August 1993 Vol. 76, No. 8
Forty missions over the Gulf with A-10 pilot Shanghai Sheehy.
To War in a Warthog
By Alfred Price
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In A-10 No. 81-0964, Capt. Todd "Shanghai" Sheehy
shot down an Iraqi Mi-8 "Hip" helicopter during the
Persian Gulf War. The aircraft bears a little Iraqi flag to commemorate
the encounter. Opposite, a "Warthog" from the 442d
Fighter Wing, Richards-Gebaur AFB, Mo., flies into the sunset.
(Photo by Randy Jolly / Arms Communications)

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In the decade and a half leading up to the Persian Gulf War,
the Air Force A-10 community worked hard to hone its skills in
the difficult business of providing close air support (CAS) for
ground forces. During Operation Desert Shield, seven squadrons
with 144 of the ungainly attack planes went to Saudi Arabia,
where they formed the 354th Tactical Fighter Wing (Provisional)
based at King Fahd International Airport.
Capt. Todd "Shanghai" Sheehy of the 511th Tactical
Fighter Squadron flew forty combat missions in the A-10 "Warthog."
His experiences provide valuable insight into the employment
of the aircraft and illustrate anew that in war one must learn
to expect the unexpected.
For instance, the Warthog force was used only sparingly in
the CAS role but proved more versatile and better able to survive
over enemy territory than many expected. During the forty-day
conflict, the A-10 force was credited with destroying 987 tanks,
926 artillery pieces, 1,355 combat vehicles, and a range of other
targets-including ten fighters on the ground and two helicopters
shot down in air-to-air engagements. The A-10 force, flying more
than 8,000 combat sorties, suffered only five A-10s destroyed
(a loss rate of .062 percent). Twenty of these aircraft returned
with significant battle damage, and forty-five others returned
with light damage that was repaired between sorties.
Like many A-10 pilots based at King Fahd IAP, Captain Sheehy
spent the first day of the war-January 17, 1991-at cockpit readiness.
Some A-10s took part in the initial air strikes, but most of
the Warthog force was held on the ground at readiness to counter
any incursion by Iraqi troops into Saudi Arabia.
Captain Sheehy flew his first combat mission on the second
day of the war. Part of the definition of the CAS mission is
"an air action against hostile targets . . . in close proximity
to friendly [ground] forces." Because hostile and friendly
ground forces were not then in close proximity, the A-10 force
was used in a role for which it had never been intended-battlefield
air interdiction missions against targets in enemy rear areas.
It was dark when Captain Sheehy and his wingman, Capt. Scott
"Sparky" Johnston, walked out to their planes at 4:30
a.m. Each Warthog carried the standard armament load: six Mk.
82 500-pound bombs with radar airburst fuses, one infrared-guided
Maverick missile and another with TV guidance, two AIM-9M Sidewinder
missiles for self-protection, and 1,200 rounds of ammunition
for the internally mounted 30-mm cannon.
A Rude Awakening
The pilots started their engines, and Captain Sheehy called
the 511th's operations center for his task. He was told to head
for a position off the coast of Kuwait and call "Blacklist,"
the Marine Direct Air Support Center, for his target assignment.
Moments later, the pilots' calm was rudely shattered.
"I had just called the ground controller for taxi clearance,"
said Captain Sheehy, "when over the Guard frequency came
a broadcast 'Alarm Red! Alarm Red! Alarm Red!' I had already
had the crew chief pull the chocks from my wheels, but none of
my weapons were armed. On hearing the alarm, my crew chief unplugged
from the jet, closed the ladder door, and ran for cover as he
pulled on his gas mask."
An attack on the base was imminent, but the broadcast did
not state the nature of the threat. The first Scud missile fired
against Saudi Arabia was speeding toward nearby Dhahran, but
so far as Captain Sheehy was concerned, the threat might easily
have been bombers sweeping in to attack the base at low altitude.
The greatest fear was a gas attack, and Captain Sheehy's first
move was to turn off his plane's environmental control system
to keep outside air out of the cockpit.
The pilot eased on power to edge the Warthog out of its revetment,
but, as he pushed the rudder pedal to turn the plane, it continued
straight ahead. The nosewheel steering had failed. As malfunctions
go, this was minor, and he was able to steer the plane using
differential application of the brakes, but it was a problem
that he could have done without at that moment.
"There I was, on my first combat sortie, with a thousand
thoughts running through my mind. The base was under attack.
Were planes about to drop bombs, or was it a Scud missile? Would
we be able to repel the attack? Would the Patriot missiles protecting
our base work as advertised? There was all of that to think about,
as well as the normal cockpit tasks of getting the aircraft off
the airfield.
"To add to that, it was dark, and as a day fighter unit
we did not practice a lot of night operations. I had not flown
a sortie from that base at night; I had never even taxied there
at night before. With an attack imminent, all lights had been
turned off, and I had to use my taxi light to find my way. And
my nosewheel steering didn't work. So my first combat mission
was definitely not going very well."

After flying three combat sorties, Captain Sheehy briefs the
next "shift" of pilots on Iraqi defenses and likely
targets in Kuwait.
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Getting Their Attention
Captain Sheehy reached the holding point beside the end of
the runway and stopped, waiting for an arming crew to remove
the safety pins from his weapons. Nobody stirred. Jiggling the
throttles and the brakes, he pointed the taxi light at the arming
crew's bunker and repeatedly flashed it on and off to get their
attention. Eventually, he succeeded.
"It was an eerie sight when the arming guys came running
out in full chemical warfare gear, gas masks, suits, gloves,
boots, flak vests, and helmets. They probably set a world record
for arming an A-10. Then, as quickly as they had arrived, they
were back in the bunker."
Once he was airborne, Captain Sheehy looked around for his
wingman's strobe light. By then, the on-alert F-15s from Al Kharj
were also streaming into the air, and strobes seemed to light
all over the sky.
"It was a beautiful clear night with a lot of stars,"
remembered Captain Sheehy. "The blinking strobe lights of
the fighters blended with the stars to create the illusion of
every aircraft in the coalition racing north to meet the enemy.
As Sparky joined up off my left wing, my heart rate began to
return to normal. Suddenly there was a large flash over my right
shoulder. . . . I thought it was either a Scud impact or a Patriot
intercepting a Scud [in fact, a Patriot had detonated close to
the incoming Scud]. I began to worry about what my squadron mates
and my air base would look like when I got back. Had the missile
landed there? Did it have a chemical warhead?"
Flying over water at 22,000 feet, the raiding aircraft ran
parallel to the Persian Gulf coast as the A-10s made their way
to the target area. The sun was rising, revealing a fine day
with clear skies below the aircraft and a thin layer of cirrus
above them at about 27,000 feet. Captain Sheehy called "Blacklist"
and was informed that his target was an artillery site just inland
from the pier at Mina Sa'ad in Kuwait.
Captain Sheehy located the pier without difficulty, and the
pilots prepared to attack with bombs. Unfortunately, the layer
of cirrus above them presented a contrasting backdrop for the
dark planes, and, as Captain Sheehy acquired his target, the
Iraqi antiaircraft gunners acquired the Warthogs. As the planes
headed toward the coast, the leader's attention was diverted
by an urgent call from his wingman.
Heavy Puffies
"He called, 'Heavy puffies [antiaircraft artillery rounds
exploding] below us!' " said Captain Sheehy. "They
were big white balls with dark gray centers. We figured they
were 57-mm rounds, and they could reach us at our altitude. We
could see the muzzle flashes, and the guns were right on the
coast, between us and our target. We tried to come in from different
directions, but the flak followed us. Putting our noses down
that chute with those gunners watching us just didn't seem like
the smart thing to do."
