Before people get more worked up by the allied flags on the two planes:
Regarding Gerald Johnson, "Earlier in the war, Johnson mistakenly shot down a Wirraway he though was a Zero. Apparently he was scrambled from Oz to intercept some Zeros and was told no Aussie aircraft were in the area. Anyway, the pilot ditched his Wirraway and only suffered some scratches. The kill marking was only on Gerry's plane for a couple months in 1945." From
http://forum.largescaleplanes.com/index.php?showtopic=24245also see
http://veterantributes.org/TributeDetail.php?recordID=569Regarding Louis Curdes: "Curdes turned out to sea and saw a familiar aircraft lumbering toward him.
It was an American C-47 transport, heading for a landing at the enemy airfield he'd just shot up. Later he would learn that it was lost, its radio was out and it was nearly out of fuel. Its pilot believed the strip he'd spotted lay in American-held territory.
Curdes flew in front of the C-47 twice to try to make it turn away, but its pilot
refused. He knew of only one other way to stop the disaster-bound craft. He dropped behind the C-47, which now was curving toward the island on its final approach. He cut loose with his six .50-caliber machine guns and destroyed one of its two engines.
Then he dropped behind it again, crossed to the other side and destroyed its other engine. The transport crashed into the sea. But Curdes' shooting had been so precise that he hadn't struck the plane's fuselage or harmed the dozen Americans, including two nurses, inside.
Curdes scrawled a note, flew above the rafts at an altitude of 50 feet, and dropped them the message: "For God's sake, keep away from shore. Japs there." The Americans were rescued by seaplanes the next morning. A few days later,
Curdes received his second Distinguished Flying Cross and became the only U.S. flier in the war to be decorated for shooting down another U.S. plane in combat."
from
http://www.news-sentinel.com/article/2014140609785