Tag: Falklands War

  • Bravo November

    Bravo November

    Chinook ZA718 ‘Bravo November’ is one of the most famous aircraft in the RAF and it is very exciting that this historic aircraft is now part of the RAF Museum’s collection. Bravo November’s arrival at the RAF Museum also coincides with the 40th anniversary of the Falklands conflict, which saw the first operational use by the RAF of its newly acquired Boeing Chinooks. Using material from the RAF Museum archive and interviews, I will explore the activities of Chinooks during the Falklands Conflict, focussing particularly on ZA718 ‘Bravo November’ and the notable events in which it was involved.

    The US Army began operating the Chinook in 1962 and it soon saw active service in Vietnam where its exceptional load carrying qualities were quickly recognised.  For the RAF the Chinook was the obvious replacement for the problematic Bristol Belvedere and in 1967 an order was placed for 15 aircraft. However, the order was cancelled due to cuts in defence expenditure. It would be another 11 years before the RAF were able to purchase the Chinook. In 1978 the Ministry of Defence announced the purchase of 33 Chinooks.

    The first aircraft were received by the Chinook Flight of No. 240 Operational Conversion Unit at RAF Odiham in December 1980.  The following August, No. 18 Squadron was reformed to become the first of three RAF squadrons to be equipped with the new helicopter.

    No. 18 Squadron’s Chinooks were soon called into action, when in April 1982 the Falkland Islands were invaded and occupied by Argentinian forces. Against the background of diplomatic efforts to resolve the situation, the British Government swiftly decided to send an all-arms force to attempt the recapture of the Falkland Islands over 8,000 miles away. No. 18 Squadron were soon involved, flying stores and supplies to ships of the task force being assembled at Devonport, this included flying a 5-ton propeller bearing to HMS Invincible at sea in the English Channel, having very publicly departed Portsmouth the day before, thus avoiding an embarrassing return to port for repair.

    It was evident that helicopters were to play an important part in any operation to recapture the Falklands, for ‘ship-to-ship and ship-to-shore, lift of freight and personnel, for direct support of troops ashore and for Anti-Submarine Warfare’. The Royal Navy were able to provide much of the helicopter resources to meet these needs but lacked a heavy lift helicopter and the RAF’s Chinooks were the only aircraft that could fulfil this capability gap.

    Six aircraft were rapidly prepared to join the Task Force, receiving modifications which improved the aircrafts’ survivability and operational capabilities. This included the installation of chaff dispensers, infra-red flare decoy dispensers, radar warning receivers and fittings for a General-Purpose Machine Gun (GPMG).  Options of how many and how to get the Chinooks to the South Atlantic were explored. One possibility was that the aircraft would fly down via ‘ship hopping’ to avoid difficult areas and countries. This was ultimately dismissed as it would have tied up too many resources.  Eventually it was decided that due to space constraints only five aircraft would be despatched onboard the container ship MV Atlantic Conveyor.  Atlantic Conveyor would disembark one Chinook at Ascension Island, an important staging post for operations in the South Atlantic, the remaining four aircraft would head south to participate in operations to recapture the Falklands.

    The Atlantic Conveyor sailed from Portsmouth on 25 April arriving at Ascension on 5 May where, within 90 minutes of disembarkation, Chinook ZA707, was on task conducting vertical resupply sorties.  ZA707 remained at Ascension for the remainder of the conflict mostly on vertical replenishment operations but also on other tasks, such as carrying early warning radar equipment to the top of Green Mountain, the highest point on the island, which ‘could only have been achieved with the Chinook’. ZA707 flew over 100 hours during the conflict and on one day alone transported over 350 tons of stores to ships of the Task Force.

    Atlantic Conveyor

    Eight British Aerospace Sea Harriers and six Harrier GR3s were embarked on the Atlantic Conveyor at Ascension and she sailed on 7 May to join the ships of the Task Force in the South Atlantic.  On 18 May, as Atlantic Conveyor closed with the Task Force, the Sea Harriers and Harriers were prepared for flight and over the next few days all had departed for HMS Invincible and HMS Hermes. With more space now available work began preparing the helicopters for flight.  Removing them from their protective cocoons and refitting rotor blades, this proved to be a difficult task within the confines of the ship. No specialist lifting equipment was available and a forklift truck was impressed to assist.

    As the Chinooks were being made ready, British forces landed ashore at San Carlos on the west coast of East Falkland on 21 May.  With the beachhead established, the need for helicopter logistic support was great. Helicopters would be crucial to the success of the ground campaign.  With no proper landing facilities available to the ships, all stores were either brought ashore by landing ships or helicopter. Once ashore the military plans were heavily reliant on helicopters in not only supplying troops in forward areas but also moving them across the island as no roads existed other than farm tracks. The Chinook’s lifting ability was almost five times that of the next biggest helicopter employed, the Sea King, and it had been envisaged that Chinooks would ferry troops across the difficult terrain, thereby keeping them fresh for battle and bring them into action quickly.

