It's a fact of life that all the rules and regulations that pilots have
to deal with are for the most part the result of something going wrong.
There are far more "Don't do this" rules than there are "Please do
that" rules!!
Here's the setting of the story. It's late afternoon on a
December day in England. Two pilots, very experienced in the A-10 and
good friends to boot, are briefing to fly their second air to air
training sortie of the day. The mission is another ACM (Air Combat
Maneuvers) sortie against a single USAF Aggressor F-5 (Aggressor -
elite AF squadron of F-5s that fly as bandits against AF operational
squadrons for advanced air to air training).
Rather than being planned as a full blown, anything goes, turn and
burn, the mission is briefed as a defensive 2v1 with the F-5 playing
the role of a Mig-21 and attacking from a visual six o'clock perch
(perch - the starting position for the attacker in an engagement,
visual - this means all participants will have each other in sight
before the engagement begins, six o'clock - the F-5 will start at the
A-10s six o'clock and about one mile range The A-10s will be in line
formation( side by side), 6000 feet apart).
The mission objectives are limited. In the AF, ACM means
"initial offensive and defensive moves against one or more bandits,
usually flown from a visual set up. "Initial moves" means that today,
the A-10s will maneuver to defeat the initial F-5 attack and then will
terminate the engagement before the engagement develops into a furball.
The engagement is terminated with a radio call, "Knock It Off"(KIO).
The KIO point in this mission will be when the supporting A-10 achieves
a re-entry position for an attack on the F-5.
The rules that apply to the conduct of the mission are known as
the ROE (Rules Of Engagement). ROE can be tailored to meet the mission
objectives. The flight lead does that for this sortie. He specifically
briefs that cross turns will NOT be flown as a defensive technique
(cross turn - a break turn in response to an attack from the flight's
six o'clock. In a cross turn, the two aircraft turn INTO each other. In
a standard break, the two aircraft would turn in the SAME direction).
The lead briefs this restriction to keep the mission objectives
limited...normally, a cross turn would be an integral part of A-10
defensive options.
The flight proceeds as planned up to the third engagement. The
three aircraft reposition according to the pre-briefed plan. The F-5
maneuvers back to the perch behind the A-10 on the right. This
engagement has been briefed as a "hit and switch". The plan is for the
F-5 to attack the A-10 on the right, wait for the break, and then
switch his attack to the A-10 on the left.
The learning objectives in this ACM engagement are two-fold.
First, the two A-10 pilots must observe the rules of the "Engaged
Fighter/Supporting Fighter Contract". This will involve proper radio
discipline and adherence to flight path deconfliction responsibilities.
Secondly, the two A-10 pilots must aggressively maneuver to neutralize
the F-5 while attempting to maneuver to threaten the F-5. So the DLOs
(Desired Learning Objectives)are proper radio calls and good BFM (Basic
Fighter Maneuvers).
The desired result for this ACM maneuver flow is for the
defending A-10 to execute a break turn while the supporting A-10 will
turn hard to bring his nose to the F-5. The F-5 pilot, once he sees the
break turn will turn back towards the left A-10 and try to get nose on.
The left A-10 pilot will see this and will make a radio crucial to the
EF/SF Contract. He will use the word "switched" in describing the
follow on position of the F-5. Until that call is made, the ROE
stipulates that the right hand A-10 is the "engaged" fighter and as a
result only responsible for keeping the F-5 in sight. The A-10 flight
call sign is Cobra 12 and the F-5 is Sniper 51.
The set up begins with the A-10 lead making the call, "Sniper
51, Cobra 12 will be ready as soon as we roll out back to the West".
The A-10 lead is positioning the engagement in the assigned working
area (a square of airspace about 70 miles off the east coast of England
over the North Sea). The F-5 answers, "Roger. OK, I'm left, eight
o'clock, to the left hand guy". Cobra lead, on the right, answers,
"One's Tally". The second A-10 says, "Two, tally". The F-5 is
repositioning from the previous engagement and is approaching the
flight from the left hand side of the left A-10.
