New Photo - These American mercenaries are revered in China. Their relatives are among the few US invitees to Xi's WWII military parade

These American mercenaries are revered in China. Their relatives are among the few US invitees to Xi's WWII military parade Brad Lendon, CNNAugust 31, 2025 at 10:28 PM Flying Tiger pilot Robert T. Smith snapped this photo of his squadron in flight over China on May 28, 1942. Photograph by Robert T.

- - These American mercenaries are revered in China. Their relatives are among the few US invitees to Xi's WWII military parade

Brad Lendon, CNNAugust 31, 2025 at 10:28 PM

Flying Tiger pilot Robert T. Smith snapped this photo of his squadron in flight over China on May 28, 1942. - Photograph by Robert T. Smith/Courtesy Brad Smith

Consider this job offer:

A one-year contract to live and work in China, flying, repairing and making airplanes. Pay is as much as $16,725 a month with 30 days off a year. Housing is included, and you'll get an extra $700 a month for food. And there's an extra $11,000 for every Japanese airplane you destroy – no limit.

That's the deal – in inflation-adjusted 2025 dollars – that a few hundred Americans took in 1941 to become the heroes, and some would even say the saviors, of China.

Those American pilots, mechanics and support personnel became members of the American Volunteer Group (AVG), later known as the Flying Tigers.

The group's warplanes featured the gaping, tooth-filled mouth of a shark on their nose, a fearsome symbol still used by some US military aircraft to this day.

The symbolic fierceness was backed up by AVG pilots in combat. The Flying Tigers are credited with destroying as many as 497 Japanese planes while losing only 73.

Today, despite US-China tensions, those American mercenaries are still revered in China.

"China always remembers the contribution and sacrifice made to it by the United States and the American people during the World War II," says an entry on the Flying Tigers memorial page of China's state-run newspaper People's Daily Online.

The bond is such that the daughter and granddaughter of the Flying Tigers' founder are among the few Americans invited to Wednesday's military parade in Beijing commemorating the end of World War II.

The formation of the Flying Tigers

In the late 1930s, China had been invaded by the armies of Imperial Japan and was struggling to withstand its better equipped and unified foe. Japan was virtually unopposed in the air, able to bomb Chinese cities at will.

Leader Chiang Kai-shek, who had been able to loosely unite China's warlords under a central government, later hired American Claire Chennault, a retired US Army captain, to form an air force.

A Chinese soldier guards a line of American P-40 Flying Tiger fighter planes at an airfield somewhere in China. - US National Archives

Chennault first spent a few years putting together an air raid warning network and building airbases across China, according to the Flying Tigers' official website. In 1940, he was dispatched to the United States – still a neutral party – to find pilots and planes that could defend China against Japan.

With good contacts in the administration of US President Franklin Roosevelt and a budget that could pay Americans as much as three times what they could earn in the US military, Chennault was able to get the fliers he needed.

A deal was secured to get 100 Curtiss P-40B fighters built for Britain sent to China instead.

In his memoirs, Chennault wrote that the P-40s he got lacked a modern gun sight.

His pilots were "aiming their guns through a crude, homemade, ring-and-post gun sight instead of the more accurate optical sights used by the Air Corps and the Royal Air Force," he wrote.

What the P-40 lacked in ability, Chennault made up for in tactics, having the AVG pilots dive from a high position and unleash their heavy machine guns on the structurally weaker but more maneuverable Japanese planes.

In a low, twisting, turning dogfight, the P-40 would lose.

A ragtag group of fliers

The pilots Chennault enrolled were far from the cream of the crop.

Ninety-nine fliers, along with support personnel, made the trip to China in the fall of 1941, according to the US Defense Department history.

Some were fresh out of flight school, others flew lumbering flying boats or were ferry pilots for large bombers. They signed up for the Far East adventure to make a lot of money or because they were simply bored.

Perhaps the best known of the Flying Tigers, US Marine Greg Boyington – around whom the 1970's TV show "Black Sheep Squadron" was based – was in it for the money.

"Having gone through a painful divorce and responsible for an ex-wife and several small children, he had ruined his credit and incurred substantial debt, and the Marine Corps had ordered him to submit a monthly report to his commander on how he accounted for his pay in settling those debts," according to a US Defense Department history of the group.

US World War II veterans, including former Flying Tigers, pose for pictures with a banner as a cheering crowd welcome them at the Chongqing Jiangbei Airport on August 18, 2005. - China Photos/Getty Images

Chennault had to teach his disparate group how to be fighter pilots – and to fight as a group – essentially from scratch.

