Restored B-26 Fighter-Bomber - Replica of the Aircraft used by the Liberation Air Force, Fuerza Aérea de Liberación and Monument dedicated to Pilots

The Douglas B-26 Invader was restored as ship No. 931. It was flown by Gustavo &quot;Gus&quot; Ponzoa with navigator Rafael Gárcia Pujol.  

The Douglas A-26/B-26 bomber was the only American bomber to fly missions in three wars. After World War II, it served as a first-line bomber during the Korean War and during the Vietnam War. Douglas started the A-26 in 1941 to follow the A-20/DB-7 Havoc bomber.  

Douglas built 2,503 A-26/B-26 Invaders. During production, a number of modifications were progressively introduced so that by 1948, the A-26 was one of the few wartime aircraft types still in service with the post-war U.S. Air Force. When the famous Martin B-26 Marauder retired and the Air Force deleted the designation &quot;A&quot; (for attack category), the Douglas Invader took on the B-26 designation.