|
In 1965, the Air Force
entered direct combat in Vietnam, despite the fact
that its leaders had always opposed involvement in
Southeast Asia. It fought in an outstanding manner,
though hampered by highly political rules of engagement
that violated all principles of airpower. As it fought,
the Air Force gathered the expertise it needed to combat
an enemy whose strength grew year by year, fueled by
virtually unlimited support from the Soviet Union and
China.
In December 1972, 25 years ago next month, the intransigence
of the tough and resilient North Vietnamese foe finally
exposed the total failure of gradualist war policies
set in motion years before by President Lyndon B. Johnson
and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. In fact,
the North's thorough defeat of South Vietnam's forces
convinced Hanoi that it need not seriously pursue peace
negotiations with the United States in Paris. Military
victory was within its grasp.
For Washington, the situation was inordinately bleak.
The process of "Vietnamization" and US military
force withdrawal had reduced the American ground presence
to about 26,000 troops-too few to win a major battle
but enough for a huge contingent of prisoners in an
inglorious defeat. President Richard M. Nixon called
upon the Air Force to save the situation. It did so
with a powerful, 11-day bombing campaign, Operation
Linebacker II. The campaign unfolded over the 12-day
period of December 1829, 1972. Because there was
a one-day stand-down on Christmas Day, the operation
came to be known by many as "the 11-Day War."
Seven Years
Late
When President Nixon gave the order the Air Force
collectively saluted and went to work, pleased at last
to be carrying out the strategy it had advocated from
the start--concentrated, sustained air attack against
the enemy heartland. In 1965, that enemy heartland
had been virtually defenseless and could have been
attacked at will. Now, after a huge buildup, it was
shielded by the most extensive and strongest integrated
air defense system in the world.
The size and strength of those defenses were so great
that many believed the B-52 heavy bomber, backbone
of the Air Force's long-range force, would not be able
to survive encounters with it. By 1972, North Vietnam
had amassed a defense that included 145 MiG fighters,
26 SA-2 Guideline surface-to-air missile sites (21
in the HanoiHaiphong area), a heavy concentration
of anti-aircraft artillery, and a complex, overlapping
radar network that served an efficient and many-times-redundant
command-and-control system. In addition, the radar
network secretly had been improved in recent times
by introduction of a new fire-control radar that improved
the accuracy of the SA-2 weapons.
All previous air campaigns, including the initial
Linebacker carried out in MayOctober 1972, were "limited," designed
to interdict the overland routes by which the North
resupplied its regular units and Viet Cong forces operating
in South Vietnam. Linebacker II was to be different.
The intent was to destroy all major target complexes
in the Hanoi and Haiphong areas, using two distinct
types of efforts, both of which had to contend with
the monsoon season. An all-weather force of heavy B-52s
and smaller F-111 attack aircraft would bomb by night
while tactical aircraft would continue to press daytime
attacks.
Air Force officers carefully shaped the list of targets
so that the bombers could avoid civilian collateral
damage and, most particularly, avoid damaging installations
housing American POWs. As it turned out, one of the
valuable side effects of Linebacker II was the boost
in morale it brought prisoners as they saw their Communist
captors tremble at the explosions and realized that
at long last, the United States was fighting the war
as it always should have been fought.
The initial orders calling for the Linebacker II effort
specified three days of intensive effort, with a strong
prospect of continued bombing. Throughout the Pacific
theater, Air Force headquarters, flight lines, supply
depots, barracks, mess halls, and all the other elements
of a fighting force throbbed with preparatory activity.
The flight line at Andersen AFB, Guam, was jammed with
an enormous force of 99 B-52Gs and 53 B-52Ds. The mission
from Guam would run about 12 hours and require in-flight
refueling. At U Tapao Royal Thai Airfield, Thailand,
another 54 B-52Ds were available. The mission from
U Tapao would take only about three to four hours and
did not require in-flight refueling.
All of the D models of the BUFFs had received the
latest electronic countermeasures modifications, while
only half of the G models had been so modified. This
would prove to be an unfortunate and at times fatal
difference, because the unmodified G models turned
out to be vulnerable to SAMs.
Double Duty
Air Force tactical air units were called upon for
double duty. They were to fly in support of the nighttime
bomber attacks then go on to conduct a vigorous attack
effort in the daytime. In the course of the campaign's
11 days, tacair units flew 530 daytime sorties, including
126 for suppression of SAM complexes, 273 for MiGCAP
[MiG Combat Air Patrol] or escort, 85 for chaff dispersal,
and 46 other types of missions. By night, tactical
air units flew 769 sorties, including 170 SAM suppression,
390 MiGCAP/escort and 209 chaff.
The effectiveness of the US tactical force's precision
guided munitions was greatly diminished by poor weather
over the North. Still, when the campaign was over,
Gen. John W. Vogt Jr., commander of 7th Air Force,
would rate one precision guided weapon to be equal
in worth to 100 "dumb bombs." The tactical
air units also received excellent support from US Navy
and Marine Corps aircraft.
