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1989 air battle near Tobruk

On 4 January 1989, two Grumman F-14 Tomcats of the United States Navy shot down two Libyan-operated Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-23 Floggers which the American aircrews believed were attempting to engage and attack them, as had happened eight years prior during the 1981 Gulf of Sidra incident. The engagement took place over the Mediterranean Sea, about 40 miles (64 km) north of Tobruk, Libya.[1]

1989 air battle near Tobruk
Part of the Cold War

Gun camera still of the lead F-14 showing the second MiG-23 exploding after being hit by an AIM-9 Sidewinder missile
Date4 January 1989
Location33°43′53.94″N 23°41′51.04″E / 33.7316500°N 23.6975111°E / 33.7316500; 23.6975111Coordinates: 33°43′53.94″N 23°41′51.04″E / 33.7316500°N 23.6975111°E / 33.7316500; 23.6975111
Result

US victory

  • Two Libyan MiG-23 fighters shot down
Belligerents
 United States  Libya
Commanders and leaders
Ronald Reagan Muammar Gaddafi
Strength
2 F-14A Tomcats
1 E-2 Hawkeye
2 MIG-23s
Casualties and losses
None 2 pilots missing
2 MiG-23s destroyed

Background

In 1973, Libya claimed much of the Gulf of Sidra (south of Latitude 31° 30′) as its territorial waters and subsequently declared a "line of death", the crossing of which would invite a military response. The United States did not recognize Libya's territorial claims and continued to challenge the line, leading to military hostilities in August 1981 and March 1986. A terrorist attack in Germany which killed two American soldiers and one Turkish civilian on 5 April 1986 was linked to Libya and prompted the U.S. to carry out retaliatory air strikes against targets in Libya ten days later.[2]

Attempts by Libya to obtain weapons of mass destruction were of great concern to U.S. President Ronald Reagan's administration since it viewed Libya as a state sponsor of terrorism.[3] Tensions between Libya and the U.S. were running high after the latter accused Libya of building a chemical weapons plant near Rabta in the fall of 1988.[4] During a December 1988 press interview, Reagan indicated the potential for military action to destroy the plant.[5] The possibility of a U.S. attack caused Libya to increase its air defenses around Rabta and its state of military readiness throughout the country.[6]

Engagement

 
A simplified depiction of the incident

On the morning of 4 January 1989, the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy was sailing toward the eastern Mediterranean Sea for a scheduled port visit to Haifa, Israel.[7] The carrier was over 120 miles (190 km) north of Libya and had aircraft operating roughly 80 miles (130 km) north of the country.[4][8] Aircraft operating from the Kennedy included several flights of A-6 Intruders on exercises south of Crete, two pairs of F-14 Tomcats from VF-14 and VF-32 conducting combat air patrols, and an E-2 Hawkeye from VAW-126 providing airborne early warning and control.[8]

The easternmost combat air patrol station was provided by the two F-14s from VF-32 with aircraft call signs Gypsy 207 (crewed by Commander Joseph Bernard Connelly and Commander Leo F. Enwright in Bureau Number 159610) and Gypsy 202 (crewed by Lieutenant Herman C. Cook III and Lieutenant Commander Steven Patrick Collins in Bureau Number 159437).[7] Although the Kennedy battle group was not operating within the contentious Gulf of Sidra and was 600 miles (970 km) away from Rabta, the battle group commander believed Libyan concerns over a U.S. attack increased the likelihood of a confrontation.[8][9] He gave the American air crews a special briefing emphasizing their rules of engagement.[8]

At 11:55 local time, the airborne E-2 detected two Libyan MiG-23 Floggers taking off from Bomba (Al Bumbah) airfield near Tobruk, and observed them heading north toward the battle group. The two F-14s from VF-32 were directed to intercept the MiG-23s, while the F-14s from VF-14 covered the A-6s as they departed to the north.[10] Using their onboard radars, the intercepting F-14s began tracking the MiG-23s when the Libyan aircraft were 72 nautical miles (133 km) away, at an altitude of 8,000 feet (2,400 m) and traveling at 420 knots (780 km/h; 480 mph). Unlike some previous aerial encounters in which Libyan pilots were instructed to turn back after detecting an F-14's radar signal sweep their aircraft, the MiG-23s continued to close on the American fighters with a head-on approach.[11]