    Work to fit the blades on BN was completed in the afternoon of 25 May, and after several ground runs of her engines she departed to conduct an air test. Shortly after taking off the carrier group which included the two aircraft carriers, HMS Hermes and HMS Invincible and the Atlantic Conveyor found themselves under air attack. Two Argentine Dassault Super Étendards carrying Exocet missiles approached the task force at low level with the carriers as their targets.  The aircraft were picked up on the radars of the carrier group and the vessels conducted defensive manoeuvres and fired off chaff to confuse the missiles. However, Atlantic Conveyor had not been fitted with chaff dispensers and one of the missiles locked onto the Atlantic Conveyor, which was still in the process of turning to present a smaller radar profile when she was hit by the missile. A fire broke out inside the vessel that could not be contained and the ship had to be abandoned with the loss of 12 lives. The loss of the Atlantic Conveyor was a severe blow. Not only were tentage for 10,000 troops, a mile of steel runway, vehicles, aircraft and helicopter spares been lost but also six Royal Navy Wessex helicopters and perhaps most importantly three Chinooks. In his history of the Falklands Conflict, Martin Middlebrook wrote ‘the land campaign would be severely handicapped by the loss of their load carrying capacity’. The loss of the Chinooks meant that the planned swift movement of troops across the Falklands could no longer take place. The Royal Marines and Paratroopers would now have to largely march or yomp or tab their way across the Falklands.

    Unable to return to Atlantic Conveyor, BN landed on the crowded deck of HMS Hermes, where her presence was not welcome. The ship’s captain threatening to have the aircraft pushed overboard if it was not removed because it would hamper the carrier’s ability to mount its own air operations. After an overnight stay the aircraft departed for the bridgehead at San Carlos.

    With only one operational aircraft, No. 18 Squadron quickly had to reorganise itself. 77 members of the Squadron had arrived in the South Atlantic onboard the Atlantic Conveyor and the MV Norland. Those who had been onboard the Atlantic Conveyor were repatriated to the UK and a small detachment of two crews (two pilots and two crewmen per crew) along with 27 groundcrew who had sailed on the Norland were nominated to remain to fly and support the aircraft while four RAF Regiment personnel would guard the aircraft. However, all the spares, manuals, servicing tools and equipment had been lost, and without this equipment it was not known how long the aircraft would remain serviceable.

    The detachment of groundcrew landed on East Falkland on 26 May and serviced BN after her arrival from HMS Hermes. They returned to HMS Fearless for the night to collect their kit and scrounge tools and consumables from the Royal Navy that could be used to support BN on operations.  Early next morning they returned to Port San Carlos, to prepare the aircraft for flight.  In between air raids a site was located from which to operate BN, Chief Technician (Chf Tech) Tom Kinsella, who commanded the ground crew detachment wrote that

    Chinook with crew of No. 18 Squadron

    ‘Once a site had been decided upon it was then a question of having to hump all our personal belongings from one tuft to the next across the valley and part way uphill in order to avoid the boggy ground. ‘BN’ had only two 7×9 tents on it. A further 7×9 tent, 9×9 and 12×12 tent were borrowed from the navy.  There were a number of bits missing from the two latter tents, which made it very awkward to tie them down. It didn’t take long before the 12×12 was blown uphill.’

    With many air raids and then post flight servicing of BN to be done, it was night before Tom Kinsella could look to prepare his bivouac. Instead he slept in the open.

    ‘I assembled my camp bed, arctic roll inside my sleeping bag, waterproof cover and went to bed fully clothed and covering my boots with polyethene bags.  I felt quite exhausted and even so I got little sleep because of a bombardment away on the other side of San Carlos Water…. Halfway through the night it rained and all I did was cover my head with the groundsheet sufficiently to prevent the rain from getting inside my bag.’

    The groundcrews spent the first three days sleeping in the open in freezing conditions before they moved to Port San Carlos on 30 May and into the luxury of some farm outbuildings and navy tents. It was from here that the Squadron would operate for the remainder of the campaign.  For the rest of the campaign the ground crew detachment continued to keep the aircraft airworthy despite the lack of equipment and tools. Chf Tech Kinsella having lost the servicing paperwork for the aircraft, used an exercise book that he managed to source as a temporary servicing Form 700. This document, now in the Museum’s collection, records how after every day flying, Tom logged the defects, that would likely have grounded the aircraft under normal operation circumstances, servicing conducted and repairs made, ending each day ‘aircraft ‘s’(afe) to fly until receipt of spares’.

    BN was put to work immediately as Andy Lawless, one of BN’s four pilots recalled in a 2021 interview

    ‘… the first couple of days were taking stores from the ships to shore, literally underslung load after underslung load. Yes, there were a few landing craft doing this type of stuff, but we were taking the more high priority, weapons and what have you, the personal kit, not just straight onto the beachhead but to designated points where individual units were.  So we could give them all the equipment, so they could be ready to breakout of the beachhead.’

    This also included carrying Rapier surface-to-air missile batteries to positions around Falkland Sound to bolster the air defences of the fleet which were under continued Argentinian air attack, so much so, that the area became known as Bomb Alley.

    Having been ashore for almost a week with no breakout from the beachhead, there was political pressure for action. An operation was devised to attack the Argentinian positions around the settlements of Darwin and Goose Green. BN along with Royal Navy Sea Kings began moving supplies for the assault by 2nd Battalion, The Parachute Regiment (2 Para). BN carried 105mm guns, artillery shells, mortars and equipment forward in preparation for the attack. Despite stiff resistance, 2 Para were successful and in the aftermath of the battle BN was busy carrying the wounded to the field hospital which had been established in a disused refrigeration plant at Ajax Bay.

    Two days after Goose Green, BN was involved in an audacious airlift to capture the prominent feature of Mount Kent which dominated the routes of advance from San Carlos but also overlooked the Argentinian defensive positions around Stanley, the capital of the Falklands. The SAS had reconnoitred the site and reported that it was thinly held. Brigadier Thompson, commander of 3 Commando Brigade decided an attempt should be made to capture the peak. On the night of 30/31 May, three Sea Kings carrying elements of 42 Command, and BN with three 105mm guns (two carried internally and one underslung) and 22 gunners, were to fly miles 40 miles to Mount Kent and capture the important feature.

    Just prior to the operation Squadron Leader (Sqn Ldr) Langworthy had raised an issue with Tom Kinsella about an oil leak in the aft gear box, with no spares with which to repair it. Tom provided the crew with two gallons of oil with the instructions that if the situation became severe to put down and top up, with that he signed the aircraft as fit to fly as he said he was aware of the importance of the operation. Upon reflection he said ‘I should have never let it go, but, I am convinced I would have been overridden’.

    BN took off into the night sky, the pilots Sqn Ldr Dick Langworthy and Flight Lieutenant (Flt Lt) Andy Lawless wearing passive night vision googles. The weather conditions were poor with frequent snow showers and intelligence vague. The crew had been informed that the landing area was flat and secure.  As the aircraft approached the designated site, it was found that the site was not level but a rocky hillside. What was expected to be a 5-minute job turned out to be a 40-minute task where each gun had to be manoeuvred into position by BN. All the while the site was subject to incoming fire.

    On the return flight in a severe snow shower, the aircraft suffered an altimeter failure and hit a body of water. Luckily BN was in a slightly flared attitude. The rotors wound down as the engines ingested water. Believing the aircraft had crashed, Andy Lawless prepared to evacuate by jettisoning his door. Miraculously the aircraft engines recovered, and the aircraft flew off the water. Crewman Tom Jones suffered concussion from the incident and tried to exit the aircraft at altitude and had to be restrained by his fellow crewman Gary Rogan.

    The door which had been jettisoned contained maps and vital Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) codes to be used on the return to San Carlos water. Luckily Andy Lawless had memorised the route back. However, without the IFF codes the Rapier anti-aircraft missile batteries around San Carlos might have mistaken BN as an Argentinian Chinook. Andy Lawless later recalled ‘if you were not squawking the correct codes, you’ll get a Rapier up your jet pipe, which is not a good idea’. The crew needed to make the Rapier batteries aware of their approach without appearing hostile, what is termed lame duck procedures, which the pilots did by turning on and off their lights to show that they were friendly, a Sea King came and inspected BN and escorted it back to San Carlos without further mishap.

    Chinook Bravo November

    The following day a thorough inspection was made of the aircraft to look for damage. Apart from some slight damage to the ramp and aerials the aircraft was still deemed serviceable and was ready to return to operations.  The cause of the oil leak was identified, and a temporary repair made which stopped the leak for the remainder of the campaign. The cockpit door, however, could not be replaced and for the rest of the campaign BN flew without the left-hand cockpit door which Andy Lawless described as ‘bloody cold’. Despite the discomfort to the aircrew, the missing door would two days later save the aircraft from near disaster.

    On 2 May, BN was being used by the recently arrived 5 Brigade to help them move troops and supplies around San Carlos and Goose Green where one of their battalions was located.  In a bold move Major Chris Keeble, the commanding officer of 2 Para, suggested to the Commanding Officer of 5 Brigade that a small group fly to Swan Inlet House and use the telephone to establish if the settlements of Fitzroy and Bluff Cover were occupied.  If they were found unoccupied an ad-hoc operation was to be undertaken to fly in elements of 2 Para and seize the settlements.

    Eager to get 5 Brigade into action, Wilson approved of the plan without consulting his superiors. The group arrived at a deserted Swan Inlet House and called Fitzroy and Bluff Cove and were told by the settlement’s manager that no Argentinians were present. Having confirmed the area was not occupied, there followed a mad dash to airlift 2 Para to the area, as recalled by Chris Keeble,

