Gomez waited, then said, “C.J. needs more birds for air-defense suppression. He wants to try an idea Jack dreamed up and mate an F4-G Weasel with an F-4E as a wingman and use the Weasel to direct the E onto threats that come up. That will double his strength and allow two birds for suppression on each target…Muddy, I’m sure this attack’ll work. Look, let me fly and I’ll abort the mission if things start to hell in a hand-basket. Jack’s planned a beauty. We really shouldn’t waste it.”
The DO’s confidence was the deciding factor. “Okay, Tom. Ops is your show. Go with the mission as planned, use tac call signs, give C.J. his wingmen, and abort the mission if things get too hairy up there. I’ve got to get over to the Security Police and work on base defense with Chief Hartley, so get this thing on the road.”
Bull Morgan led the first eight planes onto the active runway. Six of the Phantoms were pregnant with bomb loads destined for the first target. A Weasel and his wingman taxied with them. Forty more Phantoms stretched out behind them, broken into similar cells. Jack was sandwiched between the second and fourth cell; he had picked the third and most heavily defended target for himself. There had been no lack of volunteers to fly with him so it was easy to pick his five other crews at random. C.J. had also opted to fly with Jack’s cell and followed them onto the Active, his F4-G Wild Weasel teamed with an E model from the 377th. C.J.’s bird bristled with anti-radiation Shrike and Harm missiles while his wingman was loaded with CBUs and three AGM-65 Mavericks, electro-optically guided and not dependent on enemy radiations for homing.
Jack’s flight took oft” on a southerly heading, turning back to the north as the formation fell into place. As soon as they were positioned he started to descend, hugging the water as the cell flew up the Gulf.
Twenty-five miles before they coasted in at the mouth of the Shatt-al-Arab, the first tell-tale flickers of radar activity started to light Thunder’s Radar Homing and Warning receiver. “Can you sneak it down a little lower?” Thunder asked.
Without breaking radio silence Jack led his flight down to seventy-five feet above the calm and smooth surface of the Persian Gulf. They coasted in undetected and now were flying over the marsh land along the coast.
“Bandits two o’clock high, four miles, going away,” Jack warned his flight, breaking radio silence as he sighted enemy fighters. “The Gomers are up today, where in the hell did they come from?”
Streaks of vertical contrails pillared the skies as the PSI’s air-defense system started to react, indication that Morgan was already at work on his target. Jack concentrated on the orbiting enemy fighters he suspected were looking for his flight. But the Phantom’s camouflaged paint blended with the land, and the Floggers could not pick them out. Jack pushed their speed up to 480 knots, seventy miles out from their targets, and climbed to two hundred feet. “Split now,” he commanded, and the eight fighters broke, each pair going its own way, with C.J. taking the most direct route to the target in order to arrive seconds before the attack. “Glad we hadn’t planned to come back this way,” Jack said, trying to ease the building pressure. Sweat poured as he kept inching down to the deck.
Thunder directed them along a series of short navigation legs leading to their IP. “Arm ’em up,” he told Jack, who toggled the last switch that activated his weapons-delivery system, glad for the reminder. He’d been concentrating on the MiGs and had forgotten to throw the Master Arm switch and so wouldn’t have been able to pickle off his bomb load.
“IP one minute,” Thunder announced.
“IP in sight,” Jack replied over the radio. “Sooner, split now.” The two aircraft broke onto separate headings in order to strike the target from different directions. Sooner would hit the target exactly twenty seconds after him, gaining the separation in time he needed to miss the debris kicked up by Jack’s bombs. Jack stroked the afterburners, pushing the Phantom as fast as it could go that low to the ground. Until they shed the drag created by their six Mark-82 Snakeyes, their maximum speed was 540 knots and their rate of fuel consumption was enormous.
“Tallyho,” he shouted as the storage dump that was their target surged into his left forward quarter panel on the windscreen, just where it was supposed to be. He jerked the nose of the bird skyward into a pop maneuver, rolling and bringing the nose back onto the target before they climbed too high. His thumb hovered on the pickle button as the altimeter unwound and the pipper on his target ring walked to the target. As he flicked the button, a shadow flashed across the top of their canopies. “What the hell…” Jack yelled, pulling off the target and jinking to the left.
“A SAM,” Thunder said, his voice remarkably calm. “Sooner in sight; come left and he’ll cross in front of you.” A hard wrench to the left brought them onto a southerly heading, and Sooner skidded his jet across and above them, falling into place two thousand feet abeam Jack for their egress. A series of secondary explosions from the storage dump marked the two fighters’ exit, but they did not notice. Their CAP was nowhere in sight. What was going on? Something was wrong. Very wrong.
“Fish, eject! eject!” a voice crackled over Guard, the radio channel reserved for distress calls.
“Goddamn. C.J.’s wingman,” Jack said.
“Bandits, eight o’clock, on us,” Sooner shouted over the UHF radio. Before Jack could react a stick of smoke reached up and enveloped the leading enemy aircraft in a fireball. The second bandit broke off, presenting the plan-form of a MiG-23 as it turned away from them. The attacking MiG had been shot down by one of the PSI’s SA-6 missiles…The problem of sorting out friendly and enemy aircraft for the ground air-defense systems had worked to Jack’s advantage. This time…
As they coasted out, heading south for Ras Assanya, Thunder spotted two Phantoms from their cell. Jack joined them up and called for a fuel check. All four were low on fuel. He climbed the flight to eighteen thousand feet, conserving fuel as much as possible. Fifteen minutes later the flight touched down, forty-nine minutes after taking off…
When they arrived for their debriefing at the COIC, C.J. was waiting for them, already finished with his debrief. White streaks of dried sweat etched his flight suit. His face was haggard with fatigue. He walked with them to their debrief, asking if they knew about any losses. “I heard someone yell for Fish to eject, that’s all,” Jack told him.
C.J. nodded. “Yeah, I heard that call. I think someone behind us bought it too. They were waiting with everything, including the goddamn kitchen sink. We still managed to shut the SAMs down, but MiGs were all over the place. I didn’t see any friendly CAP at all. I can’t handle both SAMs and MiGs…”
“We ran into the same thing,” Jack said. “We did see four bandits on ingress but they didn’t see us. I mean, we were down in the weeds. A SAM almost speared us just as I pickled and we got jumped by two MiGs outbound. One of their own SAMS assholed the lead son of a bitch. The other MiG beat feet, lost interest I guess.”
C.J. sat with them through their debrief before they went into Ops, where they found Waters, his face gaunt and lined. Motioning to them, he sat down, still staring straight ahead. “Tom Gomez is missing. What went wrong?”
“Oh God,” from Jack.
“I’ll tell you what happened,” C.J. exploded, “there was no CAP!” He started walking away, then stopped abruptly. “Excuse me, sir. Give me a minute…I didn’t want Colonel Gomez to fly with the tail-end flight. It’s too dangerous back there and he knew it.” The major’s eyes were fixed on the floor.
“The UAC were fragged for a CAP,” Waters seethed. “Where the hell were they? Why didn’t Tom abort the mission?” A feeling of failure sickened him and he silently swore at the UAC pilots for not covering his wing.
“It was okay when we went in,” C.J. said. “The shit hit the fan when we came out.”
Waters could only shake his head, anger building in his chest, then walked out of the COIC, slamming the door behind him.
“Not my idea of a war,” Thunder muttered, and headed for their tra
iler while Jack made his way to the mailroom. When he saw his empty box, he walked away, talking to himself. “What’s wrong with her? Out of sight, out of mind, I guess.” Back in the trailer Jack took a quick shower and flopped onto his bunk. Thunder had already sacked out. But sleep wouldn’t come for Jack as thoughts of Gomez and Gillian intermingled. Gillian…he had written her the day he arrived at Ras Assanya, giving her his new address. He had struggled to find the words to tell her how much he felt about her without seeming sappy. He was feeling miserable, sorry for himself and guilty about that…after all, it was Gomez who had just been killed. But still…Gillian was the woman he had decided to settle on, or at least hoped he could. He remembered that local fair that he and the other officers were encouraged to go to for PR purposes, mingle with the civilians, put a good face on the Yank overseas, and how the two girls from the village had propositioned Thunder and himself, and how when he gave it a pass, Thunder told him that he figured maybe Makeout Jack was finally growing up. Now he wondered if he hadn’t just been suckered…Of course, feeling as he did, it never occurred to him that his letter had been lost in the mail. During the confusion that marked the first few days at Ras Assanya his letter had been mistakenly sent to the APO in New York and not to Stonewood. There it ended up in the dead-letter file. If he had waited a few days before writing or sent a second letter, Gillian would have gotten the letter in one or two days. But he couldn’t know any of that…God, he was tired, tired, and finally escaped into a fitful sleep…
After dinner, Thunder had roused him and insisted he eat…Jack wandered into Intelligence and sat studying the reccy photos that showed the Bomb Damage Assessment (BDA) from their mission. The six targets had been obliterated and the PSI’s drive against Basra blunted. But looking at the targets, he felt hollow inside.
