home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0457>
- <title>
- Apr. 25, 1994: Deadly Mistaken Identity
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- IRAQ, Page 50
- Deadly Mistaken Identity
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>How could American warplanes shoot down two U.S. helicopters?
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by J.F.O. McAllister and Mark Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> As the two helicopters sliced through the blue skies over northern
- Iraq last Thursday morning, a U.S. Air Force AWACS reconnaissance
- plane picked them up on radar. The AWACS crew immediately radioed
- a pair of U.S. F-15C fighters and asked them to take a closer
- look. Though there had been no reported violations of the no-fly
- zone over northern Iraq since January 1993, Iraqi helicopters
- had been a problem in the past, when Saddam Hussein used them
- to suppress the Kurdish rebellion that erupted after the Gulf
- War ended in 1991. The crews of the F-15Cs twice flew past the
- copters and identified them as Russian-made Hinds flown by the
- Iraqi military. The fateful, terse order came back from the
- AWACS to fire. Moments later, the blasted helicopters, each
- of them struck by an air-to-air missile, plummeted to the ground.
- </p>
- <p> As horrified Pentagon officials quickly discovered, however,
- the two choppers were not Hinds but U.S. Black Hawks. On board
- were 21 allied military and civilian officials, including 15
- Americans and five Kurds; all of them perished. They had been
- on their way to meet with Kurdish leaders in the northern Iraq
- town of Salahuddin, part of the safe haven created for the Kurds
- after the Gulf War. The crews of all five aircraft in the tragedy
- were slated to attend a rehearsal one day earlier in which they
- had reviewed flight routes, radio frequencies and the timing
- of Thursday's mission. "There were human errors, probably, and
- there might be process or system errors as well," said Defense
- Secretary William Perry. Postponing a long-scheduled trip to
- South Korea and Japan, Perry ordered one investigation into
- the event and another into the rules of engagement that govern
- the two no-fly zones in Iraq, as well as the one over Bosnia.
- He acknowledged that the rules in Iraq did not require fighter
- pilots to issue a warning to their targets.
- </p>
- <p> Lives lost to friendly fire are a devastating cost of battle.
- Almost one-fourth of the 148 American combat deaths in the Gulf
- War resulted from accidental assault by their own side. The
- Pentagon established a Fratricide Task Force to develop ways
- to avoid such accidents. Even during the war, however, when
- hundreds of planes representing more than two dozen allied nations
- filled the skies, none of those deaths involved aircraft firing
- upon one another.
- </p>
- <p> Some military analysts believe that deadly misjudgments are
- made more likely by battlefield technology that hands over decisions
- to computers. Defense officials acknowledged that last week's
- mishap is likely to hamper efforts to improve the capability
- of new U.S. weapon systems to fire on an enemy from far away.
- "We were just really beginning to push beyond-visual-range technologies,"
- says an executive at McDonnell Douglas, builder of the F-15C.
- "This is going to put a brake on that."
- </p>
- <p> The downing incident may have had less to do with modern weaponry
- than with the ancient problem of human error. Presuming the
- helicopters were not making aggressive moves toward targets
- on the ground or in the air, why did the pilots rush to fire?
- They seem to have relied primarily on visual identification,
- but that can be tricky. Though the blunt shape of the Black
- Hawks gives them a different silhouette from the needle-nosed
- Hinds, the external fuel tanks that Black Hawks can carry resemble
- the gun racks that protrude from Hinds on each side like small
- wings. To keep from being seen by the copter crews, the F-15C
- pilots would have approached from above and behind, an angle
- that might have prevented them from spotting the "U.S. Army"
- markings on the helicopters or the red, white and blue emblems.
- </p>
- <p> American attack planes also use radio units called IFFs--for
- Identify, Friend or Foe--that contact a target electronically.
- Though friendly aircraft are equipped to reply with a coded
- radio "squawk," General John Shalikashvili, Chairman of the
- Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the F-15Cs did not receive a "friendly
- response" from the copters. Did the crews inadvertently fail
- to activate their transponders?
- </p>
- <p> Even that possibility leaves open the question of whether any
- other form of radio contact was attempted--or whether the
- fighter jocks' adrenaline overrode their judgment. "I'm sure
- the F-15C pilots said, `There's something there--let's get
- it!'" says one Pentagon official. "I'm sure they had their
- fangs out." A short chain of command may also have contributed
- to the tragedy. Unlike U.S. pilots on patrol over Bosnia, who
- must obtain radio permission from air operations headquarters
- in Italy before firing on hostile aircraft, fighter planes over
- Iraq do not require consent from officers on the ground. Secretary
- Perry promised last week that the rules would be changed.
- </p>
- <p> The accident virtually wiped out the leadership of the allied
- Military Coordination Center. Serving as observers in northern
- Iraq and liaisons with Kurdish leaders and international relief
- officials, they help organize efforts to rebuild Kurdish villages
- destroyed by the Iraqis. Among the dead were U.S. Army Colonel
- Gerald Thompson, who was in charge of the command, his newly
- selected replacement, Colonel Richard A. Mulhern, and the senior
- staff from Britain, France and Turkey. The disaster struck at
- a moment when Saddam has been making bellicose gestures in the
- area. After the U.N. Security Council refused last month to
- ease the economic sanctions imposed on Iraq since 1990, the
- Iraqi Republican Guard moved into positions south of the Kurdish
- safe haven, which they are forbidden to enter. Since the beginning
- of March, three suspected Iraqi terrorist attacks have resulted
- in injuries to four U.N. guards overseeing relief operations
- there.
- </p>
- <p> Republican Congressman Newt Gingrich said that the accident
- proved that U.S. forces abroad are overstretched. The White
- House retorted that Gingrich was seeking unseemly political
- advantage from a military tragedy, but even some congressional
- Democrats wondered if the time had come for a closer look at
- U.S. involvement in Iraq. "I don't think we've really paid much
- attention to it," says House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman
- Lee Hamilton. "It's been a dangerous area, and it has to come
- under policy review." So much the worse that some of the dangers
- have been self-imposed.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-