By Stewart M. Powell

Concentration, dedication, and determination
were hallmarks of Desert Storm. The faces of
the 4th TFW F-15E maintainers above reflect
all of those qualities--attributes that made
possible the relentless hammering of Iraq with
remarkably light coalition losses.
An F-117A Stealth fighter fired the Air Force's opening shot
of the war against Iraq, dropping a pin-point-accurate, laser-guided,
2,000- pound bomb through the roof of the general communications
building in downtown Baghdad and into its communications center.
The single fighter targeting the facility operated with impunity
over the Iraqi capital before Baghdad's air defense system detected
follow-on attacks by conventional allied aircraft. "The
city was lighted up, with cars still in the streets," recalled
Col. Klaus J. Klause. Within hours, "Baghdad was blacked
out, and they were sending up their heavy antiaircraft fire.
We could see the lights of their flak twinkling all over the
place."
Pilots given the highly sensitive task of striking high-value
Iraqi targets participated in unusually detailed mission planning
beforehand, including a review of floor plans to focus pilots'
bombing priorities on key rooms.
Col. Alton C. Whitley, commander of the 37th Tactical Fighter
Wing, based at Tonopah Test Range Airfield, Nev., said planes
from his squadrons carried out thirty sorties against eighty
Iraqi targets in the opening hours of Desert Storm. Vivid videotape
of the attack on the communications building adjacent to the
Tigris River showed the bomb slide precisely through the center
of the roof of the multistory building before exploding.
Desert Storm threw hundreds of American flyers into their
first combat missions, often under the tutelage of commanders
who had seen action in Vietnam. For younger pilots, learning
to work in the stress of combat was unforgettable.
Colonel Whitley told his pilots what to expect. "It would
seem a little bit like fear," he told his men, "perhaps
a little bit like anxiety. But not to worry, because we are well
equipped. " Going into targets in Iraq, including Baghdad,
pilots hunkered down in their high-tech cockpits. "You get
as small as you can get," said Colonel Klause. "You
sit down low in the cockpit, concentrate on the gauges, and don't
look out."
One 37th TFW pilot, who identified himself as "Greg,"
dodged a storm of antiaircraft fire after the relatively calm
first-in, first-out missions over Iraq the first night. "There's
always what we call the 'golden BB'--the aimed or unaimed bullet
that you run into because there are so many bullets," recalled
the 1973 Air Force Academy graduate. "They fired more bullets
than I thought were ever made in the history of the world."
When a target was hit and the trip home began, the relief
was palpable. "Coming off the target and knowing you're
safe is one of the most exhilarating feelings I ever felt,"
the pilot said. "It's such a feeling of relief I made it
through a spot I didn't believe I was ever going to go into."
An American woman mailed a teddy bear named "Jeronamo"
to "Any Service Member, Saudi Arabia." The stuffed
toy animal quickly got more action than the sender bargained
for.
SSgt. Brad Bowers, crew chief for an F-117A Stealth fighter
known as "Invisible Thunder," assigned to the 37th
TFW, decided to give the bear the ride of its life. "I thought
I'd fly it around, then send it back to her when it's all over
[and] let her know where it's been," the crew chief said.
The tan, eight-inch toy flew over Baghdad in the map case
inside the cockpit on the allies' first mission.

Col. Merrill "Ron" Karp (left), commander of
the 35th TFW congratulates Col. George "John
Boy" Walton after the latter's first, highly
successful Wild Weasel mission over Iraq. Colonel
Wafton, characterized by Colonel Karp as
"fearless," knew that despite initial
successes, the time to "buckledown" was just
beginning.
Day of the Weasels
Waves of F-4G Wild Weasels led the way into Iraqi-held territory
for follow-on ground attacks by US Air Force and Navy attack
planes at the outset of Desert Storm. "The Weasels keep
the SAMs off the guys," said Col. Merrill "Ron"
Karp, commander of the 35th TFW, George AFB, Calif., which flew
missions out of an undisclosed country in the Persian Gulf region.
"The F-15s keep the MiGs off us, and the jamming planes
deal with the radars."
