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JessTheDog
26th Oct 2005, 21:38
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4351622.stm


Stark option in frontline terror fight

Shooting down a hijacked passenger plane has, since the attacks of 11 September, been a stark option facing those fighting terrorism in Britain.

The RAF Tornado crews are ready to scramble in a matter of minutes

The BBC's Brian Hanrahan was given unprecedented access to the Quick Reaction Alert crews of RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire for the BBC's Ten O'Clock News.

At any time in the UK, the crews of four RAF Tornado fighter jets are ready to scramble and shoot down a plane being used as a terrorist weapon.

It is a last resort - and any decision to do so will be taken by the prime minister or a senior cabinet minister.

As crews prepare for Quick Reaction Alert, they check their aircraft so they can take off instantly to challenge and shoot down any plane that poses a terrorist threat to Britain.

"We are fairly close to London and therefore the most obvious choice to launch and protect the capital," said navigator Jules, of 25 Squadron.

The crews live and eat in quarters next to the hangars for 24 hours at a time.

They arrived at RAF Coningsby the day after the 11 September 2001 attacks on New York and the duty crews have been there every minute of every day since.

Once the new watch takes over, they even sleep in their waterproof suits.

It saves seconds if they have to scramble.

I watched as fighter control dealt with a genuine alert - an airliner out of contact.

In an old cold war bunker, sophisticated computers and radar feeds from around the country scan Britain's crowded air lanes.

Thousands of aircraft are flying above UK airspace at any moment

The RAF's master controller wanted more details and warned his fighters to stand by.

When a second plane lost contact, the tension notched up.

Any decision to destroy an airliner would be passed from the control centre to the top of the government.

The most senior of a small group of cabinet ministers can be patched into the command circuit within minutes.

Fortunately, within seconds communication with both planes was established, and everyone stood down.

It all happens frighteningly fast.

"You never know where the threat's going to come from," said Wing Commander Pat McCintic from the control centre at RAF Boulmer.

"It could be any of the aircraft out there and there are thousands flying above the airspace of the United Kingdom every minute of every day."

But if ordered to shot down a plane, "That's exactly what we would do," he added.

"It's that serious."

The pilots are constantly updated over a loudspeaker - they can expect to scramble about once a month.

Encounters with airliners are always tense.

Crews aim to launch a Tornado fighter within 10 minutes

The crews practise regularly to keep up their reaction times.

Scrambling is an adrenalin-charged sprint - unchanged since the Battle of Britain.

And they have exactly the same aim - to get combat aircraft armed and airborne, ready to face an instant threat.

Their target on the drill I watched was to launch a Tornado fighter within 10 minutes. They reckon to beat it regularly.

Their first task is to get alongside a suspect plane, and become the eyes of the decision maker - then, if needed, his finger on the trigger.

They live with everybody else's nightmares.

"Nobody wants to be called upon to do the act for real," said Bradders, a pilot with 11 Fighter Squadron. "You hope the deterrent is adequate enough.

"However, if called upon to do it for real, I probably would have to live with it.

"That's part of my job.

"It probably would be hard to live with it but you would have to live with it."

The fighters are weapons of last resort - fed by intelligence and backed up by a huge counter-terrorism operation on the ground.

But they are the most visible, and are intended to deter any terrorist thinking of staging a 11 September-style attack.


http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/40919000/jpg/_40919958_flightcontrol_bbc.jpg

15 minutes of fame - enjoy!

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/40919000/jpg/_40919956_cockpit_bbc203.jpg

The mighty F3!

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/40919000/jpg/_40919962_tornado_203bbc.jpg

Talking Radalt
26th Oct 2005, 21:50
There's an echo (http://www.pprune.org/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=194663) in here!

maxy101
26th Oct 2005, 21:57
It's sobering to think that a ****wit like Johny Two Jags has the authority to make a decision as important as this. Amazing what drinking beer and eating sandwiches in smoke filled rooms brings though. I guess we get the politicians we deserve.

Blacksheep
27th Oct 2005, 00:51
True, but its still good to know that our front lines are manned by the defenders we deserve.

Helli-Gurl
27th Oct 2005, 04:22
I agree the current mob are a bunch f**kwits but.... we get the politicians we deserve

Bit of an odd comment from someone who lives abroad and doesn't even vote in this country!

Maxy101, maybe you should put your money where your mouth is, vote and get these guys out so we gt the politicians we really do deserve?

;)

B Fraser
27th Oct 2005, 07:52
We used to have the best politicians that money could buy ;)

Fire 'n' Forget
27th Oct 2005, 15:56
Nice to see the Master controllers extension number in front of him ! can he not remember it :uhoh:

pigfist
27th Oct 2005, 18:28
Whiling away the hours between ACMI sorties in 5Sqns old HAS at Coningsby I cam across a folder on the ops computer re QRA. Lots of rubbish but a sub-folder about post mish' stuff. Usual DCO and DNCO "failed to start" etc but one amusing line about the crew of QRA 1 who didn't respond to the OPs phone. Remarks at the end detailed that the crew were "in the shower" and "didn't hear the phone". Just proves what I always thought about Fag 3 pilots. Of course it could have been a Laydee!

Inspector Dreyfuss
27th Oct 2005, 19:30
There was a time when one could well speculate whether certain Master Controllers could remember their own name, let alone their phone number. Several were borderline cases (if not actual cases, come to think about it) for the men in the white coats that used to look after Inspector Dreyfuss.
For example, a certain tired and emotional character (an ex pilot as it happened) was responsible for teaching MCs at the SFC a few years ago. Part of his QRA lesson involved 'briefing the Intercept Controller' at Saxa Vord. There had not been controllers on the Outer Islands for several years at that stage after the introduction of remote access technology. Even after being corrected he carried on regardless. Another revealed to me - on the top of Mt Kent in rather inclement weather - that he was never happier than on a mountain in the middle of nowhere with a radar on the top!
Thankfully the current bunch of MCs are not in the same category as some of their predecessors!