See How F-15E Crew dodged two IRAQI Roland SAMs missile

The F-15E was the backbone of U.S. and coalition operations in Iraq. The Strike Eagle constantly dropped weapons onto Iraqi SAM and AAA emplacements that engaged Coalition aircraft undertaking this mission.

F-15Es of the 4th Fighter Wing (FW) saw most prolific use, engaging Iraqi armour before Coalition ground troops moved forward, and providing close air support (CAS) to soldiers and Special Forces as they came into contact with the enemy.

In performing such missions, the mobile surface-to-air-missile (SAM) threat remained very real for the first few weeks of the conflict.

As reported by Steve Davies in his book F-15C/E Eagle Units of Operation Iraqi Freedom

On Mar. 31, 2003, while flying a 4th FW F-15E Capt ‘Hacker’ Haskin (pilot) and Capt ‘Maddog’ Farrell (Weapons System Operator, WSO) were tasked with attacking targets in a kill box near Baghdad city.

Forced down to below 14,000 ft by poor weather, the crew of the Strike Eagle (No 2 of ‘Junker 67’ flight) flew repeated passes over the target area in a bid to locate Iraqi Republican Guard vehicles, of which there was said to be many.

Read more: Video Footage of F-15 Eagle, F-16 Fighting Falcon & F/A-18 Hornet Escaping From SAMS Missiles

But on the third and final pass, all hell broke loose, as Hacker relates:

“We were climbing up to conserve fuel on the way home, and I had barely finished my turn when the RWR (Radar Warning Receiver) screamed its stuttering wail in my headset.

The noise chilled me to the bone – it was the missile launch tone.

Before I looked at the RWR itself, my eyes cued in on the blazingly bright red warning light on the instrument panel, located just below the glare shield at eye level.

It is only the size of a dime, but the black words backlit on the square red light jumped at me larger than life – ‘SAM’. At the same time my WSO, Maddog, shouted ‘ROLAND’!”ROLAND! Read the story of the F-15E crew that dodged two (very fast) Iraqi SAMs in a few seconds

Junker 68 had to become the target for two French-built Roland SAMs, ripple-fired one after the other.

Hacker recalls: “What was strange was that the RWR was telling me I was right on top of the SAM site. That wasn’t a situation we had really trained for back at Seymour Johnson, so I knew I had to get my eyeballs on the missile ASAP.

“My first move was to plug in maximum afterburner and make a hard turn 30 degrees to the right, dumping out two bursts of chaff, then another hard jink 45 degrees back to the left.

F-15E-DODGED-IRAQI-Roland-SAMs-missile 1

At this point I was still at just under 400 knots – a good fighting airspeed – so I pulled the throttles back out of the blower. I didn’t want to present an overly ripe heat signature since at 13,000 ft I was also in a Weapon Engagement Zone for several IR-guided SAMs.

I looked over my left shoulder and down the wing line at the target area, trying to visually acquire the missile in flight.

Since the Roland is very fast, I knew I only had seconds to locate the missile and outmaneuver it.

Unfortunately, I saw nothing. With the missile site most likely have been at my ‘low six o’clock’ position, the fuselage and wings would have been blocking my line of sight regardless of how much I was turning and jinking.

“After two more hard turns, many more chaff actuations, and even a few flares dropped, the Roland indication left my RWR scope.

‘Two’s naked’, I said and began to let out a sigh of relief that we were still flying and, apparently, had neither been launched on nor evaded the missile.

“Almost as quickly as it had gone away, the Roland symbol flashed on my scope again, this time at my very close ‘six o’ clock’. The missile launch tone also returned to my headset. I continued pumping out the chaff and modified my maneuvering. Although the electronics were telling me that there was a missile in the air, neither of us could see one.

F-15E-DODGED-IRAQI-Roland-SAMs-missile 2

“Maddog and I were going through the same thought processes, evidently, because as my left arm moved off the throttles and toward the combat jettison button on the lower left instrument panel, he commented, ‘Think about the tank’.

Dropping the external fuel tanks lightens the airplane’s weight, reduces drag, and improves maneuverability – all things that I want while I’m fighting a missile shot at me.

With my left index finger I punched the red button once, and with a satisfying little ‘clunk’, much like the feeling when a 500-lb bomb is dropped, the tanks fell away from the wing stations.

“More chaff and maneuvering followed, and eventually my RWR went quiet. I was still frantically looking for the missiles, but I never saw them.

My flight lead after the sortie commented that he watched both missiles zip up toward us from below, leaving two white smoke trails, then detonate on chaff less than a mile behind us.

“I can’t help taking being shot at personally. Many times, flying airplanes and dropping bombs seems a very impersonal way to fight. This time, however, it feels like it was mano-e-mano – me versus the SAM operator – and I won. It’s just too bad that I couldn’t go back and cram a ‘500-pounder’ down his throat as a going away present to the loser of the fight – I was too low on fuel!”

Cockpit Voice Recording Transcript of the Roland Incident

2A = Capt Haskin (pilot)
2B = Capt Farrell (WSO)
1A = Flight lead (pilot)

2A: Five (seconds to bomb drop)
2B: Negative (WSO cannot capture target in TP)
2A: Okay
(RWR Launch Tone)
2B: Roland!
2A: (Under G) Chaff, Chaff
2B: (Grunting) I didn’t see the missile
2A: (UHF2) One, Roland launch, bullseye…
2B: Chaff
2A: (UHF2) … 161 for 80
2A: (UHF2) I don’t see the missile
2B: I didn’t see it, either
2A: (UHF2) Two’s naked (No RWR indications)
(RWR Launch Tone)
2B: Roland Launch
2A: (UHF2, under G) Two’s Roland launch, still 162 for 82, BRA 030
2B: (Under G) Think about the tanks…
2A: (Still under G) Jett! Tanks are gone
2A: (UHF 2) Two’s naked
1A: (UHF 2) One’s naked
2B: Dude, I’m tempted to go back there and f***in’ kill ’em!
2A: No way, man!
2B: (Laughing) Ya big p***y!

This, and other such close encounters with death, served as a stark reminder to the crews of the 4th FW that the Iraqi Republican Guard was more than capable of fighting back when the conditions were right.ROLAND! Read the story of the F-15E crew that dodged two (very fast) Iraqi SAMs in a few seconds

Check Also

IAF Fighter Jet Drops Half-Ton Bomb On Its Own Town

IAF Fighter Jet Drops Half-Ton Bomb On Its Own Town

An Israeli Air Force “Barak” F-16C from the 115th “Flying Dragon” Squadron lands on the …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *