Combat search and rescue

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An HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter comes in for a landing during a training exercise.

Combat search and rescue (CSAR) are search and rescue operations that are carried out during war that are within or near combat zones.[1]

A CSAR mission may be carried out by a task force of helicopters, ground-attack aircraft, aerial refueling tankers and an airborne command post.[2] The USAF HC-130, which was introduced in 1965, has served in the latter two roles.[3]

History

File:Richard Bell-Davies VC IWM Q 69475.jpg
Richard Bell-Davies conducted the first combat S&R mission in his aircraft during the First World War.

The First World War was the background for the development of early combat search and rescue doctrine, especially in the more fluid theaters of war in the Balkans and the Middle East.

In the opening fluid stages of the First World War the Royal Navy Air Service Armoured Car Section was formed with armed and armoured touring cars to find and pick up aircrew who had been forced down. When trench warfare made this impossible the cars were transferred to other theatres, most notably the Middle East.[citation needed]

In 1915, during the First World War, Squadron Commander Richard Bell-Davies of the British Royal Naval Air Service performed the first combat search and rescue by aircraft in history. He used his single-seat aeroplane to rescue his wingman who had been shot down in Bulgaria. His Victoria Cross citation included "Squadron-Commander Davies descended at a safe distance from the burning machine, took up Sub-Lieutenant Smylie, in spite of the near approach of a party of the enemy, and returned to the aerodrome, a feat of airmanship that can seldom have been equalled for skill and gallantry."[4] Like the search and rescue efforts of the future, Davies' action sprang from the fervent desire to keep a compatriot from capture or death at the hands of the enemy.

It was during the Mesopotamian campaign that British and Commonwealth forces began to use similar tactics on a larger scale. Shot down aviators in hostile Bedouin territory were often located by search parties in the air and rescued.[5]

A Sikorsky HH-53B refueling during the Vietnam War.

During World War II, the Luftwaffe (Seenotdienst organization) operated armed camouflaged air-sea rescue aircraft.[6]

During the Vietnam War the costly rescue of Bat 21 led the US military to find a new approach to high-threat search and rescue. They recognized that if a SAR mission was predestined to fail, it should not be attempted and other options such as special operations, diversionary tactics and other creative approaches tailored to the situation had to be considered. Recognizing the need for an aircraft that could deliver better close air support, the US Air Force introduced the A-7 Corsair, originally a carrier-based Navy light attack aircraft, to replace the Air Force's A-1 Skyraiders, an aircraft that also was originally a carrier-based naval attack bomber.

As a result of the Vietnam CSAR experience, the US military also improved the night capability of helicopters and area denial munitions.[7]:36

During the Vietnam War, U.S. SAR forces saved 3,883 lives at the cost of 71 rescuers and 45 aircraft.[7]:46

Notable CSAR missions

World War One

On 21 April 1917, Captain Richard Williams of the Australian Flying Corps landed behind enemy lines to rescue a downed comrade.[8][9]

Vietnam War

In 1972, during the Vietnam War, Lt Col Iceal Hambleton, a USAF navigator/electronic warfare officer with a background in ballistic missile technology and missile countermeasures, was the sole survivor of an EB-66 shot down during the Easter Offensive. He eluded capture by North Vietnamese forces until his rescue 11½ days later. During the rescue operation, five US military aircraft supporting the CSAR effort were shot down, eleven US servicemen were killed and two men were captured. The rescue operation was the "largest, longest, and most complex search-and-rescue" operation during the entire Vietnam War.[10] It has been the subject of two books and the largely fictionalized film Bat*21.[11]

Others

File:PJs rescued downed pilot during OIF.jpg
Pararescuemen return with a downed pilot from a successful rescue mission in southern Iraq (2003).

The United States Air Force (USAF) 24th Special Tactics Squadron was involved in the 1993 Battle of Mogadishu.[12] Timothy Wilkinson, a Pararescueman, was awarded the Air Force Cross for his heroic actions during the battle.[13]

On June 2, 1995, a USAF F-16C was shot down by a Bosnian Serb Army SA-6 surface-to-air missile near Mrkonjić Grad, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The American pilot, Scott O'Grady, ejected safely and was rescued six days later.[14] The operation became known as the Mrkonjić Grad incident.

In 1999, members of the United States Air Force Pararescue unit successfully rescued the pilot of an F-117 "stealth" attack aircraft who was shot down over Yugoslavia while on a NATO-led mission. The pilot was retrieved 6 hours after the incident.[15]

See also

References

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  2. Combat Aircraft (European Edition) (magazine), Ian Allan Publishing, September 2003, page 28
  3. Combat Aircraft (European Edition) (magazine), Ian Allan Publishing, September 2003, page 29
  4. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 29423. p. 86. 1 January 1916. Retrieved 22 April 2011.
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  6. Feltus, Pamela. History and the Headlines. "Air-Sea Rescue." ABC-CLIO, 2008. Retrieved: 23 April 2011.
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  8. Cutlack, The Australian Flying Corps, p.63
  9. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 30234. p. 8353. 14 August 1917. Retrieved 8 June 2008.
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  11. Darrel D. Whitcomb, The Rescue of Bat 21 (Naval Institute Press, 1998)
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External links