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#1
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I've got this book entitled "spyplane" about the various recon
aircraft used by western and eastern block countries during the cold war and i just noticed a strange photo . in it is a ELINT an-12 cub being flanked by a F-4 phantom from the USS saratoga . Ok the pic looked normal at first and then i see in the left hand corner what looks like a vought A-7 Corsair in the background as well . I can tell its a Corsair because i can see the shape of the aircraft and the refueling probe scab . Does anyone know what and why a Corsair may be doing escorting a soviet recon plane alongside a more dedicated interceptor? |
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"Prowlus" wrote...
Does anyone know what and why a Corsair may be doing escorting a soviet recon plane alongside a more dedicated interceptor? The A-7 was probably a tanker. |
#3
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bfoong- Does anyone know what and why a Corsair may be doing escorting a
soviet recon plane alongside a more dedicated interceptor? BRBR All aircraft on a CV can be called upon to escort a Soviet A/C. On Midway, sometimes the alert 5 was A-7s only, with a Aim-9, as the wind was too low for F-4s to fly. It was all about finding the Soviet A/C and providing escort as it found the CV. Taking pictures, that sort of thing. I have escorted many Badgers, Bears and Mays and have often been joined by A-7s and A-6s...no big deal. P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
#4
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Don't forget we escorted them in the Prowler as well. We had a couple extra
sets of hands to take pictures. :-) TheECMO "Pechs1" wrote in message ... bfoong- Does anyone know what and why a Corsair may be doing escorting a soviet recon plane alongside a more dedicated interceptor? BRBR All aircraft on a CV can be called upon to escort a Soviet A/C. On Midway, sometimes the alert 5 was A-7s only, with a Aim-9, as the wind was too low for F-4s to fly. It was all about finding the Soviet A/C and providing escort as it found the CV. Taking pictures, that sort of thing. I have escorted many Badgers, Bears and Mays and have often been joined by A-7s and A-6s...no big deal. P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#5
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![]() "Pechs1" wrote in message ... bfoong- Does anyone know what and why a Corsair may be doing escorting a soviet recon plane alongside a more dedicated interceptor? BRBR All aircraft on a CV can be called upon to escort a Soviet A/C. On Midway, sometimes the alert 5 was A-7s only, with a Aim-9, as the wind was too low for F-4s to fly. It was all about finding the Soviet A/C and providing escort as it found the CV. Taking pictures, that sort of thing. I have escorted many Badgers, Bears and Mays and have often been joined by A-7s and A-6s...no big deal. I may have misunderstood - correct me if I'm wrong - but are you saying the escort aircraft would allow (or escort) the Soviet aircraft close to the aircraft carrier so it could take pictures rather than escorting it away from any ships? If so, why? Mike |
#6
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I may have misunderstood - correct me if I'm wrong - but are you saying
theescort aircraft would allow (or escort) the Soviet aircraft close to theaircraft carrier so it could take pictures rather than escorting it awayfrom any ships? If so, why?Mike Mike, During peace time in international waters you can fly were ever you want. It wasn't unusual to have them in the Case one marshal stack or down in the landing pattern. During the Iranina crisis the Mays (IL-38) would do flight deck level passes close to port trying to see in the hangar bay. We had the rescue (CH-53) helos on board below decks. I have a picture taken on Christmas day 88 flying escort on a bear in my trusty KA-6d. I was suprised how fast he was at altitude. Sparky |
#7
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Mike,
The idea of an escort is to keep the "bad guy" in your sights so that if things go horribly wrong you are able to take him down right away. There is supposed to be a no-fly bubble around all ships at sea (I forget how big, but something like 1,000 feet sticks in my memory). Theoretically you are not to fly within that bubble, but then again, in peacetime, the only way to enforce that is to send off a stinging note to the offenders ambassador. "Mike P." wrote in message . .. "Pechs1" wrote in message ... bfoong- Does anyone know what and why a Corsair may be doing escorting a soviet recon plane alongside a more dedicated interceptor? BRBR All aircraft on a CV can be called upon to escort a Soviet A/C. On Midway, sometimes the alert 5 was A-7s only, with a Aim-9, as the wind was too low for F-4s to fly. It was all about finding the Soviet A/C and providing escort as it found the CV. Taking pictures, that sort of thing. I have escorted many Badgers, Bears and Mays and have often been joined by A-7s and A-6s...no big deal. I may have misunderstood - correct me if I'm wrong - but are you saying the escort aircraft would allow (or escort) the Soviet aircraft close to the aircraft carrier so it could take pictures rather than escorting it away from any ships? If so, why? Mike -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#8
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"Mike P." wrote:
It was all about finding the Soviet A/C and providing escort as it found the CV. Taking pictures, that sort of thing. I have escorted many Badgers, Bears and Mays and have often been joined by A-7s and A-6s...no big deal. I may have misunderstood - correct me if I'm wrong - but are you saying the escort aircraft would allow (or escort) the Soviet aircraft close to the aircraft carrier so it could take pictures rather than escorting it away from any ships? If so, why? Take it in two steps, Mike. but are you saying the escort aircraft would allow (or escort) the Soviet aircraft close to the aircraft carrier so it could take pictures Take the "(or escort)" close to the aircraft carrier implication first.. No. Our aircraft merely stay close to the other country's [it isn't just Soviets, when they were doing it, we'd send up our aircraft if it was a Brit, Spanish, Japanese, Moroccan, anyone's aircraft] while the other country's aircraft was doing whatever it was doing. rather than escorting it away from any ships? Our aircraft have no legal right to deny the Soviet, or any other country's aircraft from flying anywhere it desires to over the ocean, except for such internationally negotiated "safe distance" requirements vis-a-vis the aircraft flying close to the ship/carrier involved. Just out of curiosity Mike. How would *you* go about "escorting it away from any ships", if a Soviet aircraft persisted in not allowing you to escort it away from any ships. Would you use a missile on it, or go the macho route and shoot it down with your guns? Or would you flirt with a Fox 4 by playing Turkey with the Bear chicken trying to "muscle" it away from the carrier? Note that we benefited from this "free access for overflights", too. One personably memorable case was that of VMA-231, a squadron I joined just after its "test cruise" on the FDR to determine if Harriers [AV-8As in this case] could fit into big-deck carrier operations. A med cruise, the timing was right for the FDR, including our Harriers, to observe the Kiev and its Forgers upon its first venture into the Mediterranean. We [both the FDRs Navy aircraft and VMA-231 itself] took a *lot* of pictures of the Kiev and its operations. -- OJ III [Email to Yahoo address may be burned before reading. Lower and crunch the sig and you'll net me at comcast.] |
#9
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On Tue, 21 Sep 2004 00:05:08 +1000, "Mike P."
wrote: I may have misunderstood - correct me if I'm wrong - but are you saying the escort aircraft would allow (or escort) the Soviet aircraft close to the aircraft carrier so it could take pictures rather than escorting it away from any ships? If so, why? How could they possibly prevent this? It's international waters in peacetime. The Soviet aircraft has just as much right to be there as the carrier does. The only way to positively stop an aircraft from going somewhere is to shoot it down, which is generally a Bad Idea in peacetime. -- Andrew Toppan --- --- "I speak only for myself" "Haze Gray & Underway" - Naval History, DANFS, World Navies Today, Photo Features, Military FAQs, and more - http://www.hazegray.org/ |
#10
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