about the fighter pilot. For the singer, see
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Hata, Ikuhiko; Izawa, Yashuho; Shores, Christopher (2012).
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1/32 scale
Nakajima Ki44-II Hei Shoki (Tojo) Fighter
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