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On 22 October 1980 two F-4D from the 71st Tactical Fighter Wing (TAB 7,
Shiraz) as usual in very low altitude on their way to attack a large Iraqi Air Base at Habbaniyah, some 120 kilometers due west from Baghdad. As they flew into the SAM defense of the Iraqi capital, Sadly one Phantom was shot down by an Iraqi SA-6 surface-to-air missile and crew was captured. While the other F-4 out maneuvered the second missile by making an 11 G turn. Mean while trying to jam the enemy radar emissions with its ALQ-109 jammer pod. The crew soon realized that it was impossible to continue the attack and turned towards the secondary target at Al-Bakr oil refinery. After the successful attack, the F-4D turned toward the border, with two Iraqi MiG-23MS in hot pursuit. The Iranian pilot jettisoned it's empty drop tanks and blasted on high speed at very low altitude going back with Iraqi's behind him firing couple of R-13 (NATO code AA-2 Atoll) missiles. All could be evaded, however, some 70 kilometers from the border the Phantom crew realized that they spent to much fuel, and they could not even reach the border any longer. Thus, they declared an emergency and prepared to eject because they had no other alternative. At this time the supporting Boeing 707 tanker and two F-14A Tomcats that had waited behind the border did cross into Iraq to provide fuel. At the time of contact between the F-4D and Boeing 707 there were only 700lb. fuel left in the tanks of the Phantom. Although the whole refueling operation was undertaken in medium altitude and Iraqi radar had full picture of what was going on not even one Iraqi interceptor dare come close. submitted by Iranian F-4 pilot |
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"Amir" wrote in message
oups.com... On 22 October 1980 two F-4D from the 71st Tactical Fighter Wing..... submitted by Iranian F-4 pilot Sounds like B.S. to me. Why not take him out when he is most vulnerable and get the tanker aircraft at the same time? Also, an 11G turn without blacking out? With a jammer pod attached? Hmm...... JD |
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On 1 Aug 2005 00:36:03 -0700, "Amir" wrote:
On 22 October 1980 two F-4D from the 71st Tactical Fighter Wing (TAB 7, Shiraz) as usual in very low altitude on their way to attack a large Iraqi Air Base at Habbaniyah, some 120 kilometers due west from Baghdad. As they flew into the SAM defense of the Iraqi capital, Sadly one Phantom was shot down by an Iraqi SA-6 surface-to-air missile and crew was captured. While the other F-4 out maneuvered the second missile by making an 11 G turn. Mean while trying to jam the enemy radar emissions with its ALQ-109 jammer pod. Well, since you asked for opinions--- 1.) If the target was 120 kilometers from the capital, why were they in SA-6 range from Baghdad SAMs? Were they 100 kilometers off course? 2.) How did they know they pulled 11G? The g-meter doesn't go that high. 3.) Was the ALQ-109 an Iranian invention? Do you mean the ALQ-119? 4.) Did they not know that once you are in end-game doing evasive maneuvers you are long past the point where an ECM pod does anything for you. 5.) Was there no pre-mission planning, analysis of defenses, SEAD support? The crew soon realized that it was impossible to continue the attack and turned towards the secondary target at Al-Bakr oil refinery. If the target was 120k from Baghdad and they were inside the Baghdad SAM defenses how were they going to find a different target with a single F-4? And, what would be the Pk of a single, now-overstressed F-4 against an oil refinery? After the successful attack, the F-4D turned toward the border, with two Iraqi MiG-23MS in hot pursuit. How did the singleton F-4D know that they were -23MS? Without a wingman and having just been engaged in a divert to a secondary target, how did he spot both aircraft and make a specific target ID? The Iranian pilot jettisoned it's empty drop tanks Why did he still have tanks at that point? Wouldn't he have blown the tanks with the first SA-6 engagement? Or, maybe when he had to divert to a secondary target? Would he know that the tanks would separate after an 11G overstress? and blasted on high speed at very low altitude going back with Iraqi's behind him firing couple of R-13 (NATO code AA-2 Atoll) missiles. Nothing smarter than blowing along at high speed tail-on to a pair of IR missiles. All could be evaded, however, some 70 kilometers from the border the Phantom crew realized that