Waters walked in on him then. “It doesn’t do any good to brood on it. We take our losses and go on from here…”
“Maybe there were other ways we could have done it—”
“Jack, it’s self-indulgent to go blaming yourself for what happened. Your planning was right on. The results on the photos prove that. We plastered them.” The wing commander studied the BDA photos. “And we paid a price…”
“Yes, sir. Two birds out of forty-eight. That’s over four percent attrition—”
“It’s worse than that,” Waters said, not sparing him. “Six of the birds had battle damage and two won’t fly again; we were lucky they even recovered. That puts our aircraft attrition rate at eight percent. I don’t worry about losing birds when we recover the crews. There are lots of E models floating around the National Guard and Reserve units that can be ferried in.” Waters stopped, not wanting the young lieutenant to assume all the burden for the wing’s casualties—that fell to him. He searched for words…“Jack, you based your planning on not having to deal with a MiG threat. When the MiGs showed up, the mission should have been aborted. That was Tom’s job, that’s why he was there. Intel says a MiG got him when he coasted in, before he could abort the attack. I have to accept that. What I’m trying to say is that when the threat changes, we’ve got to change—and fast. Otherwise, we lose our friends and aircraft. Jack, you have a natural talent that helps put us right at the tip of effectiveness. You lay out attacks that bring what we’ve got, our capability, to bear on the enemy. You put six birds on each target and tied it together with nearly precise timing. And because of it, we clobber the bad guys. This mission today would have been textbook perfect except for one thing—MiGs—which we saw for the first time.”
Jack could rationally accept everything the colonel was saying, but an inner fire drove him on, making him want to hurt the enemy, to keep hitting, not to back away. “Colonel Waters, I think I know how we can prowl around and prey on the bastards without getting hosed down.”
“Prowl like a wolf, Jack?”
“Exactly, sir. Let me work on it.”
8 July: 1400 hours, Greenwich Mean Time 1500 hours, Stonewood, England
Gillian’s shop was unusually full now, many of the patrons being Americans; it kept her and her staff of stylists happily busy. Gillian was less happy about the level of gossip that swirled around the place, especially gossip about the way the Air Force notified next of kin when a man had been lost in combat. Talk about the number of trips that General Shaw had made in his staff car to base housing struck her at times as the lucky ones keeping score on the less fortunate. She thought a little more of the “there but for the grace of God go I” might be in order.
On the other hand, she had to admit some of her reaction was intensely personal, having more to do with Jack and her failure so far to hear from him. Not even a note about how he was doing, where he was…God, she missed him, no use denying it. She concocted stories for herself about why she hadn’t heard from him, that he was too busy, that he was, after all, a combat pilot…At least there hadn’t been any word that the worst had happened, and for that she had to be grateful.
Margaret, her oldest-in-service employee, asked her why she didn’t talk to her American friend Francine; surely she’d heard from Thunder. But, of course, she would have done that if she could have…Francine had gone back to the States, not able to stand the waiting and anxiety. Gillian had no place to go, no place to hide her emotions. How much longer, she wondered, could she take it…?
9 July: 0925 hours, Greenwich Mean Time 1225 hours, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
The sergeant laid the folder on General Mashur Darhali’s ornate desk. The United Arab Command in Dhahran had assigned Darhali an office with furniture and staff that befitted a prince of the Saudi Arabian royal family. “The list you asked for, sir.” The sergeant stood back from the desk at attention and waited for the general’s next order.