    ‘Brigadier Wilson wanted to capture two settlements, one was called Fitzroy and one was called Bluff Cove. So I said, “What we’ll do is a coup de main operation. We’ll fly two assault forces in, one to Bluff Cove, one to Fitzroy.” And we only had maybe 120 soldiers to secure these two settlements, so we had to do it fast, at night, and we needed to rely on the only platform that was available to do that. And that was the one surviving Chinook, Bravo November (BN) …and as we were climbing in, I needed 60 people on the Chinook and the air loadmaster said, “I’m sorry, but it’s only equipped,” I think he said “30”. So one of my Sergeant Major’s said, “Well, you can fucking get off for starters.” Of course, that was a bit rude, but he made the point that we needed 60 people on the Chinook. And we got 60 heavily loaded paratroopers on the Chinook with the ramp down and flew at low level towards Fitzroy. The coup de main was unopposed…The threat probably was the weather. The weather was appalling, and you had to be extremely skilful to fly in thick rain and to fly at night with night goggles. Requires an immense amount of skill. So, it was speed. It was the skill of the pilots to navigate at very low level across an unknown terrain, ’cause nobody, I don’t think, had flown that route before, and it enabled us to get in speedily and with surprise.’

    In fact, as Tom Jones one of the crewman onboard BN remembered, BN flew two lifts one of 81 and one 71.  ‘A remarkable achievement since the standard capacity was 33, exceptionally 44’. The official RAF narrative acknowledged.  However, the inbound flight almost became a tragedy but for the missing cockpit door, as Jones recounted

    ‘…there were artillery guys attached to the marines, on the high ground to our left. They were about to open fire because they thought it (BN) was an Argentinian Chinook, and then one astute corporal said “Wait a minute, hang on, no, it’s ours, it hasn’t got a door in the left hand side of the cockpit.” So what happened disastrously nearly a day before, we suddenly found out saved our lives…’

    The coup de main had rapidly progressed the southern advance, however, the move was not without risk and 2 Para were now isolated without any supporting arms, few stores and little equipment.  The move had disrupted plans for the assault on Stanley and there was now an urgent need to bring the remainder of 5 Brigade to Fitzroy and Bluff Cove with all its equipment and stores to reinforce 2 Para. One officer describing the move in his diary as ‘grossly irresponsible’.

    The question was how to move the rest of 5 Brigade quickly to the Fitzroy and Bluff Cove. The loss of helicopters on Atlantic Conveyor meant there were simply not enough helicopters available to support 3 Brigade and move 5 Brigade.  The idea of marching the two 5 Brigade battalions from San Carlos was explored and discounted.  The only other viable alternative was a risky move by sea at night.  Plans were rapidly devised and the first elements of 5 Brigade sailed on the night of 6 June landing early the next day, the vessels returning to collect the remainder of the brigade. Delays in loading and poor communications meant that the ships departed late and Landing Ship Logistics RFA Sir Galahad arrived during the morning of the 8 June.   The poor weather of the previous day which had helped protect Sir Galahad’s sister Ship RAF Sir Tristram had now cleared and the two ships were visible to the Argentinians, unloading continued slowly and Rapier air defence batteries had not been properly established ashore. When shortly after midday the ships came under air attack. Both ships were hit, Sir Tristram was largely empty by now but not so Sir Galahad where 48 soldiers and crew were killed, many injured and suffering burns from the fire that subsequently took hold.   The casualties were brought ashore by lifeboat or winched to safety by Sea King helicopters of the Royal Navy. BN was tasked with ferrying some of the casualties to Ajax Bay as Tom Jones recalled.

    ‘We went in and picked up a lot of the casualties from there, amputees, badly burned and flew them to Ajax Bay. And then once they had done their initial first aid treatment with the fantastic medical team they had set up there, we then went in to pick them up and ferry them to Uganda…a hospital ship.’

    BN continued to fly support helicopter operations for the remainder of the war, moving troops, supplies and ammunition in support of the ground forces as they battled toward Stanley, including carrying and replacing the Murrell Bridge near Mount Kent to enable vehicles to continue to Stanley. Tom Kinsella remembered that the morale was very high despite all the problems encountered in keeping BN operational, ‘We didn’t want to be reinforced, we wanted to see this thing through ourselves’. Which they just managed to do, two hours after the Argentinian surrender on 14 June a second Chinook arrived on the Falklands. Ironically following the surrender, No. 18 Squadron groundcrew removed the door from a captured Argentinian Chinook and fitted it to BN. BN would fly for many years with its Argentinian door.

    During the 18 days ashore, BN had flown everyday bar one, carried 2,150 troops, 95 casualties, 550 prisoners of war and 550 tons of stores.  In a footnote in the RAF’s official history, it was noted that the tonnage was more than the ‘total carried by an entire squadron of Sea Kings for the same period’. An amazing achievement considering the scarcity of supplies, equipment, and manuals available to the groundcrew. For his efforts on Mount Kent, Sqn Ldr Dick Langworthy was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC).

    An eventful opening chapter in the long career of BN which would see a further three pilots (Steve Carr, Ian Fortune and Craig Wilson) awarded the DFC while flying Bravo November and an important and most welcome addition to the Museum’s collection.

  • Harriers over Falklands

    Harriers over Falklands

    The Harrier will always be associated with the Falklands War. Several RAF Harriers and Royal Navy Sea Harriers brought the fight to the Argentinians over the Falklands, battling it out with their jet fighters and attacking ground targets in support of the British soldiers on the ground.