Selected to lead the Weasels into combat was Col. George "John
Boy" Walton, a veteran whom Colonel Karp selected for the
job because Colonel Walton had "respect for the enemy"
but was "fearless."
Upon returning from his first mission over Baghdad, a visibly
drained Colonel Walton described in detail the antiaircraft firestorm
US warplanes dodged over Baghdad. "I saw one of the most
fantastic fireworks demonstrations I've seen since years ago,"
he said. "Baghdad lit up like a Christmas tree."
With his face still creased from his oxygen mask, he sounded
a sober note of determination, knowing the kind of antiaircraft
fire that awaited his squadron on subsequent missions. "Now
we have to buckle down and prepare," Colonel Walton said.
"It's not over. We just have to keep the pressure on until
the President says, 'Lay off."'
The predawn assault that opened the war was "the scariest
thing I've ever done," said British Tornado pilot Flt. Lt.
Ian Long. "It was absolutely terrifying. You're frightened
of failure, you're frightened of dying. You're flying as low
as you dare, but high enough to get the weapons off. We saw some
tracers coming off the target down our left side. We tried to
avoid that. As the bombs come off, you just run--run like hell."
"Like New Year's"
The months of waiting ended for American forces in Saudi Arabia
at midnight EST (8:00 a.m. Saudi time) on January 15--the deadline
the United Nations set for Iraqi withdrawal from Kuwait. Aircrews
with the 53d TFS greeted the milestone at their air base with
applause, cheers, and a dose of gallows humor.
"We rang it in like New Year's," said Capt. Mike
Elliott. "The official 1991 Iraqi calendar had just come
to an end."
What Elliott meant was that the custom-made calendars prepared
by the aircrews had dates only up to January 15--and a menacing
blank thereafter. Tiny bomb bursts marked the spaces where the
remainder of that week should have been. In the space where the
following Sunday should have appeared, there appeared the words
"Black Sunday."
The squadron marked the day with a group photo of forty pilots
before they all headed out for the high-tempo, high-risk operations.
"Organizing forty pilots is a contradiction in terms ,"
quipped Lt. Col. Randy "Bigs" Bigum, the squadron commander.
The pilots were confident. As Capt. Mike Miller, an F-15C
pilot, put it, Saddam Hussein is "not going to have a country
after this thing."
Others marked the deadline's passing more quietly. SSgt. Mike
Thomas set his watch alarm to go off at 8:00 a.m., the hour the
deadline took effect. An engine was turning when his alarm went
off, so it wasn't until a few minutes later that he realized
the deadline had passed.
"I just had to stop and collect my thoughts," he
recalled. "Is today the day?"
Confirmation that Desert Storm had started came not from President
Bush or Defense Secretary Dick Cheney but from Col. Ray Davis,
chief maintenance officer at an F-15 base in Saudi Arabia.
"This is history in the making," the officer told
two combat correspondents.
Their report was filed at 2:27 a.m., January 17, 1991, Saudi
time. It announced that "the war with Iraq began early Thursday
morning as a squadron of US fighter-bombers took off from the
largest US air base in central Saudi Arabia."
"The first [planes] took off at 12:50 a.m.," Colonel
Davis told the correspondents. "We've been waiting here
for five months. Now we finally got to do what we were sent here
to do."
The two-man F-15E crews walked soberly to their aircraft to
board their planes for what was for most their first combat mission.
"They know what the targets are," Colonel Davis said
at the time. "It's pretty much mechanical."

Sights of the unforgiving terrain underscored
the importance of refueling. One pilot
described the "tightness" he felt 200 miles from
friendly territory, and another said running out of
gas (or hitting the ground) was "the biggest threat."
F-15s "Splash" Four
One contest less than two weeks into Desert Storm was an exhibition
of US professionalism. The engagement between two F-15Cs flying
combat air patrol about sixty miles south of Baghdad and four
Iraqi warplanes took barely eighteen minutes on Super Bowl Sunday,
January 27.
"When I realized I was about to engage them, time just
seemed to slow down," said a laid-back pilot nicknamed "Coma,"
flying for the 53d Tactical Fighter Squadron, 36th TFW, Bitburg,
Germany. Like many other pilots, he withheld his true name to
prevent reprisals against his family back home.
