Falklands Conflict in the Air | How British Harriers beat the odds

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when the Fulton's conflict began it seems like Argentina had a massive advantage in the skies they had over a hundred aircraft of varying types some could operate from the Argentinian Mainland and others could operate from airstrips on the Falklands themselves meanwhile the British task force was initially restricted to the justice tree harriers which could fit on its two aircraft carriers it was up to them to protect the task force at Sea as well as the troops on the ground to many that seemed like an impossible task in this third episode of our Falkland series we're going to examine the conflict in the air just how big was the Argentinian Advantage how did each side change their strategy and how did British Pilots beat the odds and take control of the Skies on paper Argentina had Air Supremacy over the Falkland Islands Britain would need a superb high performance fixed wing fighter aircraft if there was to be any attempt to counter the Argentine Advantage it was the aircraft behind me the Harrier and its Naval cousin the sea Harrier upon which British hopes were placed but we'll take a closer look at that later on as the British task force made its way down to the South Atlantic the argentinians began setting up defenses on the islands with men that supplies constantly flown in the main airport was at Stanley the Falklands Capital with other smaller airfields at Goose green and Pebble Island Stanley was the only hard all-weather runway on the Falklands but it was still not long enough for Argentina's fast Jets which remained on the mainland the Argentinian Air Force had dusselt Mirage threes IAI daggers Douglas A4 Skyhawks and even English electric canbras purchased from Britain in the 1970s the Supersonic mirages and daggers were a serious threat but flying from the Argentinian Mainland put them at the limits of their fuel range the Argentinian Navy had an aircraft carrier the winter Senco de Mayo which was also equipped with Skyhawks while from the mainland they flew the dosso brigay super Eton Dart which could be equipped with the feared exorcet anti-ship missile five of which were known to be in Argentina's Armory the argentinians also had a number of smaller light attack aircraft based on airfields on the Falcons as well as ia-58 picaras like the one behind me it was a two-seat low Wing twin turboproc ground attack and counter Insurgency aircraft it had two cannons four machine guns and bombs and Rockets could be attached to the three external hardpoints it was low performance in comparison to the Mirage especially but it was maneuverable and could take off from short rough airfields perfect for the Falklands this aircraft joined Grupo Arya Tres de Taki or attack group 3 at Port Stanley on the 29th of May 1982 piloted by first lieutenant ayadi it carried out various armed escort missions for Chinook helicopters and on the 10th of June it was involved in an attack on Mount Kent on East Falkland in the face of all of these Argentinian aircraft it was crucial the Britain established air superiority before attempting to land troops on the Falklands the first step was eliminating the Island's most important Airfield at Stanley denying its use would not only demonstrate Britain's will to fight for the Falklands but also force a change of strategy for the argentinians but pulling off that raid would be a very difficult job a bomber would have to fly over 3 800 miles from Ascension Island to Stanley with multiple air-to-air refueling Maneuvers on the way damage the runway enough to deny its use and then fly all the way back to Ascension this was the aircraft they chose for the job the Avro Vulcan B2 a jet-powered high altitude strategic bomber designed to carry Britain's nuclear weapons during the Cold War the Vulcan had two defining characteristics which were suddenly in demand its long-range capability which could be extended through refueling and its ability to carry 21 000 pound bombs this particular Vulcan was delivered to iwm Duxford just one month before the Falklands conflict began by a pilot called Martin Withers the ministry of Defense actually asked if they could have the Vulcan back but the museum managed to persuade them otherwise one thing they probably did take was the fuel Pro and for very good reason at the time the Vulcan raid on Port Stanley would become the longest range bombing mission in the history of aerial Warfare codenamed the black book raid just before midnight on the 30th of April 1982 two Vulcan bombers and 11 Victor tankers took off from Wide Awake airfield on Ascension Island almost immediately the lead Vulcan suffered a technical difficulty which meant the reserve Vulcan xm-607 flown by Martin Withers had to take over instead over the next eight hours the Victor tankers completed a complex sequence of fuel transfers to the Vulcan and to each other this process was not without its issues but on the morning of May 1st they reached the target Withers and his crew dropped the payload of 21 000 pound bombs from 10 000 feet one bomb cratered the runway and the others caused further damage to the Airfield a few hours later see harriers from hos Hermes followed up with more attacks on the airstrips at Stanley and Goose green later still xm-607 arrived back at Ascension Island after 16 hours in the air the black book raid on the 1st of May would be the first of seven black book grades over the course of May and June 1982. the short-term and long-term success of these raids is still debated there's contention as to whether the cost of resources in terms of the number of aircraft and the amount of fuel used for instance alongside the risk involved for people but that could ever be justified with assessing the arguably limited impact of the missions but while its physical impact is debated ITS Tactical impact is clear the raid on the 1st of May demonstrated that the Royal Air Force had the