    The Hawker Harrier, a product of the Cold War

    The Harrier was originally meant for a completely different fight in a post-apocalyptic world devastated by nuclear weapons as part of the Third World War. The concept of a jet fighter with the ability to take off and land vertically came from the assumption that a nuclear war would destroy all the RAF stations and runways. A ‘jump jet’ would not need a runway but could theoretically operate from anywhere with minimal ground facilities.

    Several British companies devoted tremendous resources into developing a practical jet fighter, capable of this performance. Hawker replied with the P.1127. This became the Hawker Siddeley Kestrel which made its first flight on 7 March 1964. The Kestrel proved the concept was feasible and a fully-fledged combat aircraft was developed. This became the Harrier GR1 which first entered service with No.1 Squadron at RAF Wittering in July 1969.

    It instantly caught international attention when that year it took off from St Pancras railway station and, with mid-flight refuelling, flew to Manhattan in New York in just over six hours.

    Harrier GR1 transatlantic flight 1969, coming in to land at St Pancras coal yard

    The Harrier achieved vertical lift through its Pegasus jet engine. Unlike normal jet engines with a single exhaust, the Pegasus has four vectoring nozzles for directing the thrust. Small auxiliary exhaust nozzles are also fitted in the nose, tail and wingtips, to provide further balance during vertical flight.

    Beside vertical lift, this engine configuration provided it with exceptional manoeuvrability. This made it suitable as a ground attack aircraft but also as a close-range dogfighter. However, the RAF used it solely for ground attack and reconnaissance as it was not equipped with radar or air-to-air missiles.

    The flexibility of the Harrier led to a long-term heavy deployment in West Germany as a conventional deterrent and potential strike weapon against Soviet aggression. In time of war the Harrier was to be deployed away from established airfields, which were vulnerable to attack. Instead it was to be operated from short, rough strips of ground and hidden in camouflaged ‘hides’, from which it would attack the enemy’s approaching armoured formations.

    Harrier GR1s of No. 1 Squadron during Exercise SNOWY OWL, a field deployment exercise held in March 1972. Following a sortie, the Harriers are positioned back in their hides and readied for another flight.

    In the 1970s Harrier GR1s were converted into GR3s and fitted with improved attack sensors, electronic countermeasures, and a more powerful engine over the GR1. A Sea Harrier was also developed for the Royal Navy. Beyond the armament of the RAF Harrier, the ‘Shar’ was equipped with radar and Sidewinder missiles for air combat duties as part of fleet air defence.

    Unprepared for the Falklands

    When in 1982 the Task Force was being assembled to liberate the Falklands, only 28 Sea Harriers were available for use on the Royal Navy’s two aircraft carriers. It soon became apparent that this was a modest number, and the idea was hatched to include RAF Harriers. Because of the Harrier’s capability for bare base operations and the fact that No. 1(F) Squadron was the only Harrier squadron qualified in air refuelling, this Squadron was tasked to prepare for operations from a carrier as attrition replacements for Sea Harrier combat losses. However, its Harriers were not suited to operate from aircraft carriers, nor did their pilots have had any training operating from them.

    The initial plan provided for just twelve aircraft to be modified but this soon rose to over twenty. Major elements comprised nosewheel steering, changes to the fuel control units, the introduction of a Sidewinder missile capability, specialist radio transponder, tie-down shackles, drain holes and anti-corrosion weatherproofing. To achieve this in the time available while working up the squadron required additional aircraft and an intensive round-the-clock effort over a seven-day week. The system was proved and tested less within three weeks. Further modifications, which were later incorporated to increase the aircraft’s capability, included the installation of a flare and chaff dispenser for self-protection, an active electronic jammer to counter enemy radars, and the ability to carry and fire American anti-radar missiles.

    As said, the RAF Harrier pilots were not trained to operate from aircraft carriers nor did they have the expertise to operate the new weapons which were rapidly being fitted to the Harriers. The pilots of No. 1 Squadron were deployed to Royal Naval Air Station Yeovilton to practice deck landing and ski-jump take offs. They also conducted air combat training against French Mirage and Étendard aircraft, as well as trials with the new Sidewinder heat-seeking missiles and laser-guided bombs. Paradoxically, four of them had been BAC Lightning fighter pilots before transitioning to Harriers. Because of their previous air combat experience they were selected to fly Sea Harriers of the Royal Navy which did not have enough qualified Sea Harrier pilots.

    Harrier GR3 refuelling from a Handley Page Victor tanker

    The plan was to fly the Harriers over to Wideawake airfield on Ascension Island, the closest RAF station to the Falklands. To bridge these 4,000 miles, the Harriers were to be refuelled in mid-air. The nine-hour flight by a single-engined jet fighter was a new milestone for the RAF. Once on Ascension, they would be loaded on board a converted container ship, called the Atlantic Conveyor, and tightly parked in the ‘aircraft hide’ which had been built between the walls of containers. They were then ‘bagged’ to give added protection against salt water. With a total of fourteen Harriers and ten helicopters embarked this was a very valuable target and, during the passage south, one Sea Harrier was kept at a high state of readiness for air defence duties. The very use of a container ship as a carrier of aircraft, let alone the ability to mount limited operations from it, is a hallmark of the Harrier’s enormous flexibility.