As Linebacker II operations unfolded, a number of
critical elements played a role in the execution of
the attacks, including routes, spacing, altitudes,
bomb loads, and basing. The routes to and from the
targets were governed by many factors, including disposition
of surface-to-air missile sites, the proximity of the
Chinese border, and strength of the prevailing winds.
Flight tactics called for formations of three B-52s,
separated by 500 feet in altitude and one mile in horizontal
distance.
Unlike bomber forces in the Korean War, the B-52s
were under the command of Strategic Air Command, not "chopped" to
the theater commander. SAC headquarters had ordered
aircraft commanders not to take evasive action in the
face of threats from either SAMs or MiGs during the
long run in from the initial point to bombs away. The
speed and direction of the turn after the bomb drop
was designed to get the bombers out of SAM range as
soon as possible. The tactics were needed primarily
because SAC wanted to preserve electronic countermeasures
integrity of the three-ship formations while making
sure that only military targets were hit.
It took nearly two hours for 87 B-52s from Guam to
taxi, take off, and become airborne on the afternoon
of Dec. 18, 1972. They then were joined in the attack
by 42 additional B-52s flying out of U Tapao, forming
the largest attacking bomber force assembled since
World War II. The B-52 targets on the first day were
Kep airfield, Hoa Lac airfield, Phuc Yen airfield,
Kinh No vehicle repair site, Yen Vien rail yards, Hanoi
railroad repair facility, and the main Hanoi radio
station. The F-111 force was assigned missions against
nine targets.
The North Vietnamese leaders had expected a US air
attack, but they were shocked by the intensity of the
assault on Dec. 18. Reacting swiftly, the forces of
the North used their SAMs effectively and quickly began
to concentrate their efforts on the post-target turn.
Of 741
planned B-52 sorties, 12 were aborted. The Air
Force SEAD (Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses)
mission was carried out by F-105, F-4C, and F-4E
fighters. CAP (combat air patrol), escort, and
chaff dispersal were carried out by numerous
types. In addition, US Navy and US Marine aircraft
flew a total of 277 night support sorties in
A-6, A-7, and F-4 aircraft.
Linebacker II Total Night
USAF Sorties
|
| Day/Date |
B-52
Attack |
SEAD |
CAP/
Escort |
Chaff |
Total |
| 1: Dec 18 |
129 |
17 |
63 |
22 |
231 |
| 2: Dec 19 |
93 |
19 |
61 |
24 |
197 |
| 3: Dec 20 |
99 |
18 |
55 |
26 |
198 |
| 4: Dec 21 |
30 |
13 |
23 |
9 |
75 |
| 5: Dec 22 |
30 |
15 |
27 |
15 |
87 |
| 6: Dec 23 |
30 |
13 |
12 |
3 |
58 |
| 7: Dec 24 |
30 |
16 |
22 |
16 |
84 |
| 8: Dec 26 |
120 |
18 |
33 |
25 |
129 |
| 9: Dec 27 |
60 |
23 |
32 |
23 |
118 |
| 10: Dec 28 |
60 |
7 |
28 |
23 |
118 |
| 11: Dec 29 |
60 |
11 |
33 |
25 |
129 |
| Totals |
741 |
170 |
390 |
209 |
1,510 |
SAM Dangers
This turn was the point of greatest B-52 vulnerability,
for three reasons. First, it was here that the North
Vietnamese radar had the greatest chance to "burn
through" the B-52 cells' combined electronic countermeasures
protection. Second, a banking B-52 presented a greater
radar cross section to the defenders. Finally, the
turn would reverse the benefits of the wind, transforming
a 100-knot tailwind into a head wind that slowed down
the enormous aircraft.
On Day 1 of the campaign, the Communist forces fired
more than 200 SAMs, often sending them up in four-
or six-weapon volleys. Once, the air was filled with
more than 40 SAMs. On that day, the US lost three B-52s,
two from Andersen and one from U Tapao, as well as
one F-111. The losses were lighter than had been expected
and were not considered unacceptably high. For the
entire 11 bombing days, the BUFF crews upheld the Air
Force tradition of never being turned back from an
assigned mission, pressing on regardless of the ferocity
of the enemy attack. On Day 1, SSgt. Samuel Turner,
tail gunner on Brown 03, also shot down a MiG-21, the
first in B-52 combat history.
Tactics were revised slightly on Day 2 of the attack,
but routes remained the same. Bomber cell altitudes
were lowered to 34,500 and 35,000 feet, the better
to place the B-52s more securely within the chaff corridors
being laid by the F-4s. Time separation between cells
and between Times Over Target (TOTs) was increased
to four minutes. Evasive action was authorized on both
inbound and outbound routes. The results of the changes
seemed to be positive. On Day 2, the North launched
some 180 SAMs at the 93 attacking B-52s, but no losses
occurred.