As both pairs of aircraft converged, the E-2 and other U.S. eavesdropping assets in the area monitored radio communications between the Libyan aircraft and their ground controllers.[6][11] The Americans listened to the MiG-23s receiving guidance to intercept the F-14s from ground controllers at a radar station in Bomba.[11] This radar station was one of several activated along the Libyan coast to support the MiG-23s.[6]

Gun camera video and audio from the two American F-14s

At 11:58, the F-14s made a left turn, away from the MiG-23s, to initiate a standard intercept.[12][1][13] Seven seconds later, the MiG-23s turned back into the American fighters for another head-on approach and were descending in altitude.[12] At this point, the F-14 aircrews began employing tactics to reduce the effectiveness of the MiG-23s' radars and the 12-mile-range (19 km) AA-7 Apex missiles they were potentially carrying.[11][10] The American aircraft started descending from 20,000 to 3,000 feet (6,100 to 910 m) to fly lower than the Libyan fighters. The drop in altitude was meant to prevent the MiG-23s from detecting the F-14s by using ocean clutter to confuse their onboard radars.[11] The American pilots executed another left turn away from the Libyan aircraft during the descent. Moments after the F-14s created a 30-degree offset, the MiG-23s turned to place themselves back into a collision course and accelerated to 500 knots (930 km/h; 580 mph).[12]

The air warfare commander on the Kennedy gave the American aircrews the authority to fire if they believed the MiG-23s were hostile.[13][8] The F-14s turned away from the approaching MiG-23s two more times, and each time, the American aircrews saw the Libyan aircraft turn back toward them for a head-on approach. At 12:00:53, the Radar Intercept Officer (RIO) in the lead F-14, Commander Leo Enwright in Gypsy 207, ordered the arming of the AIM-7 Sparrow and AIM-9 Sidewinder missiles on the American fighters, after what he determined was the fifth time the Libyan aircraft turned back toward them.[12]

The American aircrews armed their weapons when the opposing aircraft were less than 20 miles (32 km) away, the two groups closing in on each other at a rate of 1,000 knots (1,900 km/h; 1,200 mph).[1] At a distance of about 14 nautical miles (26 km), the lead F-14 pilot, Commander Joseph Connelly, made a radio call to the carrier group's air warfare commander to see if there was any additional information in regard to the MiG-23s.[13][8] There was no response to his call. At 12:01:20 and at a range of 12 nautical miles (22 km), Enwright fired an AIM-7, surprising Connelly, who did not expect to see a missile accelerate away from their aircraft. The missile failed to track toward its target. At a distance of about 10 nautical miles (19 kilometres), Enwright launched a second AIM-7, but it also failed to hit its target.[1]

The MiG-23s continued to fly directly toward the American fighters at 550 knots (1,020 km/h; 630 mph).[12] The F-14s executed a defensive split, where both aircraft made turns in opposite directions. Both Libyan fighters turned left to pursue the second F-14, Gypsy 202.[1] Connelly prepared Gypsy 207 for a right turn to get behind the MiG-23s as they went after the other American fighter.[8] With the MiG-23s pointed directly at them, the crew of Gypsy 202 fired a third AIM-7 from roughly five miles (8.0 km) away and downed one of the Libyan aircraft.[12]

After executing a sharp right turn, Gypsy 207 gained a position in the rear quadrant of the remaining MiG-23.[1] As the Libyan fighter was turning left and from a distance of one and a half miles (2.4 km), Connelly fired an AIM-9 missile, which downed its target.[12][8] The second MiG-23 was hit by the AIM-9 at 12:02:36. The F-14s descended to an altitude of several hundred feet and returned at high speed to the carrier group.[1] The Libyan pilots were both seen to successfully eject and parachute into the sea, but it is not known whether the Libyan Air Force was able to successfully recover them.[1][14]

Aftermath

 
A MiG-23 silhouette was painted onto Gypsy 202 after the engagement; it was removed prior to returning from cruise.