Training was rigorous and deadly. Three pilots were killed early in accidents.

During one training day, which became known as "Circus Day," eight P-40s were damaged as pilots landed too hard, or the ground crew taxied too fast, causing collisions.

Chennault expressed his disappointment at his group's first combat mission against Japanese bombers attacking the AVG base in Kunming, China, on December 20, 1941. He thought the pilots lost their discipline.

"They tried near-impossible shots and agreed later that only luck had kept them from either colliding with each other or shooting each other down," the Defense Department history says.

Still, they shot down three Japanese bombers, losing only one fighter that ran out of fuel and crash-landed.

Establishing a legend

The pilots quickly conquered their steep learning curve.

A few days after Kunming, they were deployed to Rangoon, the capital of British colonial Burma and a vital port for the supply line that got allied war materiel to Chinese troops facing the Japanese army.

Japanese bombers came at the city in waves over 11 days during the Christmas and New Year's holidays. The Flying Tigers ripped holes through the Japanese formations and cemented their fame.

"The AVG had officially knocked 75 enemy aircraft out of the skies with an undetermined number of probable kills," the group's website says. "The AVG losses were two pilots and six aircraft."

The Flying Tigers spent 10 weeks total in Rangoon, never fielding more than 25 P-40s.

American Volunteer Group aircraft flying in tight formation during World War II. - Three Lions/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

"This tiny force met a total of a thousand-odd Japanese aircraft over Southern Burma and Thailand. In 31 encounters they destroyed 217 enemy planes and probably destroyed 43. Our losses in combat were four pilots killed in the air, one killed while strafing and one taken prisoner. Sixteen P-40's were destroyed," Chennault wrote in his memoir.

Despite the Flying Tigers' heroics in the air, allied ground forces in Burma could not hold off the Japanese. Rangoon fell in March and the AVG retreated north into Burma's interior.

But they'd bought vital time for the allied war effort, tying down Japanese planes that could have been used in India or elsewhere in China and the Pacific.

Claim to fame

Though news didn't travel quickly in 1941-42, the United States – still reeling from the devastating December 7, 1941, Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor – was eager for heroes. The Flying Tigers fit the bill.

Republic Pictures cast John Wayne in the leading role of "Flying Tigers" in 1942. Movie posters showed a shark-toothed P-40 diving in attack mode.

Meanwhile, the AVG's sponsors in Washington asked the Walt Disney company to make a logo.

Disney artists came up with "a winged Bengal Tiger jumping through a stylized 'V for Victory' symbol," the US history says.

A World War II-era P-40 Warhawk, painted in the colors of the American Volunteer Group the "Flying Tigers" is on display in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, in 2007. - Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images/File

The logo didn't include the iconic shark mouth featured on the Flying Tigers' aircraft.

Chennault wrote that the shark mouth didn't originate with his group, but was from British P-40 fighters in North Africa, which in turn may have them from Germany's Luftwaffe.

"How the term Flying Tigers was derived from the shark-nosed P-40's I never will know," he wrote.

Whose country to fight for

When the US entered the war, US military leaders wanted the Flying Tigers assimilated into the US Army Air Corps.

But the pilots themselves either wanted to go back to their original services – many came from the Navy or Marine Corps – or wanted to stay as civilian contractors of the Chinese government, where the pay was much better.

Most told Chennault they'd quit before doing what Washington wanted. When the Army threatened to draft them as privates if they didn't volunteer, those who'd considered signing on opted out.

Chennault was made a brigadier general in the US Army and agreed that the Flying Tigers would become a US military outfit on July 4, 1942.

Though the Flying Tigers continued to wreak havoc on the Japanese in the spring of 1942 – striking ground targets and aircraft from China to Burma to Vietnam – it was clear the force was entering its waning days, according to US military history.

The AVG flew its last mission on the day it would cease to exist, July 4.

Four Flying Tiger P-40s faced off against a dozen Japanese fighters over Hengyang, China. The Americans shot down six of the Japanese with no losses of their own, according to a US history.

A US Air Force A-10 attack jet is pictured in Iraq in 2004. The Flying Tigers iconic nose art lives on the A-10 fleet. - Master Sgt. Cecilio Ricardo/Digital/US Air ForceA contribution never forgotten

Despite frosty relations with Washington in recent years, the bond that American mercenaries made with China 80 years ago remains untarnished.

There are at least half a dozen museums dedicated to or containing exhibits about the Flying Tigers in China, and they've been the subject of contemporary movies and cartoons.

