home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!not-for-mail
- From: bergman@afnews.pa.af.mil (CMSgt Mike Bergman)
- Newsgroups: soc.veterans
- Subject: USAF News Feature - Southern Watch 93-01
- Date: 22 Jan 1993 12:44:05 -0600
- Organization: Hq Air Force News Agency/SCC
- Lines: 86
- Sender: daemon@cs.utexas.edu
- Message-ID: <9301221838.AA18498@afnews.pa.af.mil>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: cs.utexas.edu
-
- SW93-01. Monitoring no-fly zone an ongoing mission
- & & &
- & & &
- & & &
- SW93-01. Monitoring no-fly zone an ongoing mission
- by TSgt. David P. Masko
- PHILADELPHIA IAP -- Much has been made about how quickly U.S.-led forces
- contained Saddam Hussein's military provocations, but some Air Force people
- say monitoring Iraq's no-fly zone is simply an ongoing mission.
- Capt. Carlos Febres, an AWACS pilot with the 552nd Air Control Wing,
- Tinker AFB, Okla., said Air Force E-3A missions have become almost "routine"
- since the end of the Gulf war.
- "I'm going back to the Gulf for another 45-day tour," Febres said Jan.
- 20. "I was there last year... the 552nd has three operational AWACS squadrons
- that regularly rotate in and out of the Gulf."
- Febres, and other AWACS crewmembers, were awaiting transportation at the
- Philadelphia Airport USO on inauguration day, a day some deployed military
- say is ironic because of Iraq's offer of a cease-fire in honor of the new
- president right after its defiance of United Nations restrictions.
- Representatives from Northwest Airlines, one of the commercial carriers
- supporting Air Mobility Command's air-bridge for the latest Iraqi action, said
- more than 200 new troops per day fly out of Philadelphia airport since the
- United States began sending reinforcements to the Middle East Jan. 13.
- Under the terms of the U.N. resolution, which brought the Gulf war to an
- end in 1991, Iraq is ordered to stay out of no-fly zones in its north
- and south. The off-limits areas are at Iraq's 36th and 32nd parallel.
- However, Hussein has taunted the U.N. by threatening coalition forces
- above and below the parallel boundaries.
- Pete Williams, the outgoing Pentagon chief spokesman, told reporters Jan.
- 19 that Iraq has been testing the allies by moving fighter aircraft inside the
- no-fly zone. Williams characterized the action as "sticking a toe over the
- line."
- He also pointed out that the recent bombing of Iraqi air defense systems,
- and attacks in the northern no-fly zone, were successful.
- For U.S. and allied aircraft in the Gulf, AWACS aircraft provide radar
- surveillance and weapons control during defensive attacks against Iraq.
- "It's nothing more than a big radar on an air platform," Febres said.
- "But coverage is much better because you're sitting so high."
- However, AWACS doesn't operate alone. Without protection from F-15s,
- F-16s, or other U.S. and allied fighters, the plane would be vulnerable to
- attack.
- "It's like driving an 18-wheeler in a sports car arena," Febres said in
- describing the feeling of flying in harm's way near Iraq.
- "Fortunately, our fighters and even French Mirages have been there in
- case we run into trouble."
- Capt. Christopher Maloy, an F-16 pilot with the 33rd Fighter Squadron,
- Shaw AFB, S.C., said both Iraqi strikes on Jan. 13 and 18 included a flight of
- F-16s, flying combat search and rescue missions. He said the aircraft not
- only supported the Air Force, and Navy, but allied aircraft as well.
- "During the missions, we go into an orbit to protect them from threats,
- and to provide search and rescue for the entire coalition," Maloy said.
- For the recent Iraqi strikes, fighters also stayed in positions between
- the threat and the AWACS. The surveillance plane usually flies 10- to 12-hour
- missions over the desert, helping to provide air cover for the region and to
- enforce the no-fly zones.
- In addition to surveillance, the AWACS airborne command element talks to
- the air operations center on the ground and coalition warplanes who could be
- poised for an air strike.
- "We would see and direct intercepts," said Capt. John Fair, an AWACS
- senior weapons director, who recently deployed from the 552nd ACW.
- Although Fair said AWACS is one link in giving aircrews as much
- information as possible about the threat, it also relays a "green light" to
- fire if the situation presents itself.
- "The bottom line on any aircraft mission over there is self defense,"
- Fair said. "It's their call when in a dangerous combat situation."
- He also points out that at the same time more troops are moving to
- locations in the Arabian Gulf region, Bill Clinton was being sworn in as the
- 42nd president.
- "Morale is high right now, and it's an exciting time because we have a
- new commander in chief who says he's going to keep the same policy towards
- Iraq," Fair said.
- (Masko is a member of the Joint Task Force-Southwest Asia Command Information
- Team)
-
- --
-
- // \\
- // \\ Air Force News Agency
- | | Kelly Air Force Base, Texas, USA
- \\ {*} // bergman@afpan.pa.af.mil
- \ CMSgt / ___________________ /____________________________________
- \ Mike /
- \ Bergman /
- \ /
-
-
-