“I need a map to understand this. Get one and an intelligence officer up here to explain this moving target.” When the sergeant had bolted from his office, Mashur walked over to the copying machine in the far corner and ran a copy of the only target the 45th would be receiving in forty-eight hours. Prince Mashur Ibn Aziz al-Darhali calmly folded the copy and buttoned it into the breast pocket of his tailored uniform shirt, then sat and waited for the sergeant to return as he scanned the list. He wondered why his contact wanted the list so far in advance. When the sergeant returned with the intelligence officer he directed the man to plot the target on the map, playing out his charade. He briefly scanned the map before turning both list and map over to the sergeant and dismissing the two men. He noted it was one P.M., the time he normally quit for the day.
That afternoon Mashur made his way through a fashionable jewelry store to a table displaying heavy gold chains and necklaces. The casual disarray on the table did not indicate the value of each chain, most of which cost more than a car. He fingered one after another until he was joined by his contact. They did not speak to each other but examined the chains. When Mashur left, a folded note was lying under a chain. The contact picked the note up with the chain and made his way to the counter, casually throwing sixty thousand riyals on the counter and not bothering to wait for his change. Neither Mashur nor his contact noticed the women who followed them out of the store.
10 July: 0600 hours, Greenwich Mean Time 0930 hours, Teheran, iran
The men gathered around the table did not have the crisp look associated with high-ranking officers, and the chaos in the villa they were occupying bore little resemblance to a military headquarters. But their determination matched that of any professional soldier in the Middle East. “It’s a good plan,” the commander of the PSI said. “As Allah wills, tomorrow the Americans will attack the slow-moving convoy we have prepared as a lure. We must use this opportunity to destroy them. Prepare the Fedayeen for battle as the Americans will inflict casualties among our martyrs. But these foreigners will in turn be destroyed.” Carefully the men selected locations for their SAMs and Triple A, creating a trap for any aircraft that might attack the convoy.
The air-group commander was the only pilot among them and ap
proved of the overlapping rings of defensive fire surrounding the trap they were setting. “Your missileers and gunners must not fire after the Phantoms come off the convoy,” the pilot repeated, worried that his pilots would fall victim to their own ground defenses. He had been insistent that the ground defenses work separately from his Floggers.
The men surveyed their handiwork. Every air-defense resource they possessed was marshaled in defense of the long convoy carrying men and supplies southward to the Strait of Hormuz. The commander of the PSI spoke in a low voice. “We will lose some of our soldiers and valuable trucks when the Americans attack. I know many will penetrate our rings of fire. But they will come and we will be waiting. We will receive messages when the Americans take off and our MiGs will be able to launch at the proper moment to meet and attack them.” He did not tell the hushed men that one launch-warning would come from the Soviet trawler and another from a coastal watch-team that was moving into place disguised as fishermen. Some things were better kept secret even from the faithful.
11 July: 0400 hours, Greenwich Mean Time 0700 hours. Ras Assanya, Saudi Arabia
Because the 45th had three air crews for every two Phantoms, Waters had established a rotation order for assigning crews to fly combat sorties. Jack’s and Thunder’s name had not come up for the wing’s fourth mission against the convoy and so they found themselves sitting on the sidelines. Jack had suggested they try using corridor tactics, his only input to the mission. He and Thunder occupied their time by working on Jack’s latest idea for a small group of aircrews to roam at night and prey on selected targets. He was thinking of calling it “Wolf Flight.”
When the crews had moved to the aircraft Jack walked into the makeshift command post at the rear of the COIC and found an empty seat next to the acting DO, Lieutenant Colonel Steve Farrell. His impatience grew as the crews checked in on status, ready to start engines and taxi. He admired Waters’ cool and tried to imitate his relaxed attitude. He glanced at the big situation plot map, where two airmen were marking the location of friendly and hostile aircraft along with the day’s targets. His worry even slackened a notch when one airman plotted an orbit over the Gulf and marked it “CAP-UAC.”
The Warbirds Page 30