The following day, Libya accused the U.S. of attacking two unarmed reconnaissance planes which were on a routine mission over international waters. Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi called for a United Nations emergency session to take up the incident.[4] The U.S. claimed the American aircrews acted in self-defense due to demonstrations of hostile intent by the Libyan aircraft.[13]

Two days after the engagement, the Pentagon released photographs taken from the videotapes on the F-14s which, according to U.S. naval intelligence analysts, showed the lead MiG-23 armed with two AA-7 Apex missiles and two AA-8 Aphid missiles.[4][11] The AA-7 can be either a semi-active radar-homing missile or an infrared-homing (heat-seeking) missile, and it can be fired at another aircraft from head-on. The imagery was used to prove the Libyan fighters were armed and helped support the U.S. position that the MiG-23s were hostile.[8]

The intent for the Libyan aircraft on 4 January is not known for certain.[9][15] Gaddafi could have believed the U.S. was preparing an attack on the chemical facility in Rabta and ordered his military to see if the aircraft offshore were bombers bound for targets in Libya.[11] The possible reasons for the MiG-23s' flight profile range from a deliberate attack against the battle group to a radio breakdown with ground controllers leading to the Libyan fighters merging with the F-14s.[9][11]

Details released three months after the incident revealed that the MiG-23s never turned on their fire control radars, needed to guide their AA-7 missiles at maximum range. The turns by the Libyan pilots prior to the first missile launch by the F-14s were considered too slight to be hostile, according to U.S. House Armed Services Committee chairman Les Aspin.[15] Despite these findings, Aspin said the self-defense claim by the U.S. was still justified due to the continued acceleration of the MiG-23s as they closed the distance with the F-14s and Libya's history of firing first.[15]

Legacy

F-14 Tomcat Bureau Numbers 159437, 159610

At the request of the National Air and Space Museum, the U.S. Navy provided Bureau Number (BuNo) 159610 to its Udvar-Hazy location near Dulles International Airport.[16] Although Tomcat BuNo 159610 downed the Libyan MiG-23 as a VF-32 F-14A model Tomcat, it returned from that deployment and was entered into the F-14D re-manufacture program, later serving in a precision strike role as a VF-31 F-14D(R).

As of June 2017, BuNo 159437 was still stored at the Aircraft Maintenance and Restoration Group (AMARG) facility at Davis-Monthan AFB. One of eight F-14s remaining in the AMARG complex, it has not been scrapped due to impending museum placement.

In popular culture

Parts of the audio of the engagement were used in the 1992 movie Under Siege and the soundtrack to MicroProse's 1998 video game, Falcon 4.0.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Stanik 2003, p.229.
  2. ^ "1986 Year in Review: Strike on Qaddafi". UPI. www.upi.com/Archives/Audio/Events-of-1986/Strike-on-Qaddafi-and-Soviet-Espionage. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  3. ^ Kaplan, Eben. "How Libya Got Off the List." Council on Foreign Relations, 16 October 2007. Retrieved: 4 August 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d Stanik 2003, p.230.
  5. ^ Pear, Robert. "U.S. Downs 2 Libyan Fighters, Citing Their 'Hostile Intent'; Chemical Plant Link Denied." New York Times, 5 January 1989. Retrieved: 5 August 2017.
  6. ^ a b c Trainor, Bernard E. "Bonus to U.S. From Clash: Intelligence." New York Times, 6 January 1989. Retrieved: 8 August 2017.
  7. ^ a b Stanik 2003, p.228.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Gillcrist 1994, p.154.
  9. ^ a b c Stanik 2003, p.231.
  10. ^ a b Gillcrist 1994, p.155.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Wilson, George C. "Secretly Acquired MiGs Aided Navy Pilots In Libya Combat." Washington Post, 13 January 1989. Retrieved: 8 August 2017.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Halloran, Richard. "U.S. Says Tape Shows Missiles On a Libyan Jet." The New York Times, 6 January 1989. Retrieved: 8 August 2017.
  13. ^ a b c d Rosenthal, Andrew. "Pentagon Defends Tactics of Pilots Off Libya." The New York Times,11 January 1989. Retrieved: 8 August 2017.
  14. ^ "The American Fighter Aces Association F-14 Tomcat Panel Discussion." Youtube, uploaded by The Museum of Flight, 23 June 2018
  15. ^ a b c Wilson, George C. Despite New Details, Libyan MiG Incident Is Still Puzzling." The Washington Post,26 March 1989. Retrieved: 13 August 2017.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-07-09. Retrieved 2007-01-03.