range to bomb airfields in the Falklands and therefore had the potential to reach Mainland Argentina in response to that threat Argentina decided to hold more of its fast Jets back to protect the mainland the following day things got worse when the Argentinian Cruiser General belgrano was sunk by the submarine HMS conqueror this forced the Argentinian Navy including the Vintage Cinco de Mayo to largely withdraw to Port they would play no further role in the conflict in the first air-to-air battles over the Falklands the British refused to climb to the mirage's optimal altitude and vice versa when they eventually engaged the argentinians lost two mirages and a Canberra all shot down by British Sea harriers in addition to their fuel problems Argentinian Pilots also lacked experience they were more prepared for a war with Chile than fighting over the South Atlantic meanwhile on the ground Argentinian air Crews struggled to service their aircraft with spare parts hard to come by that first day was was absolutely crucial in the extent that it was it almost set the pattern for all subsequent operations it gave us enormous confidence uh looked at from the other way around I think the demoralizing effect on the Argentine Air Force must have been colossal now that pattern happily I'm glad to say continued they decided they would retain a number of aircraft in defense of their Airfield to shore had they actually committed more aircraft to deal with the combat Air Patrol over the landing area perhaps it would have been different from this point onwards Argentina essentially tried to avoid air-to-air combat with the harriers using mirages as decoys to draw them off while the daggers and Skyhawks attacked the fleet it seemed Argentina's air power wasn't olives cropped up to be that was until the 4th of May when HMS Sheffield came under attack from a pair of Argentinian Super 8 on darts it was hit by one of two xsf missiles later sank for the British that was a stark warning the loss of an aircraft carrier to an exorcet would end any chance of success for the British task force as a consequence the British carriers predominantly remained well out of their range to the east of the Falklands for the remainder of the conflict however by increasing the distance they had to fly this reduced the amount of time the harriers could spend over the islands leaving the ships and ground forces more Exposed on the 21st of May the first British Landings began on the Falklands to minimize this still considerable air threat the British chose to land at San Carlos on East Falkland it was hoped that the hills around the bay would provide sheltered Waters from Air attack but that didn't stop the argentinians from trying British ships were attacked by picaras Skyhawks mirages and daggers over the next few days but it was the Skyhawks that would become the most feared silhouette as the British forces could see the aircraft's impressive maneuverability against the sky from the ships below few Argentine Pilots had even been trained in low-level flying and fewer still to undertake attacks on ships in Open Water having flown for hours for Mainland Argentina they only had the chance to engage in a few attacks before heading home again but despite all of that they still managed to achieve significant damage all the while Under Fire themselves from the ships below and from sea harriers we persuaded the flight Commander it'd be a good idea to stay on the ship of course we never realized that that was the biggest mistake of Our Lives because everybody I'm sure I was watching the ships getting hit they used to break the mass of the Aerials of the ship the pilots as they were flying so low we thought at first that the Argentinian Air Force were mad but as time went on we changed our views drastically they were very professional and the way they conducted a business they came down San Carlos water the first one just blowing straight out of the sky three missiles hitting bad plants were possibly some of the bravest men over the whole campaign I mean if everything they dropped had gone off we'd still be down there fighting now fortunately for the British many of the Argentine bombs failed to explode due to problems with the setting of their fuses essentially the aircraft had flown at a height lower than the fuses had been set so the bombs hit their target before they had the chance to explode if there hadn't been this issue with the bomb fuses the losses at San Carlos water would have been catastrophic by the 25th of May 1982 three ships had sunk and eight more were damaged however the Argentine decision to Target the ships in the Falkland sound meant that the ground forces were able to land unopposed British troops were now just 13 miles from the Argentine Garrison at Darwin and Goose green and just 50 miles from Port Stanley despite their successes at San Carlos Argentinian Air Forces were sustaining losses at an alarming rate they couldn't keep up these kind of attacks for long however with a limited number of British aircraft in the skies there were inevitably gaps in the harrier's combat air patrols that's exactly what happened on the 8th of June during the Fitzroy air attacks as British troops were moved forward for attacks from the mountains around Port Stanley Royal Fleet auxiliary ships or Galahad and Sir Tristram were attacked both ships were badly damaged by Argentinian Skyhawks killing 50 men and wounding a further 150 the Argentinian air attacks on the same day sank a British landing craft killing six and severely damaged HMS Plymouth it was in moments like this the British helicopters became crucial varying casualties to field hospitals or aboard ships since the sinking of the SS Atlantic conveyor and the heavy lifting helicopters it was carrying the remaining helicopters and their Crews were operating at the limit of their capacity British forces were supported by a range of helicopters including the single surviving Boeing Chinook and the Westland gazelle seeking