Jet fuel is basically kerosene, which was available long before gasoline. Diesel is similar enough to kerosene that military aircraft can burn it. Refineries were producing fuel that jets could burn long before jets existed.
GPS is needed for a certain degree of precision in standoff weapons. Without it, they have to rely on laser or TV guidance, or dead reckoning. The ring laser gyros and accelerometers they use in their inertial guidance systems are far more accurate than the guidance systems used aboard V1 and V2 rockets, which were themselves surprisingly effective.
GPS is not required for navigation of manned aircraft: they can rely on terrestrial radio beacons or dead reckoning with their own inertial navigation systems.
I can’t think of a weapons system that actually requires Internet access.
Jet fuel is basically kerosene, which was available long before gasoline. Diesel is similar enough to kerosene that military aircraft can burn it. Refineries were producing fuel that jets could burn long before jets existed.
GPS is needed for a certain degree of precision in standoff weapons. Without it, they have to rely on laser or TV guidance, or dead reckoning. The ring laser gyros and accelerometers they use in their inertial guidance systems are far more accurate than the guidance systems used aboard V1 and V2 rockets, which were themselves surprisingly effective.
GPS is not required for navigation of manned aircraft: they can rely on terrestrial radio beacons or dead reckoning with their own inertial navigation systems.
I can’t think of a weapons system that actually requires Internet access.