This is important for you to visualize, because this set up eventually
becomes a major factor in how events worked out. Then Cobra lead says
to the F-5, "Cleared in". The F-5 answers, "Roger. It will be the right
hand man now". The A-10 lead answers, "OK". The stage is now set for
what turns out to be a fatal misjudgment for the A-10 lead. At this
point, everyone is "fat, dumb, and happy". The flight is going just as
briefed - completely. This will not last for long.
The F-5 advances his throttles, lowers his nose, and brings the
right hand A-10 into his HUD. He gets a good tone (acquisition sound
from the AIM-9 training missile that he is carrying), and calls,
"Atoll". The term, "Atoll" has been pre-briefed to mean the launch of
an air to air missile.
The pilot in the left hand A-10 has been waiting for this call.
He has watched the F-5 close in from the perch. The "Atoll" call has
been briefed as the "begin engagement" point for the A-10s. The left
A-10 pilot slams his throttles to full power, rolls hard into the F-5
and calls, "Two, break right". Normally, Two's transmission would have
been a call something like "Break right, missile. Bandit at your six
o'clock, one mile, level".
This call is very important. It consists of Directive and Descriptive
elements. Directive commands always precede Descriptive commentary. The
wingman should have told the defender to execute a break turn to the
right (directive) and that the threat is a missile from six o'clock and
one mile (descriptive). But he didn't. A certain complacency has crept
into the mission...things are going well, too well...the radio calls
are loosening up as the comfort level continues to rise as the number
of successful engagements increases.
It's at this point in the maneuver that some serious errors are
made by everyone. The plan was for the right hand A-10 to break away
from his wingman. Instead the lead now says," Can't...right. I'm coming
left. I've got a bandit at my left seven o'clock". The wingman
responds, "Roger", and immediately follows that up with, "The bandit's
off nose high", and immediately adds, "Bandit's on me, extend". Lead
answers, "Letting up...". This probably meant that he was unloading his
g's and extending to get his speed back. It also indicates that the
lead has understood that the F-5 has changed his attack as briefed.
While all of this has been unfolding, the F-5 pilot has repositioned on
to the left A-10. He hears the call from the lead about "coming left"
(into the wingman), and thinks it odd since the flight had briefed that
no cross turns would be flown. But he does not say anything.
The wingman is completely focused on the F-5. In his mind, he
has fulfilled his part of the EF/SF contract. He made the break call
and followed that up with the call that the F-5 had turned away from
Lead to attack him. However, the wingman did not specifically use the
term "switched", nor did he actually announce that he was "engaged".
He has accurately described the maneuver flow and has directed the Lead
to "extend" (and in fact the Lead responded correctly to that call),
but his failure to include the word "engaged" may have been critical in
the exchange of roles in the changing of the EF/SF Contract. In
addition, for some inexplicable reason, even thought the wingman heard
and acknowledged the lead saying that he was "coming left", the
seriousness of that fact never registered. He'll carry the burden of
that mistake for the rest of his life.
At this point, the F-5 is approaching the wingman from the
front and above. The wingman is in a steep right bank, having pulled
max g to get the F-5 on his nose. He is padlocked on the F-5. The F-5
is inverted watching the wingman.
The next thing heard is a shouted, "Knock It Off - Knock It
Off!!" The call comes from the Lead aircraft. The wingman hears this
and immediately looks forward to clear his 12 o'clock. As he does this,
he feels a "thump" and sees a flash of orange and red flame. His
aircraft goes violently out of control. The F-5 pilot is looking at the
wingman when he hears the call. At that instant, he sees the wingman
explode, and says out loud into his cassette voice recorder, "Andy blew
up". He does not ever recall seeing the Lead aircraft.
Eleven seconds later (as computed from the ATC tapes) the
wingman abandons all attempts at regaining control of his jet. It's
just as well...there's nothing left but the cockpit section. He pulls
the ejection handle and is blasted free of the aircraft. For the next
five minutes or so, he will slowly parachute into the North Sea, all
the while wondering what happened.
Well, folks, what happened is like a line from an old Paul
Newman movie..."What we have here is a failure to communicate". The
radio calls in this story are authentic. They were copied right out of
the USAF Accident Report. Here are the "lessons learned" from the
accident investigation:
1. The Lead violated a pre-briefed ROE (no cross turn). He did
this most likely because, in the set up, the F-5 did not come from his
exact six o'clock, but instead was slightly offset to lead's seven
o'clock. Since the common response is to always break into the threat,
Lead then broke left, instead of to the right as directed by the
wingman.