Bibliography

  • Cooper, Tom (July–August 2002). "'Floggers" in Action: Early MiG-23s in Operational Service". Air Enthusiast. No. 100. pp. 56–67. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Gillcrest, Paul T. Tomcat!: The Grumman F-14 Story. Atglen, Pennsylvania: Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. 1994. ISBN 0-88740-664-5
  • Stanik, Joseph T. El Dorado Canyon: Reagan’s Undeclared War with Qaddafi. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 2003. ISBN 978-1-55750-983-3

External links

  • Brief description of the incident
  • story, with details of the radio broadcasts and times.
  • Air aces record
  • VF-32 photo gallery
  • Audio recording of the engagement
  • Libyan Wars, 1980–89, Part 6 – Chemical Reaction, Tom Cooper.
  • video footage of the incident


1989, battle, near, tobruk, january, 1989, grumman, tomcats, united, states, navy, shot, down, libyan, operated, mikoyan, gurevich, floggers, which, american, aircrews, believed, were, attempting, engage, attack, them, happened, eight, years, prior, during, 19. On 4 January 1989 two Grumman F 14 Tomcats of the United States Navy shot down two Libyan operated Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 23 Floggers which the American aircrews believed were attempting to engage and attack them as had happened eight years prior during the 1981 Gulf of Sidra incident The engagement took place over the Mediterranean Sea about 40 miles 64 km north of Tobruk Libya 1 1989 air battle near TobrukPart of the Cold WarGun camera still of the lead F 14 showing the second MiG 23 exploding after being hit by an AIM 9 Sidewinder missileDate4 January 1989LocationMediterranean Sea33 43 53 94 N 23 41 51 04 E 33 7316500 N 23 6975111 E 33 7316500 23 6975111 Coordinates 33 43 53 94 N 23 41 51 04 E 33 7316500 N 23 6975111 E 33 7316500 23 6975111ResultUS victory Two Libyan MiG 23 fighters shot downBelligerents United States LibyaCommanders and leadersRonald ReaganMuammar GaddafiStrength2 F 14A Tomcats1 E 2 Hawkeye2 MIG 23sCasualties and lossesNone2 pilots missing2 MiG 23s destroyed Contents 1 Background 2 Engagement 3 Aftermath 4 Legacy 4 1 F 14 Tomcat Bureau Numbers 159437 159610 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksBackground EditIn 1973 Libya claimed much of the Gulf of Sidra south of Latitude 31 30 as its territorial waters and subsequently declared a line of death the crossing of which would invite a military response The United States did not recognize Libya s territorial claims and continued to challenge the line leading to military hostilities in August 1981 and March 1986 A terrorist attack in Germany which killed two American soldiers and one Turkish civilian on 5 April 1986 was linked to Libya and prompted the U S to carry out retaliatory air strikes against targets in Libya ten days later 2 Attempts by Libya to obtain weapons of mass destruction were of great concern to U S President Ronald Reagan s administration since it viewed Libya as a state sponsor of terrorism 3 Tensions between Libya and the U S were running high after the latter accused Libya of building a chemical weapons plant near Rabta in the fall of 1988 4 During a December 1988 press interview Reagan indicated the potential for military action to destroy the plant 5 The possibility of a U S attack caused Libya to increase its air defenses around Rabta and its state of military readiness throughout the country 6 Engagement Edit A simplified depiction of the incident On the morning of 4 January 1989 the aircraft carrier USS John F Kennedy was sailing toward the eastern Mediterranean Sea for a scheduled port visit to Haifa Israel 7 The carrier was over 120 miles 190 km north of Libya and had aircraft operating roughly 80 miles 130 km north of the country 4 8 Aircraft operating from the Kennedy included several flights of A 6 Intruders on exercises south of Crete two pairs of F 14 Tomcats from VF 14 and VF 32 conducting combat