A visitor walks past images and old uniforms of the Flying Tigers at the Anti-Japanese War Museum in Dayi county in China's Sichuan province in 2005. - Liu Jin/AFP/Getty Images

The Flying Tiger Heritage Park is on the site of an old airfield in Guilin where Chennault once had his command post in a cave.

In the US, the website for the Louisiana museum that bears Chennault's name sums up what he hoped his legacy would be at the top of its mainpage, using the last lines of the general's memoir:

"It is my fondest hope that the sign of the Flying Tiger will remain aloft just as long as it is needed and that it will always be remembered on both shores of the Pacific as the symbol of two great peoples working toward a common goal in war and peace."

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These American mercenaries are revered in China. Their relatives are among the few US invitees to Xi’s WWII military parade

These American mercenaries are revered in China. Their relatives are among the few US invitees to Xi's WWII milita...
New Photo - Yemen's Houthi rebels launch missile that lands near oil tanker in Red Sea

Yemen's Houthi rebels launch missile that lands near oil tanker in Red Sea JON GAMBRELL September 1, 2025 at 12:10 AM This is a locator map for Yemen with its capital, Sanaa.

- - Yemen's Houthi rebels launch missile that lands near oil tanker in Red Sea

JON GAMBRELL September 1, 2025 at 12:10 AM

This is a locator map for Yemen with its capital, Sanaa. (AP Photo) ()

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Yemen's Houthi rebels said Monday they launched a missile at an oil tanker off the coast of Saudi Arabia in the Red Sea, potentially renewing their attacks targeting shipping through the crucial global waterway.

Houthi military spokesman Brig. Gen. Yahya Saree claimed responsibility for the launch in a prerecorded message aired on al-Masirah, a Houthi-controlled satellite news channel. He alleged the vessel, the Liberian-flagged Scarlet Ray, had ties to Israel.

The ship's owners, Singapore-based Eastern Pacific Shipping, could not be immediately reached. However, the maritime security firm Ambrey described the ship as fitting the Houthis' "target profile, as the vessel is publicly Israeli owned."

Eastern Pacific is a company that is ultimately controlled by Israeli billionaire Idan Ofer. Eastern Pacific previously has been targeted in suspected Iranian attacks.

The British military's United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center, which monitors Mideast shipping, earlier reported a ship heard a splash and a bang off its side near Yanbu, Saudi Arabia.

From November 2023 to December 2024, the Houthis targeted more than 100 ships with missiles and drones over the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip. In their campaign so far, the Houthis have sank four vessels and killed at least eight mariners.

The Iranian-backed Houthis stopped their attacks during a brief ceasefire in the war. They later became the target of an intense weekslong campaign of airstrikes ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump before he declared a ceasefire had been reached with the rebels. The Houthis sank two vessels in July, killing at least four on board with others believed to be held by the rebels.

The Houthis' new attacks come as a new possible ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war remains in the balance. Meanwhile, the future of talks between the U.S. and Iran over Tehran's battered nuclear program is in question after Israel launched a 12-day war against the Islamic Republic in which the Americans bomb three Iranian atomic sites.

Israel just launched a series of airstrikes last week, killing the Houthis' prime minister and several Cabinet members. The Houthis' attack on the ship appears to be their response, as well as their raids on the offices of the United Nations' food, health and children's agencies in Yemen's capital Sunday in which at least 11 U.N. employees detained.

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Yemen's Houthi rebels launch missile that lands near oil tanker in Red Sea

Yemen's Houthi rebels launch missile that lands near oil tanker in Red Sea JON GAMBRELL September 1, 2025 at 12:10...
New Photo - Frank Grillo Gets Candid About the Difference Between Working with Marvel vs. DC — and Which He Prefers More (Exclusive)

Frank Grillo Gets Candid About the Difference Between Working with Marvel vs. DC — and Which He Prefers More (Exclusive) Kimberlee SpeakmanAugust 31, 2025 at 7:30 PM Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Frank Grillo on Aug.

- - Frank Grillo Gets Candid About the Difference Between Working with Marvel vs. DC — and Which He Prefers More (Exclusive)

Kimberlee SpeakmanAugust 31, 2025 at 7:30 PM

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty

Frank Grillo on Aug. 13, 2025 -

Frank Grillo, who stars as Brock Rumlow in the Marvel Cinematic Universe and Rick Flag Sr. in the DC Universe, told PEOPLE which franchise matched his preferred work style

Grillo, 60, also discussed the differences between the two franchise, saying with DC, "the scripts are in front of you," while with Marvel things are done a little more on the "fly"

The actor also discussed going toe-to-toe with John Cena's Peacemaker and Chris Evans' Captain America

Frank Grillo is explaining how collaborating with DC feels worlds apart from his time working with Marvel.