links wasp Scout and Wessex helicopters were the workhorses for the British forces during the Falklands conflict this Wessex helicopter behind me last flew on the 8th of December 1980 so did not serve during the Falklands conflict but the Wessex type of helicopter is probably best known for its exploits in the Falklands at the beginning of the conflict they helped sink the Argentine submarine Santa Fe and recapture South Georgia from Argentine forces in April 1982. towards the end of the conflict in June a West 65 fires two as12 missiles at the Town Hall in Port Stanley with the aim of killing senior Argentine Hernandez inside but missed hitting the police station instead so the Wessex helicopter had a crucial role that bookended the conflict a week on from the disaster at Fitzroy British troops would enter Stanley as the argentinians surrendered so just how did the British Prevail how did they overcome the odds in the air the answer at least in part is the Harrier one of the harrier's key features was its v-stall capability which stands for vertical and short takeoff and Landing this essentially means being able to take off from the ground vertically so straight upwards and to take off within a short amount of Runway gr3s are fitted with a Rolls-Royce Pegasus 103 turbofan engine and four nozzles to either side of the aircraft to achieve V-Star the pilot would switch the direction of the aircraft's thrust by rotating its nozzles the ability to take off and land vertically would prove invaluable when operating from aircraft carriers especially when the flight decks were already packed with other aircraft the harrier's benefits were not just logistical it was also an excellent combat aircraft the sea harriers were primarily employed in air-to-air combat protecting the task force ground troops while the harriers were slower than the Argentinian mirages and daggers they had an important trick of their sleeve the aim 9l Sidewinder air-to-air missile while previous air-to-air missiles could only be fired from directly behind the enemy The Sidewinder worked regardless of their position giving British Pilots A major advantage those Pilots had been testing their dog fighting skills against the best NATO had to offer for many years making them a formidable fighting force together their equipment and training allowed the British to dominate The air-to-air Battle of the 10 harriers lost during the conflict none came due to enemy aircraft while Argentina lost at least 20 in air combat alone I saw these two Delta swing shapes low I flew through them head on thinking right we've got a fight here now at last and as I got through the turn there was in the sky in front of me Steve firing the first missile as it exploded it a big gout of flame obscure the whole aircraft but at that stage Steve had already switched attention to his second Min art which was some distance ahead fired the second Sidewinder and this was really driving my mind crazy at the time pass this wonderful thing to see you know it's happening it's terrific but while I was thinking like that there was a third dagger it was behind me it was firing his cannons at me and then taught Christ you know watch a six o'clock shark you know it was still in the hard turn the whole time I looked Brown and there was this Mirage passing underneath me beautiful colors in camouflage all I had to do really was pull down hard and he didn't stand a chance because I got him behind him and tried my massage [Applause] the initial 20 British Sea harriers were joined by further sea harriers and Harrier gr3s the latter operated by number one Fighter Squadron RAF from the very unfamiliar surroundings of an aircraft carrier it was thought that the gr3s would be used as replacements for C Harrier losses but those losses were so few that they ended up being tasked primarily with their classic ground attack roll striking Argentinian positions around Darwin and Goose green and supporting British forces around Mount Kent and in the assault on Port Stanley so the gr3s could operate from aircraft carriers modifications were required and fast alterations were made to the gr3 airframe and systems including radar and navigation it was even reported that holes were drilled in the airframe to allow sea water to run out this particular Harrier gr3 operated from a temporary Landing Strip established at San Carlos this allowed it to respond more rapidly to attack missions if required and also freed up space on the aircraft carriers this Harrier carried out attacks around Port Stanley and undertook a reconnaissance mission looking for ground launched exorcet missiles it attacked positions on Mount Harriet and narrowly escaped an argentine's surface-to-air missile over the mount London which exploded only a hundred feet or 30 meters above the cockpit after the conflict it was transferred back to the UK and it has been at idbm Duxford since 1992. Wars aren't fought on paper Argentina appeared to have an advantage in the Skies over the Falklands with Superior numbers and closer supply lines but in reality the Vantage in training and Technology made the fight far more even things could have gone much worse for the British had a carrier being lost where if Landing forces had been hit that San Carlos but instead by the final weeks of the conflict British harriers and helicopters dominated the Skies over the Falklands of course the final battle for control would have to be waged on land make sure you subscribe so you don't miss out on our penultimate episode exploring the land battles for the Falklands
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Channel: Imperial War Museums
Views: 4,356,886
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: the falklands, falklands war, falklands conflict, las malvinas, islas malvinas, Guerra de las Malvinas
Id: 5Lw8eWE7aQ8
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 18min 28sec (1108 seconds)
Published: Wed Apr 20 2022
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