2. The wingman failed to react to the lead's announcement that he was "coming left", even though he acknowledged the call.
3. The F-5 pilot also failed to respond to the ROE violation. He
allowed the maneuver flow to continue and lost sight of the lead
aircraft.
So, why did this happen? It was the accident board's conclusion
that flight discipline was not intentionally broken... but it was
broken. They felt that the mission briefing and the limited DLO's had
induced complacency in all flight members. It was thought that the
flight members had gone to great detail in specifying exactly what was
going to happen in each engagement. As a result, when things changed,
it was either ignored (the F-5) or not comprehended (the wingman). The
conclusion was that Cobra flight has a certain outcome in mind and was
unprepared for anything else.
At the time of the accident, the lead was a Squadron Weapons
Officer and a graduate of the USAF Fighter Weapons School (FWS). The
wingman was the Chief of the Wing Weapons and Tactics Division and was
also a FWS graduate. The F-5 pilot had been an Aggressor for two years
and was highly experienced, having flown F-4s before. This is about as
much talent and experience as you can crowd into a three-ship.
The result was that the wingman and the F-5 pilot went on with
their fighter careers, sadder but wiser. Lead never got the chance to
further his career. It ended that afternoon in a fireball over the
North Sea.
Radio Comms in Vietnam
When we last saw Wolf flight, they had just topped off and were
back with Cricket looking for more tasking. Let's pick up the story
there...
"Cricket, Wolf 20, any words for us?"
"Standby, Wolf. Snap 360, Buster, I'll get back to you".
"Uh oh", Wolf lead thinks to himself...something's up. Better
get the flight in order. "Wolf go spread. Fence check". Cricket has
just told Wolf to take up a heading north(snap 360) and to accelerate
to max military power airspeed(Buster is 100% military). Lead has told
his flight to get into an attack formation(spread) and to perform all
cockpit checks up to placing the weapons switches "hot").
Wolf 20, Cricket, standby for words."
"Wolf 20, ready to copy."
"Wolf 20, Dodge 35 is a flight of Thuds RTB out of Pack Six and
they're hurting. Cherry 08 is leaving the anchor and turning north to
pick them up. Red Crown has Blue bandit activity south of Bullseye. I
want you to sweep in front of Cherry. Let's get our guys home!"
The situation is that a flight of F-105s is short of gas.
Cherry 08, a KC-135, is leaving his planned orbit(anchor) and is
heading into North Vietnam to meet Dodge before the Thuds run out of
fuel. Pack Six is the Hanoi area of North Vietnam. Bullseye is Hanoi.
Our GCI radar(Red Crown)has picked up MiGs airborne south of Hanoi.
Cricket wants Wolf to sanitize the airspace between Cherry and the
F-105s.
"Wolf 20 copies".
Wolf lead now radios his flight, "OK, guys, it's time to earn
our pay. Two and four, search level to low. Three search level to high.
GIBS, let's bring home the bacon". Wolf lead has now assigned the radar
search pattern for the flight and he has encouraged the F-4
backseaters(GIB- Guy In Back) to seriously get their faces in the radar
scopes!
The next call Wolf lead hears is, "Wolf 23 has a bent system".
This means that #4's radar is unreliable. Since the MiGs are probably
in the weeds, the lead now directs #3 to search level to low, leaving
the lead radar as the only radar looking up.
Lead then calls for a fuel check. He sees that each flight
member has burned all the fuel out of the external tanks. Because of
the critical nature of this tasking, the lead now directs the flight to
jettison their external stores.."Wolf, clean off your tanks and pickle
your bombs off safe". Wolf lead wants the bombs to be jettisoned so
they will not explode...the flight is flying over an undercast and the
lead thinks he may still be over friendly territory.