The 60-year-old actor, who stars as Rick Flag Sr. in the DC Universe (DCU) and Brock Rumlow in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) recently told PEOPLE in an exclusive conversation that there are several key differences between the two studios both on-screen and behind the scenes.

"It's different. It's not organized in the same way. [DC] is really like all the scripts are in front of you and you kind of have a real secure handle on what's happening," Grillo says at the Peacemaker Season 2 premiere.

"And there's nothing wrong with it, but [Marvel] was a little fly by the seat of your pants," he adds, referring to Marvel, at the Aug. 13 event.

Zade Rosenthal/Disney/Marvel

Frank Grillo in 'Captain America: The Winter Soldier' from 2014

He noted that Marvel was "done very well," but it can be daunting for some actors who don't know what is in store for their characters in the script.

"For me, it's a little scary to do it that way," Grillo admits.

However, there are some similarities between the two characters he plays as both Brock Rumlow and Rick Flag Sr. are soldiers who are fighting for what they believe in.

Frank Grillo in 'Superman' from 2025

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In the MCU's Captain America: The Winter Soldier from 2014, Grillo has an intense fight scene with Chris Evans' Captain America. He also goes toe-to-toe with John Cena's Peacemaker in the second season of the DCU show.

When it comes to which was the better fight, Grillo knows his answer.

"I had no problem beating the crap out of either one of them," he said, jokingly, despite his character losing the fight to Captain America. "I mean … I don't know. They were both easy pickings."

Grillo is not the only one who stars in movies for both universes, as Michael Rooker and Sean Gunn, who starred in Guardians of the Galaxy as Yondu and Kraglin, also are in the DCU, following in the footsteps of the film's director James Gunn.

James, 59, also recently weighed in on Marvel vs. DC, saying that the key distinction between the two lies in how their universes are built.

In a recent chat with Interview Magazine, the filmmaker explained that while Marvel often ties its heroes together under one overarching narrative, his approach at DC is about exploring different heroes and worlds told through standalone stories.

Charley Gallay/Getty

Sean Gunn and James Gunn in April 2023

"People say, 'Oh, the DCU is doing what MCU is.' But I think it really is a lot more to me what the Game of Thrones world is like or what Star Wars is like, because we're building a universe and then picking out little pieces of it and telling individual stories from that universe," James said.

"There is not a New York City in our DCU. There is not a Los Angeles in our DCU," he continued, describing the differences. "There is Metropolis, Evergreen and Coast City. It's a different map. It's a world in which some form of superheroes, which we call Metahumans, have existed for at least 300 years and they've been a part of our life."

Peacemaker's season 2 is streaming on HBO Max.

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Frank Grillo Gets Candid About the Difference Between Working with Marvel vs. DC — and Which He Prefers More (Exclusive)

Frank Grillo Gets Candid About the Difference Between Working with Marvel vs. DC — and Which He Prefers More (Exclusiv...
New Photo - Smith's pinch-hit homer in 9th inning gives Dodgers a 5-4 win over Diamondbacks

Smith's pinchhit homer in 9th inning gives Dodgers a 54 win over Diamondbacks August 31, 2025 at 7:24 PM 1 / 5Diamondbacks Dodgers BaseballLos Angeles Dodgers' Will Smith (16) celebrates after his walkoff solo home run with teammates during the ninth inning of a baseball game against the Arizona Dia...

- - Smith's pinch-hit homer in 9th inning gives Dodgers a 5-4 win over Diamondbacks

August 31, 2025 at 7:24 PM

1 / 5Diamondbacks Dodgers BaseballLos Angeles Dodgers' Will Smith (16) celebrates after his walkoff solo home run with teammates during the ninth inning of a baseball game against the Arizona Diamondbacks in Los Angeles, Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Pinch-hitter Will Smith homered leading off the bottom of the ninth inning to give the Los Angeles Dodgers a 5-4 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Sunday that prevented a three-game sweep.

Los Angeles took a two-game lead in the NL West over rival San Diego, which lost 7-2 at Minnesota.

Smith sent the second pitch he saw from reliever John Curtiss (2-1) a projected 420 feet into the left-center stands. His 17th home run of the season saved the Dodgers after they blew a late lead.

Corbin Carroll tied it 4-all by launching a three-run homer off Tanner Scott with two outs in the eighth.