On Day 3, tragedy struck. Only 90 of 99 planned B-52s
sorties were effective and six BUFFs were shot down.
Two Gs and one D were lost in the first wave and an
identical number were downed in the third wave. Three
were struck prior to bomb release and three afterward;
four went down near Hanoi while two made it out of
North Vietnam. None of the lost B-52Gs had been modified
to carry the new AN/ALT-22 ECM equipment. In the first
three days of the campaign, five unmodified Gs and
only one modified G had been lost. Of the total of
nine B-52s lost to date, five had been hit during their
turn off the target.
This constituted an unacceptably high seven-percent
loss rate. Even so, Gen. John C. Meyer, the commander
in chief of SAC, made the tough decision to press on,
calling for even heavier strikes on SAM sites and storage
areas. His decision proved to be correct, for the enemy
had been hurt, too, and now was rapidly expending SAMs.
Tactics were altered again, too; cell separation and
TOTs were compressed to 90 and 120 seconds, respectively.
The altitude separation between cells was increased,
and withdrawal routes were changed, enabling some bomber
streams to withdraw directly toward the Gulf of Tonkin.
Electronic warfare officers received authorization
to add an ALT-28 ECM transmitter to their system with
the intent of jamming the SAM downlink frequency.
On Day 4 of the campaign, attacks were staged by only
30 heavy bombers, all D models from U Tapao. Planning
was simplified and a total of 75 tactical aircraft
were available for support. Two B-52s were lost to
SAMs in an attack on Bac Mai airfield.
On each of the next three days--Days 5, 6, and 7--USAF
carried out attacks with packages of 30 B-52s, losing
none. The Air Force was making good use of its experience
and new tactics (including altitude changes, multiple
approach paths, and the selection of new targets outside
the HanoiHaiphong area) to confuse the North Vietnamese
defenders. On Dec. 24, the seventh day of the air campaign,
A1C Albert Moore, a gunner on Ruby 03, shot down a
MiG.
Wrong Signal
US bombing forces stood down on Christmas Day in order
to give planners a chance to review events so far and
give the crews some rest. Politically, the stand-down
was like the previous bombing halts, a well intended "signal" that
negotiations were in order. Once again the North Vietnamese
interpreted the respite as a sign of American weakness,
and they spent the day feverishly restocking their
SAM sites with missiles.
The next day, Day 8, the bombing resumed. All of the
previous experience gained was exploited in new tactics.
Seventy-eight B-52s in four flights attacked Hanoi
simultaneously from four different directions. At the
same time, 42 aircraft in three other flights struck
Haiphong, North Vietnam's principal harbor and transshipment
point for military supplies.
The compressed nature of the attack intensified the
difficulties of the 114 tactical support aircraft.
However, they executed the mission flawlessly. The
versatile USAF F-4 Phantom served as the MiGCAP and
also dispensed the dense chaff blanket necessary to
shield the B-52s from enemy radar. Phantoms and the
redoubtable Republic F-105 Thunderchiefs suppressed
SAMs in the dangerous Wild Weasel mission.
Aging EB-66s were forced by the heavy SAM threat to
operate farther than desired from the target area,
but they nonetheless provided efficient ECM support.
F-111s and Vought A-7s attacked northern airfields.
KC-135 tankers furnished fuel to all types of aircraft,
often moving well into a combat area to reach aircraft
in trouble. The Air Force Linebacker II team was completed
by C-130 search and rescue aircraft, HH-53 Jolly Green
Giant helicopters, and EC-121s.
The Navy and Marines both supplied F-4 aircraft for
the MiGCAP and BARCAP [Barrier Combat Air Patrol],
while A-6s attacked designated targets. Even though
there was still no centralized control of all air assets,
the Navy and the Air Force worked together closely.
The attack on Day 8 went off with precision, although
two B-52s were lost because of the heavy increase in
SAM firings.
The United States Air Force had now established a
clear ascendancy over the North Vietnamese defenders.
Sixty B-52s were dispatched on each of the three remaining
nights of the campaign, Days 9, 10, and 11. Two B-52s
were shot down on Dec. 27, one going down in North
Vietnam and the other making it back to Thailand, where
the crew bailed out.
USAF Aircraft Losses Dec.
