Education
He subsequently entered the United States Air Force Academy in 1964 and graduated in 1968.
He subsequently entered the United States Air Force Academy in 1964 and graduated in 1968.
In 1972 during the Vietnam War, while flying as a weapon systems officer (WSO) aboard F-4 Phantom IIs, Feinstein downed five enemy aircraft, thereby becoming a flying ace, the last of five United States. aviators to become aces during that conflict. Born in Chicago, Illinois on January 29, 1945, Feinstein enlisted in the Air Force in 1963 to attend the United States Military Academy Preparatory School. His nickname/tactical callsign was "Fang." Having originally been designated as an Air Force Navigator, he was given a vision waiver after Vietnam (Feinstein wore glasses to correct mild nearsightedness to 20/20), sent to Undergraduate Pilot Training and redesignated as an Air Force pilot in the fighter community.
Feinstein subsequently served as an F-4 pilot with the 526th Tactical Fighter Squadron of the 86th Tactical Fighter Wing at Ramstein Air Base, West Germany in the mid-1970s.
From 1977 to 1978, he was assigned to Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama as a student at the Air Command and Staff College, followed by another flying assignment with the 31st Tactical Training Wing at Homestead Air Force Base, Florida. Reassigned to the 9th Air Force staff at Shaw Air Force Base, South Carolina in the 1990s, Feinstein also flew as Airborne Command Element Director aboard East-3 Sentry AWACS aircraft during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm from August 1990 to February 1991.
Lieutenant Colonel Feinstein retired from the United States. Air Force on 1 July 1996.