Blake Treinen (1-2) pitched a perfect inning for the win.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto allowed one run in seven innings and matched his career high with 10 strikeouts for the Dodgers. He retired his first 10 batters before Ketel Marte bunted for a single.

Carroll, Marte and Adrian Del Castillo each had two hits for the Diamondbacks. Brandon Pfaadt permitted eight hits and four runs over 4 1/3 innings.

Andy Pages drove in two runs for the Dodgers. Freddie Freeman had an early RBI double and Miguel Rojas added a run-scoring single.

Key moment

Smith had the day off before being called upon to bat for Dalton Rushing in the ninth. Smith fouled back the first pitch before jumping on Curtiss' 96.4 mph fastball over the heart of the plate and driving it 10 rows up into the bleachers.

Key stat

Yamamoto has completed at least seven innings in five of his last 10 starts. He previously completed seven innings only three times in his first 34 career starts.

Up next

Diamondbacks RHP Ryne Nelson (7-3, 3.53 ERA) pitches Monday against Texas.

Dodgers LHP Clayton Kershaw (9-2, 3.06) opens a three-game series at Pittsburgh on Tuesday.

___

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Smith's pinch-hit homer in 9th inning gives Dodgers a 5-4 win over Diamondbacks

Smith's pinchhit homer in 9th inning gives Dodgers a 54 win over Diamondbacks August 31, 2025 at 7:24 PM 1 / 5Diam...
New Photo - Sherri Shepherd Goes Makeup-Free in Instagram Video After Doctor Recommended She Get a Facelift: 'Loving Me Just as I Am'

Sherri Shepherd Goes MakeupFree in Instagram Video After Doctor Recommended She Get a Facelift: 'Loving Me Just as I Am' Toria SheffieldAugust 31, 2025 at 7:41 PM Sherri Shepherd/Instagram; Jamie McCarthy/Getty Sherri Shepherd Sherri Shepherd is aging on her own terms.

- - Sherri Shepherd Goes Makeup-Free in Instagram Video After Doctor Recommended She Get a Facelift: 'Loving Me Just as I Am'

Toria SheffieldAugust 31, 2025 at 7:41 PM

Sherri Shepherd/Instagram; Jamie McCarthy/Getty

Sherri Shepherd

Sherri Shepherd is aging on her own terms.

The View alum shared a makeup-free video of herself on Instagram on Saturday, Aug. 30. In the post's caption, she revealed that a plastic surgeon recently told her she "needed a facelift" and also that they suggested she get facial fillers to help her look "refreshed."

"I think for right now, I am loving me just as I am," Shepherd, 58, wrote.

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A post shared by Sherri (@sherrieshepherd)

The television personality noted that the lines on her face help tell the story of her life.

"This is my natural face with no makeup. The lines around my mouth are deep because of the laughter from my soul… my eyes are droopy because of the weight of tears I have shed," she wrote. "I have two chins because I have had to hold up anxiety, worry & beautiful memories. My lips turn downward but they quickly turn upwards with joy. My nose gets fuller every year because I need to breathe in a lot of peace."

Cindy Ord/WireImage

Sherri Shepherd in New York City on May 21, 2025

This isn't the first time Shepherd has gotten real about the aging process. She previously opened up about her experience with perimenopause on the March 27 episode of her show, Sherri.

"My anatomy is still playing tricks on me. Like, every time I go to the doctor, and I think we've got it figured out, something else comes up," she said during the episode.

She then explained that she had been getting hot flashes and assumed she was going through menopause — but shared that "my doctor gave me the most shocking news: She told me I was in perimenopause."

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Jamie McCarthy/Getty

Sherri Shepherd in New York City on March 26, 2025

According to the Mayo Clinic, perimenopause is "the time before menopause when your body is getting ready to stop having periods."

Symptoms can include irregular periods, hot flashes, sleep problems and mood changes. Some women may experience symptoms as early as their 30s or as late as their 50s.

"The menopause before the menopause," Shepherd continued during the episode. "If what I'm going through right now is perimenopause, what the hell is the real menopause? You tell me ... what is a peri hot flash?"

The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now!

"I've been blaming all of my chin hairs on menopause. But by the time the real menopause gets here, I swear I'm gonna look like Sasquatch from the chin up," she joked.

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Sherri Shepherd Goes Makeup-Free in Instagram Video After Doctor Recommended She Get a Facelift: 'Loving Me Just as I Am'

Sherri Shepherd Goes MakeupFree in Instagram Video After Doctor Recommended She Get a Facelift: 'Loving Me Just as...

 

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