The slow-motion perception of combat was a phenomenon common
to pilots during the air campaign that started Desert Storm on
January 17.
The two US F-15Cs, piloted by Coma and "O.P.," had
been aloft four hours and had just come off midair refueling
when they got a call from an E-3 Airborne Warning and Control
System (AWACS) aircraft.
Hostile aircraft were approaching. The US interceptors flew
toward the advancing Iraqi planes, picking them up on their radar
at eighty miles. At forty miles, the Iraqis inexplicably turned
tail, only to be pursued by the F-15Cs.
"It seemed like they were unaware that we were there,"
said O.P. The US warplanes, flying above 27,000 feet, broke off
radar contact and began to stalk their prey at 5,000 feet.
The F-15Cs dived on their targets. The Iraqi warplanes hit
the deck, dropping as low as they could go. "From this point
on, we just closed in on them," 0.P said.
The US pilots Bred radar-guided AIM-7 Sparrow missiles and
heat-seeking AIM-9 Sidewinders. Two MiG-23s went down.
The F-15Cs turned to track the two other Iraqi warplanes,
a MiG-23 and Mirage F. 1, downing the planes with Sidewinders.
The two Iraqi planes hit the desert in plumes of flame.
Preparation had been more demanding than combat, said O.P.,
carrying a purple Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle scarf given him
by his six-year-old son. "We train to a much tougher threat."
Ground crews for F-15 flying combat air patrol over Iraqi-held
territory worked night and day to improve on the "hot pit"
turn-arounds designed for the workhorse warplanes.
One maintenance crew with the 1st TFW from Langley AFB, Va.,
repeatedly tried to--and sometimes did--beat the twenty- to twenty-five-minute
wartime standard for refueling, reloading, and rechecking an
F-15 and then returning it to action.
Capt. Brad Gallup, assistant officer in charge of a maintenance
crew with the "Ironmen" of the 71st TFS, said his team
always shot for the seventeen-minute turnaround. That way, he
said, "we'll have more planes able to go back out at them
again and again."
In combat with Iraqi MiG-29s or Mirage F. 1s it was a contest
of technology. "It's more my machine and how well I can
run it vs. another guy," explained Capt. Steve Adams. "You
don't look at it as beating that man. You look on it more as
beating that machine."
Capt. Steve Tate had never flown a combat mission when the
flight leader for aircraft from the 1st TFW was assigned to fly
combat air patrol over Baghdad at the outset of Desert Storm.
Suddenly, beneath Captain Tate's patrolling flight of planes,
a French-built Mirage F.1 dashed down the runway of an Iraqi
airfield and headed skyward to challenge American aircraft.
At 3:15 a.m., barely an hour into Desert Storm, Captain Tate
fired a Sparrow missile at the Iraqi plane, piloted by one of
Baghdad's elite French-trained airmen. The plane, he said, vanished
in "a huge fireball."

Munitions crew members from the 33d TFW
load a Sidewinder onto an F-15, just one of the
many types of munitions available to Desert
Storm pilots. Crew members were nonchalant about
keeping up with the astonishing 2,000 combat
sorties per day. "It's like a 7-Eleven,"
said one. "The pilots can get any bomb they
like." (USAF photo by SrA. Chris Putnam)
Airborne Graffiti
Air Force ground crews scrawled a variety of messages on missiles
and bombs bound for Iraqi targets as they readied American aircraft
for missions over Iraqi-held territory. At an air base in Saudi
Arabia used by two squadrons of F-117A Stealth fighters, the
handwritten messages were typical.
"For all you do," said one, "this bomb's for
you."
Said another, "We care enough to send the very best,
from the US."
Writing something personal for Iraqi forces serving under
Saddam Hussein "just makes you feel better," said A1C
Gina Maskunas, who scrawled the message derived from a greeting
card television advertisement.
"It's just a way of expressing yourself [and] of taking
your aggressions out," said Sergeant Bowers.
Sergeant Bowers said that so many messages adorned bombs to
be carried by the stealth aircraft that, at one point early in
the campaign, the weapons began to look pretty scruffy. "It
looked like a New York City bathroom in the subway with all the
graffiti," he said.
As MSgt. Jerry Grace sees it, the job of the ground crews
preparing ordnance for outbound aircraft is to have just about
everything ready to go on a moment's notice.
"It's like a 7-Eleven," says the Air Force veteran.
"The pilots can get any bomb they like."
Maj. Russell Richardson has responsibility for readying bombs
for F-111F pilots flying missions against Iraqi targets from
an air base in southwest Saudi Arabia. "We've only had duds
in three days," Major Richardson said seventy-two hours
into Desert Storm.
Staying ahead of demand is the key task for the BB stackers.
During the six weeks before the air campaign began, as many as
thirty-one aircraft each day delivered bomb parts to the air
base that was handling the needs of the three squadrons of F-111Fs.
Even before the first bomb was dropped, Major Richardson's crew
assembled enough bombs for two days of around-the-clock operations.
As Sergeant Grace put it, "We haven't had any complaints."
Buffs and Warthogs
America's aging fleet of B-52 bombers, which entered service
in the 1950s as part of a round-the-clock nuclear deterrent,
handled a variety of Desert Storm missions, including attacks
on the exposed positions of Iraq's elite 150,000 Republican Guards.
Twenty-six bombers, moved from the Indian Ocean island of Diego
Garcia to Oman at the outset of the operation, attacked Iraqi
military targets day after day with routine payloads of 60,000
pounds of 2,000 pound bombs and smaller ordnance.
The Commander in Chief of US Central Command, the Army's Gen.
H. Norman Schwarzkopf, said it was hard to assess bomb damage
against Iraqi forces but that the impact of 2,000-pound bombs
on his position in Vietnam many years ago was something he'd
never forget.
"I was [accidentally] bombed by B-52s one time in Vietnam.
They were coming toward us. They did a marvelous job of dropping
all their bombs, and then one rack hung up and it released over
my position.
"Being an infantryman, I certainly wouldn't want to be
under that type of attack."
The fleet of ungainly, often-disparaged A-10 close air support
aircraft, popularly known as Wart-hogs, earned high praise for
their performance during the campaign against Iraq's elusive
Scud-B mobile missile launchers, used to terrorize civilian populations
in Saudi Arabia and Israel.
Finding the disguised mobile launchers was like "trying
to find a semitrailer in Los Angeles," said Capt. Becky
Colaw, who serves with the 354th TFW, based at Myrtle Beach AFB,
S. C.
The long-duration aircraft loitered over Iraqi territory,
waiting for a signal from overhead surveillance aircraft and
satellites to target newly found Scud-B missile launchrs. Pilots
quickly tried to "walk that cat back" to the area where
the missile was fired, explained Col. Ervin C. "Sandy"
Sharpe, the commander of the wing, who also com-manded a huge
forward air base a few minutes flying time from Kuwait.
The pilots' motto? "Eyeball," Colonel Sharpe said.
"That's how they find [the launchers]. The guy who finds
it puts whatever ordnance he has on it. If there is still some
left, whatever order aircraft are in they are called in, until
all the ones we have found in a particular area are destroyed."
The air campaign against Iraqi targets encountered unusually
cloudy weather in the opening ten days, with more than a week
of poor visibility obscuring targets assigned to a variety of
strike aircraft. Squadrons of F-15Es became the work-horses called
in to handle a variety of daylight and nighttime missions.
Cloud cover thwarted bombing missions by F-16A strike aircraft
for several days, forcing many frustrated F-l6 pilots to return
to base with ordnance still on board. "We wish the weather
was a little bit better so we can go in and do our job,"
said Capt. Ted Limpert, an F-16A pilot for the Air National Guard's
138th TFS, based at Hancock Field near Syracuse, N.Y.
Capt. Deane "Dawg" Pennington, a pilot with the
ANG's 157th TFS, echoed this feeling. It was a delinite letdown,
he said, to "fly all that way when the pressure is on, getting
tensed up a little bit, to get to that point where you're crossing
enemy territory and then to have the weather become a big factor
where you couldn't get in and tind the target area."
Iraq's barrages of Scud-B missiles on Saudi Arabia barely
interrupted the busy schedule of takeoffs and landings under
way at US air bases. F-15 pilot 1st Lt. Steve Kirik was preparing
to take off when he spied what quickly became a routine interception
of an inbound Scud by a Patriot antimissile missile.