18-29, 1972
|
| Date |
Type |
Call
Sign |
Target
(Mission) |
Cause |
| Dec. 18 |
F-111A |
Snug 40 |
Hanoi Radio |
unk. |
| Dec. 18 |
B-52G |
Charcoal 01 |
Yen Vien complex |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 18 |
B-52G |
Peach 02 |
Yen Vien complex |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 18 |
B-52D |
Rose 01 |
Hanoi Radio |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 20 |
B-52D |
Quilt 03 |
Yen Vien complex |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 20 |
B-52G |
Brass 02 |
Yen Vien complex |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 20 |
B-52G |
Orange 03 |
Yen Vien complex |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 20 |
B-52D |
Straw 02 |
Gia Lam rail yard |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 20 |
B-52G |
Olive 01 |
Kinh No complex |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 20 |
B-52G |
Tan 03 |
Kinh No complex |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 21 |
B-52D |
Scarlet 03 |
Bac Mai airfield |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 21 |
B-52D |
Blue 01 |
Bac Mai airfield |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 22 |
F-111A |
Jackle 33 |
Kinh No complex |
unk. |
| Dec. 23 |
EB-66C |
Hunt 02 |
(non combat) |
engine out |
| Dec. 26 |
B-52D |
Ebony 02 |
Giap Nhi rail
yard |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 26 |
B-52D |
Ash 01 |
Kinh No complex |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 27 |
F-4E |
DeSoto 03 |
(strike escort) |
MiG-21 |
| Dec. 27 |
F-4E |
Vega 02 |
(MiGCAP) |
MiG-21 |
| Dec. 27 |
HH-53 |
Jolly Green |
(rescue) |
small arms |
| Dec. 27 |
B-52D |
Ash 02 |
SAM site |
SA-2 |
| Dec. 27 |
B-52D |
Cobalt 02 |
Truan Quan rail
yard |
SA-2 |
| Source: Pacific
Air Forces |
Under Siege
On the final day of the campaign, Day 11 on Dec. 29,
USAF crews--both bomber and support--were at the peak
of their form while the enemy was in obvious distress,
able to fire only a total of 23 SAMs. Where once they
had salvoed six SAMs at a time, they now were reduced
to individual snap shots. They were almost out of SAMs,
their MiGs were shut down, and their radar and communication
links were disrupted. In short, they were at the mercy
of the United States.
The US had proved decisively that B-52s, supported
by tactical air assets, were an effective force, able
to meet and defeat the enemy. In the miserable prisons
in which they were held, American prisoners of war
experienced an unimaginable elation at seeing their
brutal captors frightened and suddenly polite.
The result of Linebacker II was exactly what had been
predicted by those who had advocated full application
of airpower against North Vietnam: a military victory.
The badly shaken North Vietnamese accepted that the
war was at a stalemate, returned to the negotiating
table in Paris, and signed the Paris Peace Accords
on Jan. 27, 1973. Within 60 days of the signing, 591
American POWs were released and back in the United
States.
In Linebacker II, SAC's B-52s had flown 729 sorties
out of a total of 741 planned sorties and dropped 15,000
tons of bombs. North Vietnamese forces had fired about
1,240 SAMs. The Air Force lost 15 B-52 bombers, which
amounted to a loss rate of less than two percent. Of
92 B-52 crew members involved in the losses, 26 were
recovered, 25 came up missing in action, 33 became
prisoners of war, and eight were either killed in action
or later died of wounds. In addition, the US lost two
F-111As, three F-4s, two A-7s, two A-6s, one EB-66,
one HH-53, and one RA-5C.
As soon as Hanoi signaled it wished to resume peace
negotiations, Linebacker II raids immediately ceased.
Some in the Air Force argued that this was a mistake;
if the United States continued the attacks, they maintained,
North Vietnam would have to accept a military defeat.
Instead, they secured at the peace table a political
victory that they would in due course translate into
a full-scale military conquest of South Vietnam.
Not long after the end of Linebacker II and the formal
return of the US prisoners of war, United States forces
at last formally disengaged from the war in Southeast
Asia. There then followed what Henry Kissinger described
as a "decent interval" of about two years,
after which Hanoi, knowing that it no longer faced
any realistic threat of another Linebacker II, invaded
South Vietnam across a broad front. The Communist forces
entered Saigon on April 30, 1975, and unified the two
Vietnams under Hanoi's totalitarian control.
To Air Force observers, the events of 1975 pointed
up a classic case of "what might have been." To
them, full application of airpower in a Linebacker
II-type campaign in 1965, a decade earlier, would have
achieved military victory, prevented the long and costly
US involvement in Southeast Asia, saved South Vietnam
as a nation, and allowed the US to escape the calamitous
effects that the Vietnamese war has afflicted on America
ever since.
Walter J. Boyne, former director of the National
Air and Space Museum in Washington is a retired Air
Force colonel and author. He has written more than
400 articles about aviation topics and 28 books,
the most recent of which is Beyond the Wild Blue:
A History of the United States Air Force, 1947-1997.
His most recent article for Air Force Magazine,
"Hap," appeared
in the September 1997 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
|