Yeah he looks real concerned. Notice the elbow resting on the edge of the cockpit ? Or the nonchalant glace at the photographer ? But then again : He is a walking, talking, flying American. Que sera sera.
Oh this can't be right,: Tornado GR1 fighter is put up for sale by a former RAF technician in order to raise funds to restore a Lightning warbird. He is asking for £20,000 to sell the aircraft.
U.S. Army Air Force, Desert Camouflage. North American B-25H-J Mitchell medium bomber over North Africa, 1943. It was introduced in 1941 and named in honor of Major General William “Billy” Mitchell, a pioneer of U.S. Military Aviation.
Probably started out as an "H" and was modified as a "J". From Wiki: The final, and most numerous, series of the Mitchell, the B-25J, looked less like earlier series apart from the well-glazed bombardier's nose of nearly identical appearance to the earliest B-25 subtypes.[17] Instead, the J followed the overall configuration of the H series from the cockpit aft. It had the forward dorsal turret and other armament and airframe advancements. All J models included four .50 in (12.7 mm) light-barrel Browning AN/M2 guns in a pair of "fuselage packages", conformal gun pods each flanking the lower cockpit, each pod containing two Browning M2s. By 1945, however, combat squadrons removed these. The J series restored the co-pilot's seat and dual flight controls. The factory-made kits available to the Air Depot system to create the strafer-nose B-25J-2. This configuration carried a total of 18 .50 in (12.7 mm) light-barrel AN/M2 Browning M2 machine guns: eight in the nose, four in the flank-mount conformal gun pod packages, two in the dorsal turret, one each in the pair of waist positions, and a pair in the tail – with 14 of the guns either aimed directly forward or aimed to fire directly forward for strafing missions. Some aircraft had eight 5-inch (130 mm) high-velocity aircraft rockets.[17] NAA introduced the J-2 into production in alternating blocks at the J-22. Total J series production was 4,318.