they spent to much fuel, and they could not even reach the border any longer. Thus, they declared an emergency and prepared to eject because they had no other alternative. At this time the supporting Boeing 707 tanker and two F-14A Tomcats that had waited behind the border did cross into Iraq to provide fuel. Well, duh! Did the F-4 driver have a pre-planned "bingo"? Why was the supporting tanker not in a position to support? What were the Toms doing on the tankers wing while the singleton strike "package" is engaged with pursuing interceptors? And, with look-down, shoot-down capability, why aren't the Toms chasing the MiG-23MS pair back where they came from? Does no one have a radio? At the time of contact between the F-4D and Boeing 707 there were only 700lb. fuel left in the tanks of the Phantom. Although the whole refueling operation was undertaken in medium altitude and Iraqi radar had full picture of what was going on not even one Iraqi interceptor dare come close. They were probably doubled over with laughter. submitted by Iranian F-4 pilot Submitted by USAF F-4 pilot and Wild Weasel #2488. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" www.thunderchief.org www.thundertales.blogspot.com |
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Just what base did the two F4Ds start from? Shiraz, on my atlas, is
about 590 statute miles from Al-Ramadi, which is by coincidence about 120 kilometers west of Baghdad. And that 590 mile RTB makes Shiraz a long ways away for a post-strike recovery base. No wonder he got short on fuel; he was short when he took off. I'm not saying it couldn't be done, but it'd take tanking on both legs and both ARIPs would be dangerously close to Iraq. Pretty shaky, I'd say. But what do I know - I've only got 2k hours in the F4. Walt BJ |
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![]() Amir wrote: On 22 October 1980 two F-4D from the 71st Tactical Fighter Wing (TAB 7, Shiraz) as usual in very low altitude on their way to attack a large Iraqi Air Base at Habbaniyah, some 120 kilometers due west from Baghdad. As they flew into the SAM defense of the Iraqi capital, Sadly one Phantom was shot down by an Iraqi SA-6 surface-to-air missile and crew was captured. Lots more detail than in his other posts. Hmmmm Also, would Iranian jets commit to flying single-ship missions that early in the war? I know that the Phantom drivers were reputed as experts, but a single ship seems a bit light - and lacking the support you get from a section. While the other F-4 out maneuvered the second missile by making an 11 G turn. 11g's - with full stores? Mean while trying to jam the enemy radar emissions with its ALQ-109 jammer pod. The crew soon realized that it was impossible to continue the attack and turned towards the secondary target at Al-Bakr oil refinery. Were the combatants of the PGW-I hitting each other's petro-industrial assets that soon? I always thought that there was a short interval, eventually broken of course, in which they focused on other targets like factories unrelated to oil production, and power stations. After the successful attack, the F-4D turned toward the border, with two Iraqi MiG-23MS in hot pursuit. The Iranian pilot jettisoned it's empty drop tanks and blasted on high speed at very low altitude going back with Iraqi's behind him firing couple of R-13 (NATO code AA-2 Atoll) missiles. All could be evaded, So these Phantoms are not only zooming for the border at top speed and at bottom altitude, but they're maneuvering as well? however, some 70 kilometers from the border the Phantom crew realized that they spent to much fuel, and they could not even reach the border any longer. Thus, they declared an emergency and prepared to eject because they had no other alternative. At this time the supporting Boeing 707 tanker and two F-14A Tomcats that had waited behind the border did cross into Iraq to provide fuel. At the time of contact between the F-4D and Boeing 707 there were only 700lb. fuel left in the tanks of the Phantom. Although the whole refueling operation was undertaken in medium altitude and Iraqi radar had full picture of what was going on not even one Iraqi interceptor dare come close. Was the fear of the F-14 so firmly established that 1) Iraqi pilots knew to avoid them whenever they crossed into Iraqi AS? and 2)Iranian pilots of large and non-maneuvering tankers could rely on that fear to bring their large and valuable aircraft into enemy airspace? |
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