"Cricket, Wolf 20, what freq is Dodge on?" Cricket replies that
he wants everyone on the same freq. Wolf flight then checks in on the
new freq where Cherry 08 is already waiting. Cricket tells Wolf that
Cherry 08 is at his eleven o'clock at a range of sixty miles. "Contact
there, Wolf 20". The GIB in lead's a/c has locked on the tanker and
reads the relative closure as less than 200 knots...this indicates that
the fighters are overtaking Cherry from behind and helps confirm the
radar contact. Cherry 08 acknowledges the lock on on his RHAW gear.
"Cricket, Wolf 20, bogey dope." Wolf lead is asking for an update on the bandits.
"Red Crown has two Blue bandits Bullseye 220 for 80, heading south and fast. They look like they are after Dodge".
Wolf lead now looks at his map, notes the position of the MiGs
and approximates an intercept heading from his present position. Wolf
flight is now at 15000 feet and doing about 550 KIAS.
"Wolf, green 'em up". Wolf is telling his flight to make sure
that their weapons switches are set up for a/a missiles. At this point
the arming switch is still off. By now, Wolf has passed Cherry 08 and
is pressing deeper into North Vietnam.
"Wolf 21 has a contact ten right for 60, slightly low, 900
knots". Wolf two has a radar contact ten degrees right of the flight at
60nm. The relative closure is 900 knots...this means a head on set up.
"Cherry, Dodge, heading south, where are you, son?". The flight
of F-105s is now in radio range and clearly needing help...the tone of
the voice makes everyone's hair stand up.
Cricket tells Wolf that the radar contact is probably
Dodge...the positions match up. "Dodge, Cricket, snap 200, climb to
base plus 10. You have Wolf at your 1:30 clearing your six". Cricket
now tells Dodge to fly a heading of 200 degrees and climb to the
altitude of 'base plus ten'. In order to keep the bad guys guessing,
actual altitudes are never used. Instead the freq card includes the
base altitude for the day...today it is 10,000'. Dodge then adds 10 to
that altitude and continues his climb to 20,000 feet.
Meanwhile, Wolf flight is looking hard into their radars.
Another Bogey Dope call to Red Crown confirms that the MiGs are still
chasing the F-105s. The F-4 flight breaks radar lock on Dodge and focus
their radars on Red Crown's last bandit position.
The GIB in the backseat of #2 is a grizzled old major on his
second tour. He's flying with Lt Fuzz, who has been in country for
three weeks. A former Bear, the GIB talks reassuringly to his
inexperienced front seater as he works the gain control to fine tune
out the ground return while slowly adjusting the elevation. "Gotcha!",
he mutters as he moves the range gate over the return slowly emerging
out of the clutter. (Tour-tour of duty in the war...usually a year. In
Country-assigned to a base in Southeast Asia. Bear-a backseater in a
Wild Weasel...usually carries around his family jewels in a wheel
barrow. Gain and elevation-adjustments to the radar picture...the GIB
is tuning out the static caused by the ground returns...a skill that
comes only from years of experience. Range gate-the lock on symbol on
the radar scope.)
...........
When we last saw Wolf flight, they were about to engage a flight
of MiGs that were chasing down some F-105s. In the coming engagement,
please note the attention given to which flight member is attacking and
which is defending. In the real world, air combat procedures include
something called "The Engaged Fighter/Supporting Fighter Contract".
This contract is a set of rules and procedures that govern how a flight
deconflicts itself when maneuvering against one or more bandits. It
turns out that the "furball" that you all have heard of is a bit more
structured than it may at first seem. Here in very abbreviated form are
the essentials of that contract:
1. Once the flight comes into contact with the enemy, the
traditional leader/wingman relationship is set aside for the duration
of the engagement. It is replaced with the concept of
"engaged/supporting" fighters. In years past, this was known as the
"engaged/free" contract.. The word "free" was deemed too representative
of undisciplined flying and was changed to "supporting". Very PC!!
Basically, the engaged fighter is the pilot that is either attacking or
under attack. The supporting fighter is the pilot that at the moment is
neither attacking or defending.
2. These roles are assigned as the fight develops. The leader never
loses control of his flight, but he does give the wingman a certain
amount of freedom to make on-the-spot tactical decisions. Because of
the time compressed environment of modern air combat, decision time is
measured in seconds.