    MV Atlantic Conveyor looking forward, with Harriers, Sea Harriers, Chinooks and Wessex helicopters on deck.

    The Harrier enters the fray

    On 18 May the Harriers and Sea Harriers were transferred to the two carriers, ten to HMS Hermes and four to HMS Invincible. All the GR3s went to Hermes and, after one day of work-up training, the Squadron flew its first operational sortie on 20 May. The Sea Harriers had been in operation for a good two weeks during which time no Sea Harriers had been lost in air combat. So, instead of being replacements, the GR3s were used as reinforcements and dedicated to the attack role. In this capacity they carried out the full gamut of offensive support missions, ranging from close air support, armed reconnaissance to offensive counter-air. The aims of the latter missions were twofold; first, to deny the use of Stanley airfield and the various outlying strips and, secondly, to destroy aircraft in the open.

    One such operation took place on 23 May. The Squadron’s Commanding Officer, Wg Cdr Peter Squire at the controls of our Harrier XZ997 led a four-aircraft formation to drop 1,000 lb bombs on Dunnose Head airstrip on the West Falklands. No enemy aircraft were found but the airstrip was bombed to ensure it was not to be used by the enemy in future. In the end, the Argentinians never used the airstrip. The unguided bombs fell off target and hit nearby buildings, injuring one local. After the war, Harrier pilot Mark Hare visited the settlement to apologise for the damage caused. Jimmy Forster, the farm manager, commented drily: ‘If you wanted the runway destroyed, why didn’t you tell us? We’d have ploughed it up for you!’

    Harrier GR3 taking off from HMS Hermes

    The GR3 could carry a reconnaissance pod with five cameras for 360-degree coverage. Using this capability, and the photo processing facilities within Hermes, they were able to find concentrations of enemy defensive positions and other lucrative targets, which could then be engaged. However, it required extensive photo interpretation. For instance, the Argentineans went to some lengths to deceive the British, both by making the Port Stanley runway appear to be extensively cratered and by placing fake aircraft decoys. For instance, they modified some of their training aircraft to look like Étendard fighter jets.

    For its attack tasks, the GR3 carried and delivered a variety of weapons, including cluster bombs, 2-inch rockets, 1000 lb bombs and, in due course, the laser guided bomb. The cluster bomb had a marked effect against troops in defensive positions, both in terms of casualties and in the lowering of morale. This was particularly true in the battle for Goose Green where missions flown in close support of 2PARA had a significant effect on the outcome of that battle. 2PARA were stuck on a forward slope, in daylight, being engaged by Argentinian 35 mm gunfire at 2000 metres range, something to which they had absolutely no answer. Suddenly, like cavalry to the rescue out of the sky, came three Harriers which promptly took out those guns and turned the tide of the battle.

    Harrier dropping bombs

    It was also a highly effective weapon against storage areas, such as fuel, and against helicopters caught on the ground. The full potential of the laser-guided bombs could not be made use of until just one day before the ceasefire. It was not until then that the laser target markers were positioned at the right time and place. However, four bombs delivered from loft profiles that day achieved two direct hits on pin-point targets and made the Argentineans aware that the RAF now had a weapon of extreme accuracy. No doubt that only reinforced their decision to surrender shortly after. This was the first use in conflict of smart weapons by the RAF. Ever since their use has increased, and now in 2022 virtually all ordnance dropped is guided.

    Shortly after the landings in Port San Carlos, an airstrip was built close to one of the settlements. The Harrier Forward Operating Base (FOB) had refuelling facilities and up to four aircraft could be parked on the strip at any one time. As a rule, two GR3s were detached each day to provide quick reaction support for ground forces, whilst the Sea Harriers used it extensively to lengthen their time on combat air patrol. To protect the FOB against Argentinian air attacks, eight Rapier missile systems were placed in defence of the Harrier strip. Six Rapiers had been airlifted by Wessex helicopters to sites on surrounding hills and two were positioned in the valley. Whether the presence of eight Rapiers acted as a deterrent, or because the Argentine Air Force had decided beforehand not to engage in counter-air operations, there were no enemy air attacks on the Harrier FOB.

    Rapier Air Surface Missile System On Falkland Islands (P032443)

    Losses by ground fire

    The greatest threat to the Harriers came was the gun fire and missiles fired from the ground. They varied from small arms fire to surface-to-air missiles (SAM). The two major SAM systems were Roland and Tigercat and the Harrier pilots were instructed to stay away from them. Although a substantial number of both types of missiles were launched, none was successful. The remaining SAM threat came from the shoulder-launched variety, British Blowpipe and the Soviet SAM-7, both of which were in plentiful supply. Flying very low and fast largely negated this threat and only one Harrier was claimed by the Argentinians using Blowpipe. The Argentineans were also equipped with a large quantity of AAA guns, ranging from 20mm to 35mm, some of which were linked to fire control radars. Although these tended to be sited in known areas, they posed a high threat to our aircraft, and a second Harrier was lost during the attack on Goose Green. However, most hits on the Harriers came from small arms fire which did little damage and could easily be repaired. In the later stages of the campaign, of every four aircraft launched one would return with holes in it. In total, four out of fourteen Harrier GR3s were lost during the campaign.

