The correct answer is D. All three will get you on the enemy plane's tail. In flying there's often more than one way to achieve the result you want.

Congratulations, Cadet, you have completed Elementary Flight School. After a brief leave you will be posted to a Service Flight Training school.

Before you report to the Service Flight Training School, your EFS instructors and commander will determine your future direction in the Air Force. Most Elementary Flying School graduates will be assigned to the challenge of adapting to flying larger, twin-engined aircraft such as the Avro Anson, the Oxford or the Cessna Crane. This will eventually lead to flying the huge four engine aircraft of Bomber Command.A few, highly capable student pilots who are judged to be suited to the greater demands of flying fighter aircraft will receive training on the single-engined Yale and Harvard aircraft - a much more powerful and demanding than the aircraft at EFTS. This will lead to flying combat missions in high performance fighters such as the Spitfire.

You will train hard for five weeks to improve your navigational skills, master instrument and night flying, and participate in formation flying exercises.Upon graduation from an SFTS, pilots will continue their training first at a five week Advanced Flying Course, then a two week gunnery and bombing program, then they will be sent overseas to an Operational Training Unit (OTU) in Britain, before proceeding to full operational status.