Often, the rapidly developing nature of an engagement requires an
immediate decision by the flight member seeing the threat. This may be
the wingman. He may find himself in position to attack (or defend) and
sees that he must react first and talk second. If this happens, the
wingman becomes "engaged" and the leader, by definition, takes up the
"supporting" role. The wingman remains "engaged" until the bandit is
disposed of or the leader re-asserts his ultimate authority and calls
the wingman off.
3. The engaged fighter has the responsibility of killing the
bandit or maneuvering such that he himself is not killed. He is only
responsible for keeping the bandit in sight...no one else.
4. The supporting fighter on the other hand MUST keep both the
bandit and the engaged fighter in sight. The supporting fighter
maneuvers to gain a position of kill on the bandit, but NEVER loses
sight of the engaged fighter when doing so. Violation of this rule
invites a mid-air between the two fighters. In case anyone doubts this,
I have a story to tell you sometime (see the first column!)
So much for the guts of the relationship between the flight
members...let's get back to business here with Wolf flight. To quickly
recap, Wolf flight is sweeping the six o'clock of Dodge flight as that
flight of F-105s is trying to reach the tanker. The backseater in Wolf
21 has the first radar contact.
"Wolf 21 has a contact on the nose for 20, low, 180 out". At
the same time, Red Crown calls out, "Wolf, two Blue bandits at your 12,
20 nauticals". Wolf leader gets a quick call out, "Wolf 20, contact,
Judy; Wolf kick it out. Check master arm on." Lead has acknowledged the
bandits, reported a radar contact at that location, and taken
responsibility for the intercept(Judy). He tells his formation to
loosen up(kick it out) and reminds everyone to arm up their weapons. #3
reports a contact also while #4, with his radar T/U, hangs on for dear
life.
It's a typical cloudy day as the two opposing flights hurtle
towards each other. While the clouds don't affect the radar, it
certainly cuts down on visual detection. Today's ROE require a visual
ID of the target, so a face shot is out of the question. Lead has to
get his act squared away, and he needs to do it fast.
"Three, hold high and clear our 12. Two, eyeball/shooter, #1
shooter;call your lock". Lead wants the second element to continue to
sweep for more bandits...he does not want them engaging the two known
bandits..instead they should continue to monitor Red Crown for
additional threats. Lead tells #2 to fly the eyeball/shooter formation
in the eyeball position, and he wants #2 to report a radar lock on.
Wolf 21's front seater has his heart in his throat and can't
even get a squeak out. Not to worry. His GIB has seen all of this
before. He makes the call, "Two's locked, visual, no tally". The lead
now knows that #2 has a good lock and sees him, but not the bandit. The
lead has known #2's GIB for years and trusts him to run a perfect
intercept...his own GIB is also a new guy and is a bit behind events as
they rapidly unfold.
"Two, take the lead on the left, push it up". Lead is now directing #2
to assume the eyeball role. Lead rolls off to fall into the shooter
position and directs #2 to go into burner. At the same time, lead trys
to calm down his own backseater who is losing the radar lock as lead
maneuvers.
In the #2 airplane, the old man in the back has similar
problems. He talks to the pilot in a smooth and measured voice, tells
him what's going down, and assures him that they as a team can handle
it. He tells the pilot to check his front scope..."See the dot? Fly the
dot into the center". The GIB is instructing the pilot to aim his a/c
right at the locked on bandit. "That's it...nice and smooth..plenty of
time...bandit's 8 miles on the nose..stay with the dot".
Meanwhile, lead moves out on about a 45 degree angle and
maneuvers to put the sun behind himself as much as possible. If the
bandit is going to see him, they are going to have to look into the sun
to do it. As lead settles into position, his GIB continues to fumble
with the radar...as the two opposing flights near each other, the GIB
overcontrols his radar controls and can't get a lock. Lead is heads out
and doesn't have the time to give him any radar lessons.
"Two tally uh...uh..."...the pilot in #2 struggles to say
something meaningful. His GIB sees the two MiGs at the same time and
overides him with "Two has two 21s, 11 o'clock, low, 5 miles, right to
left". That talks Lead's eyes onto the bandits, and he responds, "One
tally, visual, come off right, one's engaged".
The GIB in #2 tells his pilot to come off high right..."you
watch the 21s, I'll look for Lead". The GIB looks hard to his low and
left and sees Lead. He radios, "Two's tally, visual, free". He has told
the lead that he sees.
both the bandits and the lead and is assuming the supporting role. At
this time the Engaged Fighter/Supporting Contract is complete...one
fighter has announced it, and the other has agreed to comply. Until
this is done, the role of attacker and wingman is not perfectly clear.
Lead tells his GIB, "give me boresight, dammit". He wants the
radar put into a mode where he as the pilot can command a lock on. He
pulls the bandits into the HUD and checks the scope for proper
boresight indications. He's got them!! He presses the Auto-Acquisition
button! "Come on..come on..come on". There, a good lock! He counts to
himself, "one potato, two potato, three potato, four potato.." With a
mash that nearly pushes the fire button out the back of the stick, lead
hoses off an AIM-7, and then another. "Fox One!!"
No such luck. Even though the lead waited the four seconds needed to
get a good launch solution, the missiles didn't hack the close in shot.
Both went ballistic. But lead hardly knew it. He was already pulling
hard into the vertical and then reversing hard down on to the two MiGs
who were in a hard left turn.
Meanwhile, the newbie in #2 was finally getting into the act. He too
had repositioned high and was now slicing back down inside the MiGs
turn. He had switched to heat and was getting a good tone. He had a
chance for a shot but would have to switch roles with lead. "One, two's
your seven, one mile, I've got a shot".
Lead sees his wingman and realizes that his own maneuvering will take
too long. He decides to give the wingman a shot. "Roger, Two...one's
tally, visual, free...hose that mutha!" Sweeter words were never heard
by #2. He calls "Two's engaged, Fox Two...Fox Two!!" These don't miss,
and one bandit explodes in a fireball. The other MiG rolls wings level
and tries to flee.
In the #2 a/c, the old head in the back is trying to get a very
excited Lieutenant to calm down! The pilot has gotten fixated on his
kill and has left the motors in full blower.. the clean F-4 rockets
ahead. The GIB yanks the throttles back but not before his a/c
overshoots the surviving MiG's flight path. As he tries to get his
pilot back into the fight, he hears Lead radio, "Two, come off high
right, I'm at your eight". His pilot, realizing what's happened, calls
"Two tally, visual, off right, press". Once again the contract has been
changed...now it's Lead's turn.
Seconds later, the remaining MiG bites the dust, but before the
celebration begins, there's still work to be done. Wolf lead needs to
get this act together. "Two, line right". He sends #2 into line
formation as he starts a turn towards home and begins a climb. "Wolf
three, say position". "Your four o'clock, three miles, level". "Roger,
three, line left. Wolf, ops check, one's 6000". After the other flight
members tell lead their respective fuel states (ops check in thousands
of pounds of fuel), the lead takes a big breath and radios Cricket,
"Cricket, Wolf 20, splash two blue bandits, looking for words".
Cricket, who has been listening to all of this, responds,
"Roger, Wolf. Good work. Snap 230 and climb to base plus 5. Cherry is
waiting for you with some happy Thuds. Contact Cherry on button three.
Cricket out."
And so ends our story. Hope you all enjoyed it half as much as
I did writing it. Take away from this the idea that this air combat
stuff is more than just running around with your hair on fire. There
are tried and true procedures designed to keep you alive and the bandit
dead. BFM is important...but so are flight management and effective
radio procedures. Until next time....
Alfakilo out.
Andy is a retired USAF pilot. During his AF career, he flew the
F-4,F-104, A-10, and T-37. After a F-4 tour in Vietnam, he flew the F-4
and A-10 in stateside and European assignments, and instructed NATO
pilots in the F-104 in Arizona.
After graduating from the Fighter Weapons School, he
remained in the school as a flight and academic instructor. Andy has flown in Red Flag and USN TOPGUN exercises.
Since retirement, he has been a pilot
for a major US airline. He continues his life long love of aviation
with
his contributions to flight sim forums, publications, and developers.
You will often find Andy interacting with virtual pilots on the
Tactical forum.