Captain Sheehy moved to what appeared to be a safe distance
from the coast and tried to lock a Maverick missile on to a target,
but there was insufficient image contrast to use the weapon.
As if to emphasize the point that things could turn sour at any
moment, his wingman gave a sudden "Break right!" call
to avoid an upcoming SAM. Captain Sheehy did as he was told,
punching out chaff and decoy flares.
"As I looked out the side of the canopy," said the
A-10 pilot, "I saw a glowing orange ball with a long white
smoke trail streaking toward me from the pier. I rolled out to
put the missile off my right wing and kept the flares coming.
I was greatly relieved to see the missile moving aft across my
canopy, which meant that it was not guiding on me any longer.
The smoke trail abruptly stopped, and I watched the missile fall
into the Gulf."
Captain Sheehy moved further from the coast and pondered what
to do next. The A-10s were starting to run low on fuel. Captain
Sheehy called "Blacklist" and informed the controller
that he had been unable to hit the assigned target. He said he
was returning to base and hoped to be back later. When the pair
reached King Fahd IAP, Captain Sheehy was delighted to find that
his earlier worries about the attack on the base were unfounded.
"The base was still there, and, in the light of day,
everything was fine," he remembered, "but I still had
no nosewheel steering. So after I landed, I turned off the runway
and stopped. At the end of my first combat sortie, my plane was
towed back to the parking ramp with all the bombs and missiles
still loaded--not exactly what I had planned."
Later that morning Captain Sheehy took off in another A-10.
He and Captain Johnston returned to their original target and
took advantage of the higher sun to deliver a quick, accurate
attack, apparently unobserved by enemy gunners.
Captain Sheehy's next twenty-four sorties were against Iraqi
artillery positions and vehicles situated well back from the
border. On his twenty-seventh combat sortie, on February 15,
1991, he led Lt. Jay Keller from the forward operating base at
Al Jouf. The A-10s were briefed to go to a point a few miles
from Mudaysis Airfield in southwest Iraq, where enemy planes
had been found hidden in revetments in the desert. Captain Sheehy
destroyed an Su-20 "Fitter" with cluster bombs and
cannon fire and headed away from the area, climbing back to 20,000
feet.
As he did so, he heard the controller in the E-3 Airborne
Warning and Control System aircraft trying to contact some A-10s
that had departed the area. Captain Sheehy told the controller
that he and his wingman were available, and he was informed of
a low and slow contact thirty miles to the northeast. Captain
Sheehy started in that direction and commenced a shallow descent.
Soon afterward, the A-10 pilot saw a small cloud of dust and
a dark object moving across the desert. Leaving Lieutenant Keller
above to cover his attack, Captain Sheehy rolled inverted and
pulled into a forty-five-degree dive.

The men of Captain Sheehy's Desert Storm unit, the 511th Tactical
Fighter Squadron "Vultures," pose after the war with
the aircraft of their commander, Lt. Col. Mike O'Connor, who
designed his plane's nose art.
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Hip Shot
"As I got closer, I identified it as an Mi-8 'Hip' helicopter
moving fairly quickly, very low to the desert floor," said
Captain Sheehy. "I took aim and started shooting at about
8,000 feet, firing about 300 rounds of 30-mm. As I recovered
from the dive and circled back around, I observed that the helicopter
appeared to be smoking. Jay radioed that it looked like some
of the bullets impacted the tail section. I rolled back into
the dive [and] fired about 200 more rounds into the Hip, bottoming
out of the dive at about 4,500 feet."
As Captain Sheehy climbed away, he glanced back and saw a
cloud of black smoke rising from a new fire on the ground. That
marked the point where the helicopter had gone down.
The ground war opened on February 24, 1991, and Captain Sheehy
went into action in the CAS role on February 26. He and Captain
Johnston were scrambled to assist US Marines moving on Kuwait
City and under fire from enemy artillery. There were also reports
of Iraqi tanks moving against them. As the Warthogs neared the
battle area, they had to descend to 5,000 feet to keep below
the "petroleum overcast," the layer of thick black
smoke from burning Kuwaiti oil wells.
