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Panama Jack
3rd May 2008, 08:01
By SEBASTIAN ABBOT, Associated Press Writer
27 minutes ago


ABOARD THE USS HARRY S. TRUMAN - U.S. pilots flying missions over Iraq come to the region expecting a host of challenges, including swirling sandstorms and urban battlefields filled with a mix of enemies and civilians.

But Naval aviators flying off the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman said one of the newest difficulties has been the least expected: navigating increasingly crowded airspace in a region that has experienced the world's fastest airline growth in recent years.

The mix of U.S. combat aircraft and civilian planes from booming Gulf airlines illustrates the growing divide in the Middle East between countries like Iraq and Lebanon, which are mired in political and sectarian conflict, and oil-rich nations such as the United Arab Emirates and Qatar enjoying a windfall revenue and surging investment.

Cmdr. Bill Sigler, head of an F/A-18 fighter jet squadron on the USS Truman, estimated that planes flying off the carrier headed north over the Persian Gulf to Iraq were confined to one-fifth of the airspace available the last time he was in the region in 2002 because of increased airline traffic.

"You have to carve a strip out of the middle of the Gulf and that's frequently below 15,000 feet, which for us is like confining your car to the sidewalk," said Sigler. "It does not give us much to work with."

The Truman's battle group ended its Gulf deployment this week and is returning to Norfolk, Va. It was replaced by the carrier USS Abraham Lincoln.

Civilian air traffic controllers work with U.S. pilots flying to Iraq to keep them on their designated routes, a process that has become more complicated as the number of flights has ballooned.

"Now it is a spider web of networks that crisscross the Gulf," said Sigler.

Civilian air traffic in the Mideast doubled between 2002 and 2007, according to the International Air Transport Association. Mideast airline traffic is still relatively light compared with North America and Europe, but the region's growth rate galloped at more than 18 percent last year — far faster than any place in the West.

The boom in Gulf air traffic — particularly with carriers such as Emirates and Qatar Airways — has been driven by oil-funded airline investments and the region's strategic location as a hub between Asia and the U.S. and Europe, said John Strickland, a London-based airline analyst.

"Between their geographic location and the ultra-long range aircraft that are becoming available, they can pretty much fly nonstop anywhere in the world," said Strickland. "They have really introduced services that wouldn't have been possible 5-10 years ago, and the demand has really come through."

Capt. Fredrick Pawlowski, commander of the entire air wing on the USS Truman, said the increased air traffic has made flying missions into Iraq from the Gulf more difficult but also reflected stability and growth in the region.

"In the last five years since I was here previously, we have been constricted in our airspace, in the routes we can fly in and out of the country because of good things," said Pawlowski. "That is, access is there because we can guarantee it."

But Sigler said the airline growth has brought with it an increased risk of mid-air collisions with military aircraft headed toward Iraq.

Two F/A-18 fighter jets from the USS Truman crashed after they collided in January over the Gulf. The three aviators involved were plucked safely the Gulf. Sigler said the incident involved pilot error, but the accident occurred in the same block of airspace where airlines fly in and out of Kuwait.

"Ironically, we thought that if we had a mid-air (collision), it would be with somebody else, not in-house," said Sigler.

Pilots say the problem of crowded airspace gets even more difficult once they enter Iraq because of the layers of manned and unmanned military aircraft, known as UAVs, and civilian planes flying in and out of the major cities — making it among the most crowded skies in military history.

"There are little UAVs, there are helicopters, there are bigger UAVs, there are airplanes, there are bigger airplanes, there are really big UAVs, there are really big airplanes, and there's commercial air traffic over there," said Rear Adm. William Gortney, commander of the USS Truman carrier group and a fighter pilot himself. "It's a real challenge."

Most of the civilian air traffic in the Gulf bypass Iraqi airspace, but several airlines conduct daily flights to cities including Baghdad, Basra, Irbil and Suleimaniyah.

"Our training ranges in the United States have something like that going on, but they don't bring (civilian) airplanes into land right in the middle of your bombing run," said Pawlowski.


I am just wondering whether US Military fighters squak Mode C when on their way to a sortie-- obviously not when they are in a hostile area, but for example when launching off a carrier in international waters?

ferris
3rd May 2008, 09:30
Yes (usually), but generally dont have TCAS. Its the UAVs you have to worry about.

Thridle Op Des
4th May 2008, 04:37
UAVs have Transponders as I discovered personally over PURDA the other night

Andu
4th May 2008, 04:51
The US Navy actually getting clearances to go through civil airspace? These new USN drivers are wuzzes. Years ago, their forebears didn't know what civil airspace was. Or you wouldn't have thought so, they way they'd just blast on through without a VHF radio to their name.

Panama Jack
4th May 2008, 11:15
Well, they still haven't learned to talk properly on the radio:

"Baw-rain this is Stalker 58 checkin' in with the flash. . . " Oh they sound so cool. :yuk:

Fox3snapshot
4th May 2008, 13:35
The practice of 'Due Regard' is still alive and well and wreaks havoc, especially the MN (P3) traffic right in the middle of your holds and busy arrival rush!! :*

The Global Hawk is pretty much a regular now and we just have to remain 10,000' below once we have determined it is him. We can get comms with 'the pilot' if we need to but mostly liaise through the military.

Things I must say have improved compared to the early days of the ' war's ' as most of the squadron components have deployed numerous times now over the years. The carrier ops are still a shambles but I don't think that will ever change.

:8

Itswindyout
6th May 2008, 12:07
silly question, but no silly answers please.

windy

RustyNail
6th May 2008, 13:14
Itswindyout.

It is the yank way of saying "squawking ident"

Heres the Flash, were' Flashing etc etc :yuk: