Thread: ASuW tactics
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Old September 6th 04, 07:38 PM
Mike Kanze
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Woody,

The book is a compilation of a bunch of A-6E (and at least one Prowler)
mishaps. I was surprised to have met or known several of the folks who
were at the controls of many of them--kind of a rush for me.


Get ready for another rush, small as it likely will be. The cockpit
security "malfunction" in THE INTRUDERS - in which the VDI comes shooting
into the pilot's face during the cat stroke - was a KA-6D mishap from
VA-95's 1973 cruise. (I've posted the story on this previously to RAMN.)

Difference here is that both Dave Cohen and I survived. IIRC, one or both
of Coonts' fictitious aircrew buy it.

Agree that THE INTRUDERS is not one of Coonts' better oeuvres. My guess is
that he wrote it after writing several of the other Grafton books, to make
use of the leftover notes, etc. he compiled for FLIGHT OF THE INTRUDER. If
so, good business decision to turn these otherwise unused materials into a
cash stream.

Coonts was based at Whidbey almost contemporaneously with me, except that he
was invariably deployed while I was ashore, and got out sometime during our
cruise. So I never met him, although I did my share of drinking with his
squadron bubbas after we returned to the Rock.

--
Mike Kanze

"If history repeats itself, I should think we can expect the same thing
again."

- NBC softball analyst at the 2004 Summer Olympics (This one earned the Yogi
Berra Award.)


"Doug "Woody" and Erin Beal" wrote in message
...
On 9/4/04 11:52 AM, in article ,
"Paul Michael Brown" wrote:

I'm curious about the US doctrine for anti-shipping attacks 25 years
ago -
say, the late 70's/early 80's?


This topic is covered (fictionally of course) in Stephen Coonts novel
"The
Intruders," which is set in the mid-70s. The protagonist is assigned to
study how best to attack a Soviet surface combatant (cruiser?
destroyer?).
In the novel, no precision ordnance is available and the attack plan
requires flying into the evelope of both SAMs and AAA. When queried by
his
skipper as to his conclusions, the protagonist says "I've become a big
fan
of attack submarines lately."


I just read that book recently. Not the best of Coonts' books. Jake
Grafton just gets more and more spec ops, and frankly, even though , many
of
the Intruder pilots I have known might *think* they could pull off the
crap
that Grafton does, they couldn't. (Just my editorial opinion...)

The book is a compilation of a bunch of A-6E (and at least one Prowler)
mishaps. I was surprised to have met or known several of the folks who
were
at the controls of many of them--kind of a rush for me.

I vote for more sea stories and less "Jake gets shot down and kills bad
guys
with M-60's."

--Woody