"Visibility decreased to about three miles, and, even
though it was midday, under the clouds it was more like dusk,"
said Captain Sheehy. "The scene below us was amazing: thousands
of coalition vehicles in columns moving north. We could even
see the corridors that had been cut through the barbed wire barriers
and minefields as the columns bottled up at these chokepoints
before moving northward again. Our guys were definitely on the
offensive."
Captain Sheehy made contact with the pilot of the F/A-18 airborne
forward air control (FAC) plane, who briefed him on the whereabouts
of the Iraqi artillery and AAA defenses.
The A-10s were handed to the ground FAC to get final clearance
to attack. It took the latter several minutes to transmit the
exact positions of friendly forces in the area to Captain Sheehy,
but that was an essential part of the operation. The fundamental
axiom of the CAS mission is "Better to kill no targets at
all than risk accidental hits on friendly forces." Captain
Sheehy was then directed to the offending enemy artillery positions
and given clearance to attack.
"I moved our orbit further north until I could see the
muzzle flashes from the self-propelled artillery vehicles that
were pounding our guys' positions. I directed Sparky to a trail
formation, and we set up our switches to deliver Mavericks. I
rolled into a shallow dive and locked on to one of the revetted
artillery vehicles with an IR Maverick."
This Iraqi weapon had already fired several rounds, and on
the TV monitor in the A-10 cockpit the vehicle appeared white-hot--a
perfect target for an IR missile. Captain Sheehy launched the
Maverick from three miles and turned away. After it made impact,
he observed several large secondary explosions around the revetment.
Captain Johnston delivered a similar attack on another of the
Iraqi guns. The A-10s pulled clear and orbited while the FAC
assessed the situation.
"He reported good hits and said the artillery barrage
had stopped," said Captain Sheehy. "Sparky and I moved
closer and observed operators of the guns abandoning their vehicles
and running south. I reported this to the FAC, and he directed
us to turn our attention to the tanks reported moving south down
the coastal highway. We found and identified the tanks and quickly
dispatched the lead two with TV Mavericks.

It may be ugly, but the A-10 is a welcome sight to ground troops
in a tight spot. In the Gulf War, Warthogs performed little CAS
but shone in interdiction, proving more versatile and surviving
better over enemy territory than many expected. (Photo by Randy
Jolly / Arms Communications)
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"Fuel was getting low, and the FAC had a set of AV-8B
Harriers waiting, so we safed up our armament switches and pressed
back to King Fahd. The FAC had kind words for us as we departed,
saying that teams were rounding up prisoners who had abandoned
the artillery."
That was the last time Todd Sheehy went into action and the
only time he did so in the CAS role. During his remaining missions,
he flew to the battle area, orbited, and returned with all his
ordnance. By then the coalition forces were advancing so rapidly
that the FACs usually refused to clear attacks because of the
risk of hitting friendly forces. Captain Sheehy never had to
put the A-10's ruggedness to the test, for his aircraft never
took a hit of any kind.
The slow-flying A-10 was never designed to go deep into enemy
territory to seek out targets. Because its primary CAS mission
was denied it for most of the conflict, interdiction made up
the bulk of its sorties. Still, no military person would assert
that every future conflict can be so well controlled. The A-10
is surely among the ugliest planes ever built, but, to a platoon
of grunts cut off, pinned down, and taking losses, one of the
most beautiful sights in the world is the approach of a pair
of Warthogs with full ordnance and fuel for forty-five minutes
on task. The most beautiful sight is six pairs.
Alfred Price flew with the Royal Air Force
for sixteen years. He has published some three dozen books, including
The Spitfire Story, The Last Year of the Luftwaffe, and Battle
of Britain: The Hardest Day. His most recent article for Air
Force Magazine, which appeared in the December 1992 issue, was
"Tornado in the Desert."
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved
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