    One of the pilots shot down was Jerry J Pook who also flew the Harrier GR3 XZ997 on display at our Midlands site. On 30 May, Harrier pilots Jerry Pook and John Rochfort were searching for enemy helicopters on the ground over Port Stanley, when Pook’s Harrier was hit by small arms fire from the ground. Pook felt the impact of the small arms but everything felt alright and the pair pressed on. They spotted Argentinian heavy artillery and attacked them with 2-inch rockets. On the way back to HMS Hermes aircraft carrier, it became clear that Pook’s Harrier’s fuel tanks had been hit and his fuel was decreasing rapidly. Pook jettisoned his empty fuel tanks and rocket pods to reduce drag but soon the engine flamed out. With no way to get back safely, he continued in an unpowered glide towards the ship but at 56 km (35 miles) from the ship, he ejected. Luckily, a search and rescue helicopter had been scrambled on time and Pook was picked up from the water within ten minutes. His only injuries were a stiff neck and some minor burns to his face from the ejection.

    At the same time as Pook was in a helicopter back to Hermes, another helicopter was bringing back another shot-down Harrier pilot. Bob Iveson’s Harrier had been hit by ground fire three days earlier during an attack on enemy troops in support of 2 Para’s advance at Goose Green. He ejected from his aircraft and evaded capture before being rescued. In an interview with us he said ‘It was pretty hairy, because I’d never seen that much tracer and flak going off in the air. They had a lot of guns at Goose Green including some pretty sophisticated radar laid ones which I found out to my cost later.’ His Harrier was hit and the controls became unresponsive after which Bob knew he had to jump out. However, It was just… I’d rather get a little further away from a bunch of troops that I had just dropped cluster bombs on or near. So, ’cause I thought they might not be best pleased to see me.’ he decided to keep the Harrier flying as far as he could. “I’d just dropped cluster bombs on them, so they might not be best pleased to see me”, he later said. He ejected at very low altitude, but landed “on the softest, mushiest grass and heather you could imagine”. He avoided capture until picked up by soldiers of 2 Para. His immersion suit is on display in the Age of Uncertainty exhibition in Hangar 6 at the RAF Museum London. As Harriers pilots had to fly over water, they had to wear immersion suits in case they were shot down. Bob evaded the Argentinians for three days until he was picked up by friendlies and returned to HMS Hermes.

    Group of RAF Harrier aircrew on deck of container ship 'Atlantic Conveyer' (P032429)

    Following the ceasefire on 14 June, a full site was built ashore at Port Stanley and on 4 July the GR3 Detachment went ashore, armed with Sidewinders in the air defence role. No. 1435 Flight, famous from the defence of Malta during the Second World War, was reformed on the Falklands with Harriers, later with McDonnell Douglas Phantoms. No. 1435 Flight is still operational on the Falklands today, flying the Eurofighter Typhoon FGR4.

    Meanwhile, the Harrier continued its service with the RAF in Germany. The Harrier was redesigned with a new wing, stronger engine and digital avionics. The Harrier GR5 entered service with the RAF in the mid-1980s and served over Iraq and Bosnia. A further improved GR7 and GR9 did so over Kosovo and Afghanistan. A Harrier GR9A is on display at the RAF Museum London. Due to budget cuts, the Harrier was withdrawn from service in 2010, although the Harrier II is still in use on board Italian, Spanish and American aircraft carriers where it will be replaced by the F-35 Lightning II.

    A Harrier GR9A is on display at our London site, while Harrier GR3 XZ997, a genuine Falklands veteran, is waiting for you at our Midlands site. Book your free ticket via our website to see them up close, together with other aircraft and artefacts of the Falklands.

  • The Hercules in the Falklands War

    The Hercules in the Falklands War

    In the #Falklands40 commemorations, the Lockheed Hercules may not receive the attention of the Harriers and Vulcans of this world, but it played an essential role during the conflict.

    As has been explained in previous posts, Ascension Island was the vital staging post for the recapture of the Falklands, located strategically between the UK and the Falklands. From here the Vulcan and Victors launched their Black Buck raids while the remaining (Sea) Harriers were loaded on ships steaming toward the Falklands. However, how to get supplies to Ascension Island? Or how could the Fleet be supplied while in the South Atlantic? This is where ‘the Herc’ came in.

    The Hercules entered service with the US Air Force in 1956 as a heavy tactical transport aircraft powered by then-novel turboprop engines. Ever since, the Hercules and its many enlarged and improved versions have been a mainstay of Western logistics. During the Falklands, the RAF had a total of 54 Hercules transports, which operated together at RAF Lyneham, and therefore referred to as the Lyneham Wing.

