During the war, the C7, C123, C-141, C-5 Galaxy, and the C-130 were used. Post war the C-5 might still be in the inventory, as the C-141...the C-130 Hercules will probably be used for years down the road. The C-130 is like the B52...perfection; hard to improve upon perfection!
post-revisionist
By ship (transports).
Zaibatsu
Primarily front paging the "Air War" against them; "War Pirates" (US Airmen).
In the beginning of the war US Naval aux vessels normally had a 40mm twin mount or a 5" mount. But by the mid/late 60's the vast majority of US personnel enroute to RVN were flown by Air Force transports or chartered civilian airliners.
The French Armee de L"air, which was essentially in home guard or defensive mode, did not, to my knowledge, use Blimps in world war II. after the capitulation they were essentially in a puppet-defensive mode. They did employ all kinds of flying boats- heavy duty seaplanes such as the Latecoere which even had retractable counterweights on the wingtips- and six engines. these were intended primarily as Air Liners- transports, not combat craft.
The Liberty ships and the DC-3 (C-47) air transports.
Post war Europe means "after the war".
I'm presuming that you're asking after the British/English air force - they were called the RAF (Royal Air Force) and primarily flew Spitfires and Hurricanes.
Post means after, so post-Civil War means after the Civil War ended.
Post war is after World War II; 1945. Post cold war is after the cold war; 1990 (even though the papers were signed in 1991).
Post-War was created on 2006-08-22.