"I'm sitting in my jet getting ready to go," said
the pilot. "I looked over at my port engine, and there [the
Patriot] was. It jumped off the ground, snaked back and forth
a couple of times, and then boom. It was pretty spectacular."
For a unit that had been guarding a major air base since the
tirst hours of the US reinforcement in Saudi Arabia last August,
the first combat "intercept" of an enemy missile by
a Patriot was finally a chance to put the training--and waiting--to
good use.
"We didn't expect [the missile] at that moment,"
said Army Lt. Col. Leroy Neel of Houston, Tex., commander of
the Patriot battalion. "It was there. We reacted properly,
and it was gone."
Wins and Losses
Capt. Tony Mattox experienced a double lirst in Desert Storm.
He flew his lirst combat mission in an aircraft that had never
seen combat. Both the pilot and the A-10 Thunderbolt II performed
admirably.
"I've been training for years and I was dad-gum glad
to be part of it," Captain Maddox said. "I mean we
go for months just drooling to get a chance to shoot live weapons
in peacetime. Yesterday we went out and shot more live weapons
than I had in my entire career."
Discovering that a comrade was lost in combat often came just
as the "fog of war" was lifting. Col. Hal Hornburg,
commander of the 4th TFW Provisional, based at Seymour Johnson
AFB, N. C., recalled the way his pilots learned that the F-15E
wing had lost its tirst warplane.
"The pilot was coming off the target. He was seen,"
Colonel Hornburg recalled. "He made a radio call that he
was coming off target, and then, as the formation regrouped after
hitting the target and they checked in to make a roll call, he
wasn't heard from."
Intense surface-to-air missile activity reported in the area
at the time, as well as antiaircraft artillery fire, apparently
claimed the two-man plane.
"We all feel bad that we have an airplane missing,"
Colonel Hornburg said, "but at the same time, no one has
lost his focus that we still have a job to do. I see fire in
their eyes."
For all the munitions illuminating the night skies over Iraq
and Kuwait, with the allies bombing Iraqi targets and the Iraqis
unleashing a lirestorm of surface-to-air missiles and antiaircraft
artillery fire, an unseen war raged as well.
"There's still a lot of war going on," explained
Lt. Col. Dennis Hardziej, commanding officer of the 390th Electronic
Combat Squadron of EF-111 Raven aircraft based ' Mountain Home
AFB, Idaho. "It's not just 'waltz in and waltz out."'
Iraqi activity in the early stages of the air war pressed
US assets, forcing commanders to husband valuable resources for
attack aircraft entering only the most densely protected sites.
"There are a limited number of EF-111s in the region,"
Colonel Hardziej said, "and there are always more missions
than aircraft."
F-111F fighter-bombers from the 48th TFW, based at RAF Lakenheath,
UK, carried out pinpoint bombing missions with Pave Tack target-acquisition
systems against many of the forty-four Iraqi airfields targeted
for early interdiction.
"I went against a maintenance hangar," recalled
Col. Tom Lennon, the 48th's wing commander, who led a wave of
fifty-three F-111Fs into Iraq and led a flight of six aircraft
against a large Iraqi airfield. "We put our bomb right through
the side door."
Colonel Lennon, a veteran of 390 combat missions in southeast
Asia, spent just forty minutes in Iraqi airspace on his first
mission. The early minutes of combat are crucial for hardening
aircrews, settling nerves, and giving pilots and weapon systems
officers confidence in their training, the veteran pilot said.
"I told [my pilots] the biggest threat is hitting the
ground or running out of gas," said Colonel Lennon. Capt.
Matt Warren flew his lirst combat mission under Lennon's lead-ership.
"Just being over enemy territory-- knowing we were 200 miles
from friendly territory--the only way out is to fly out or punch
out--it's a tightness."
Stewart M. Powell, national security correspondent
for Hearst Newspapers, has reported on defense and foreign policy
in Washington and London for ten years. He was in Saudi Arabia
throughout Desert Storm. His most recent article for AIR FORCE
Magazine was "Long Haul in the Middle East" in the
March 1991 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association.
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