    The air bridge

    The Hercules was the first RAF aircraft to jump to action in the Falklands War. One day after the invasion, four Hercules departed Lyneham for Gibraltar to set up an air bridge via Dakar in Senegal to Ascension Island. Goods and personnel were flown to the Island to ready it for air operations.

    Another valuable mission performed by the Hercules fleet was that of air drops to the Task Force ships sailing toward the Falklands. Once the Task Force sailed south from Ascension Island, the only way of delivering urgent/vital supplies would be through Hercules flying down to it and dropping them by parachute into the sea, having provided sufficient flotation packaging to permit the stores to float until picked up by the ships.

    The air drop technique always worked very well but there was one peculiar incident when the small boat sent to drag the large load alongside a destroyer for pick up, took over three hours to do the job. A killer whale had fallen in love with what the Herc had dropped. It chased off the naval boat every time it tried to get near it. It eventually took the destroyer itself to chase off the amorous orca and recover the load.

     

    map Atlantic Ocean

    Longer legs

    A more serious problem was the limited endurance of the Hercules. Remember, Ascension Island was 4,000 miles away from the UK, and it was another 3,500 miles to the Falklands. Both were beyond the range of the Herc, even without cargo. A solution was literally found. Discarded fuel tanks, once used by retired Andover and Argosy transport aircraft, were located in storage. These 825-gallon tanks were hastily installed in some Hercules aircraft, greatly increasing their range. The first extended-range Hercules deployment was on 4 May. Hercules XV196 took off from Lyneham and flew non-stop to Ascension Island. A few days later it dropped supplies over the Task Force and returned, staying in the air for over 17 hours.

    Still not satisfied with the range, the RAF investigated adding an in-air refuelling probe to the Hercules. Hercules XV200 was chosen for the conversion. A probe was mounted on top of the cockpit with the equipment faired over from the fuselage roof to the starboard wing root. A Handley Page Victor tanker was flown over to test the mid-air refuelling. However, there was one obvious problem. The Vulcan’s minimum flight was higher than the Hercules’ maximum flight!

    In the end a technique was developed which involved fuel being transferred in a gentle dive starting at about 20,000 feet. That way, the Victor could manage to keep down to 230 knots (265 mph) and (thanks to Isaac Newton) the Herc could bump up its normal 210 knots (242 mph) to match this. This procedure meant a prolonged descent at 500 feet per minute, the exercise usually being completed about 5,000 feet above the ocean, before commencing the long haul back up to altitude. That said, depending on the conditions, it could be a lot lower…

    Six Hercules were converted before the end of the Falklands conflict. The first operational sortie with XV200 took place on 16 May. Flt Lt HC Burgoyne and his crew took off from Ascension for a 6,300-miles journey to the Task Fleet off the Falklands, and back.

    The Hercules was refuelled twice by tanker aircraft; the second tanker having to be refuelled itself on the way back. Once down to about 1000 feet the Hercules depressurised, opened its ramp, and dropped 1,000 lb of supplies and eight parachutists near HSM Antelope off the Falklands. Burgoyne’s team then closed the ramp, re-pressurised, and climbed back up to cruising altitude before making a rendezvous with its third tanker halfway home. Burgoyne received the Air Force Cross for what was probably the longest air transport mission in history.

    By 6 June the first two such equipped Hercules had carried out 11 missions, supporting the Task Fleet off the Falklands, each lasting at least 20 hours. The crews were prescribed the non-addictive drug Temazepam to ensure that they got some proper rest between flights. Without exception each crew member was absolutely drained, but determined and confident in their ability to undertake the task.

    Every mission was given a girl’s name, such as Julie, Katie, Mary and Wilma. A drop on the islands itself, codenamed Gina, was planned for 14 June but the Argentinian forces surrendered while the Hercules was still en route.

    Port Stanley

    That did not end the role of the Hercules, quite the opposite. Using the captured Port Stanley airport, the Hercules were used to supply the British armed forces on the Islands. This came to a temporary halt on 14 August to allow extension and repair work to the air strip. Sorties reverted back to airdrops.

    To pick up mail from the Islands an air snatch system was devised, similar to the practices of the RAF over the desert in the 1920s and 1930s. A grappling hook was attached to a 150ft nylon rope, trailing from the rear cargo door of the Hercules. The hook would engage a loop of rope suspended between two 22 ft poles positioned 50ft apart. The aircraft would run in at 50ft to snatch the rope and haul in the attached mail bag. Some 30 such snatches were carried out before RAF Stanley was reopened on 29 August.

    In hindsight, the Hercules air bridge delivered essential support to the British war effort. In fact, the airlift turned out to be the biggest since the Berlin Airlift of 1948-49. The Hercules carried over 7000 tons, or 15 million pounds, of freight, including 114 vehicles, twenty-two helicopters and nearly 6000 troops and support personnel.

     

    Both our London and Midlands site have a Hercules on display. Our London site has a front section of an American WC-130E while our Midlands site has an RAF C-130K Mk 3 on display. Book your free ticket at the bottom of our website to see them up close. And if you wish to find out more about the history of the Hercules in the RAF, have a look at this video on our YouTube channel: