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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

American Forces Press Service

Vigilant Pilots Face Iraqi Threats

 
By Linda D. Kozaryn
 
American Forces Press Service

 AL JABER AIR BASE, Kuwait -- Vigilance has replaced complacency 
 in the skies over Iraq, according to U.S. fliers patrolling the 
 no-fly zones.
 Routine sorties pilots once called "flying holes in the sky" are 
 now life-threatening missions. Each day, as U.S. and British 
 fighter jets and support aircraft take to the wild blue yonder, 
 they face possible Iraqi anti-aircraft artillery and surface-to-
 air missiles.
 "They're shooting at us quite a bit more," Air Force Lt. Col. 
 Bob Harvey said here in early March. "We never know when or 
 where they're going to do it. They try to surprise us -- try to 
 ambush us."
 Harvey, an F-16 pilot from Baker, Ore., has been flying 
 Operation Southern Watch patrols for the past two months. About 
 150 members of his unit, the 55th Fighter Squadron from Shaw Air 
 Force Base, S.C., deployed in mid-January to serve with the 
 332rd Air Expeditionary Wing.
 Currently, active duty Air Force and Air National Guard 
 squadrons make up the wing here. They include the 68th Fighter 
 Squadron, with F-16CGs from Moody AFB, Ga.; the 55th, with F-
 16CJs from Shaw AFB, S.C.; and three National Guard A-10 units, 
 the 103rd Fighter Squadron from Pennsylvania, the 104th Fighter 
 Squadron from Maryland, and the 108th Fighter Squadron, from 
 Connecticut. 
 For Harvey, Iraq is fairly familiar territory. This is the 24-
 year Air Force veteran's first tour in the south, but he's flown 
 many Northern Watch sorties from Turkey and also flew missions 
 during the Gulf War.
 Since the war's end in 1991, U.S. and other allied coalition 
 pilots have enforced U.N.-mandated no-fly zones over northern 
 and southern Iraq. The zones protect Kurds in the north and 
 Shi'a Muslims in the south from Saddam Hussein's aggression. 
 Along with U.N.-imposed "no-drive" restrictions, the no-fly 
 zones also prevent the Iraqi dictator from marshaling forces to 
 invade neighboring states.
 Until mid-December, U.S. and British air patrols encountered 
 little resistance, but in the wake of Operation Desert Fox, 
 Saddam declared the zones invalid. Iraqi aircraft began 
 violating the zones regularly, and Iraqi forces began targeting 
 coalition aircraft with radar. Iraqi fighters tried to lure 
 coalition patrols into surface-to-air-missile ambushes.
 At first, U.S. and coalition planes struck back only in self-
 defense. As Iraqi challenges persisted more or less daily, U.S. 
 defense officials expanded the rules of engagement. Pilots began 
 striking Iraq's integrated air defense system, not just specific 
 sites. A further expansion in February now gives military 
 leaders even more targeting flexibility, allowing strikes on 
 command and control and communications facilities. 
 For patrolling pilots like Harvey, the air mission has 
 intensified accordingly. Sorties now are more dangerous and 
 require more mission planning, he said. "We have to be more 
 vigilant when we're out there. We have to prepare more, just in 
 the eventuality that they may get lucky and shoot one of us 
 down."
 Harvey's F-16CJ fighter is equipped with high-speed anti-
 radiation missiles. "Our particular mission is support," he 
 explained. "We're the HARM shooters who watch for the radar[-
 guided] SAMs to come up." Each day, sorties of two to four 
 aircraft patrol together for about an hour and a half. It 
 doesn't take long to reach Iraqi territory, less than 100 miles 
 away.
 "We try to avoid the known threats," Harvey said. "We're not out 
 here to try to get shot at. We try to avoid that. If someone 
 does shoot at us, we try to identify the site and retaliate 
 against that site, if we can. If not, there are other options 
 available to the commanders in Riyadh."
 The U.S. planes are not looking for a fight, he pointed out, but 
 "our capabilities to strike if someone does shoot at us are very 
 high -- very good."
 Coalition pilots know Saddam has offered cash bounties to anyone 
 who shoots down a patrol, but they don't dwell on it. "They've 
 always wanted one of us anyway," Harvey said. "We're concerned 
 about it a little bit. We don't want to be the one that gets 
 shot down and shows up on TV. We're very well prepared to go and 
 rescue someone should that ever happen."
 If anything, the pilot remarked, Saddam's quest for a downed 
 American aircraft makes the pilots more careful. "We certainly 
 don't want to walk into a trap," he said. 
 Harvey expressed confidence in his fellow airmen. "We're very 
 good at what we do," he said. "We're very capable. "We 
 demonstrate that on a daily basis by not losing an aircraft. The 
 U.S. Air Force and the people in it are absolutely the best in 
 the world. There's none finer anywhere."
 Because the booming economy is luring pilots away from the 
 military, Harvey said those who stay are especially dedicated. 
 "They are outstanding young people -- cream-of-the-crop 
 Americans," he said.
 Morale among the American airmen in Kuwait is high, Harvey 
 noted. He attributed frequent contact with home as part of the 
 reason. 
 "E-mail is the best thing that ever happened to the United 
 States Air Force," said the fighter pilot, whose wife, Connie, 
 and daughters, Anne, 15, and Sarah, 12, live in Columbia, S.C. 
 "We are able to chat with our loved ones back home on a daily 
 basis. That has just been phenomenal for morale. That's the best 
 thing they've ever invented." 
 Air Force Master Sgt. Eric Farr, also with the 332nd Air 
 Expeditionary Wing in Kuwait, attributes the high morale to the 
 wing's real-world mission. The 23-year veteran airman from the 
 509th Bomb Wing at Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo., is a first 
 sergeant with the wing's logistic squadron.
 He said the Southern Watch mission provides realism and an 
 awareness that's nearly impossible to achieve during training 
 alone. 
 "No one likes to see war or be a part of a war. There's no joy 
 in bringing destruction on anyone," Farr said. But putting 10 or 
 20 years of training to actual use is a kind of validation, he 
 noted. "We've trained hard, and now that training's paying off."
 Farr said the expeditionary wing's 1,000 or so airmen, along 
 with Army Patriot missile crews stationed at the base, keep up 
 with the latest news on the Iraqi situation both at home and 
 while deployed in Kuwait. They also keep their chemical-
 biological protective gear handy because they know Iraq is a 
 mere 61 miles to the north and 56 miles to the west. 
 Each day as the expeditionary air wing's high-tech planes 
 thunder skyward, the men and women based at Al Jaber know the 
 threat they face.
 "This is not a game," Farr said. "This is the real deal. We're 
 going out to take care of business. When our jets take off, we 
 know there's a great potential that those jets will come back 
 without the ordnance on them that they had at takeoff. When we 
 launch that aircraft, there's a potential it won't be back."
 Like Harvey, Farr expressed total confidence in the airmen who 
 fly the sorties and those who support the operation. "We're the 
 best fighting force in the world," he said, looking toward the 
 busy runway. "Our folks out there are motivated and dedicated to 
 getting the job done. With their knowledge and expertise, the 
 chances of that jet coming back are greatly increased -- but the 
 risk is still out there."
 

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Mar1999/n03151999_9903154.html



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