Ah airspeed confusion. Happens more often than you think! Throw in how does one accurately measure it during flight tests regardless of weather and you have a lot more fun.
In aviation there are 3 basic speeds: GROUND speed, TRUE airspeed, and INDICATED airspeed. Ground speeds are affected by wind conditions and true airspeed (so a tail wind adds to your ground speed). TRUE airspeed is the speed of the aircraft relative to the AIR MASS it is flying through (you can get higher true airspeeds when you go higher and this is the 'standard' for how fast a plane goes). INDICATED airspeed is how fast you are relative to an airmass at sealevel at standard conditions.
Now the funny bit is on things like the U-2, the TRUE airspeed (which dictates loads on the aircraft) can be maxed out with the INDICATED (which dictates stall) at the minimum! Your true will increase as your indicated decreases as you go up high.
True airspeed is constant....only your ability to reach them changes with weather/atmosphere.
An aircraft will stall at the same indicated airspeed regardless of weather/atmosphere.
At low level with no wind, TRUE airspeed and GROUND speed should match. At low level with ISO standard atmosphere TRUE and INDICATED will match. With no wind, all three will match.
The original gold standard for measuring airspeed for record breaking required the aircraft to fly no higher than 200ft above ground level dead straight for 3km 3 times!! This was done all the way up to Darryl Greenamyer in an F-104 at something like 968mph!!! This low level was done because of the above. Now-a-days there are other tricks
Fly low, go fast
Tailwinds and high GROUND speeds!