air patrols and an E 2 Hawkeye from VAW 126 providing airborne early warning and control 8 The easternmost combat air patrol station was provided by the two F 14s from VF 32 with aircraft call signs Gypsy 207 crewed by Commander Joseph Bernard Connelly and Commander Leo F Enwright in Bureau Number 159610 and Gypsy 202 crewed by Lieutenant Herman C Cook III and Lieutenant Commander Steven Patrick Collins in Bureau Number 159437 7 Although the Kennedy battle group was not operating within the contentious Gulf of Sidra and was 600 miles 970 km away from Rabta the battle group commander believed Libyan concerns over a U S attack increased the likelihood of a confrontation 8 9 He gave the American air crews a special briefing emphasizing their rules of engagement 8 At 11 55 local time the airborne E 2 detected two Libyan MiG 23 Floggers taking off from Bomba Al Bumbah airfield near Tobruk and observed them heading north toward the battle group The two F 14s from VF 32 were directed to intercept the MiG 23s while the F 14s from VF 14 covered the A 6s as they departed to the north 10 Using their onboard radars the intercepting F 14s began tracking the MiG 23s when the Libyan aircraft were 72 nautical miles 133 km away at an altitude of 8 000 feet 2 400 m and traveling at 420 knots 780 km h 480 mph Unlike some previous aerial encounters in which Libyan pilots were instructed to turn back after detecting an F 14 s radar signal sweep their aircraft the MiG 23s continued to close on the American fighters with a head on approach 11 As both pairs of aircraft converged the E 2 and other U S eavesdropping assets in the area monitored radio communications between the Libyan aircraft and their ground controllers 6 11 The Americans listened to the MiG 23s receiving guidance to intercept the F 14s from ground controllers at a radar station in Bomba 11 This radar station was one of several activated along the Libyan coast to support the MiG 23s 6 source source source source source source source source source source source source Gun camera video and audio from the two American F 14s At 11 58 the F 14s made a left turn away from the MiG 23s to initiate a standard intercept 12 1 13 Seven seconds later the MiG 23s turned back into the American fighters for another head on approach and were descending in altitude 12 At this point the F 14 aircrews began employing tactics to reduce the effectiveness of the MiG 23s radars and the 12 mile range 19 km AA 7 Apex missiles they were potentially carrying 11 10 The American aircraft started descending from 20 000 to 3 000 feet 6 100 to 910 m to fly lower than the Libyan fighters The drop in altitude was meant to prevent the MiG 23s from detecting the F 14s by using ocean clutter to confuse their onboard radars 11 The American pilots executed another left turn away from the Libyan aircraft during the descent Moments after the F 14s created a 30 degree offset the MiG 23s turned to place themselves back into a collision course and accelerated to 500 knots 930 km h 580 mph 12 The air warfare commander on the Kennedy gave the American aircrews the authority to fire if they believed the MiG 23s were hostile 13 8 The F 14s turned away from the approaching MiG 23s two more times and each time the American aircrews saw the Libyan aircraft turn back toward them for a head on approach At 12 00 53 the Radar Intercept Officer RIO in the lead F 14 Commander Leo Enwright in Gypsy 207 ordered the arming of the AIM 7 Sparrow and AIM 9 Sidewinder missiles on the American fighters after what he determined was the fifth time the Libyan aircraft turned back toward them 12 The American aircrews armed their weapons when the opposing aircraft were less than 20 miles 32 km away the two groups closing in on each other at a rate of 1 000 knots 1 900 km h 1 200 mph 1 At a distance of about 14 nautical miles 26 km the lead F 14 pilot Commander Joseph Connelly made a radio call to the carrier group s air warfare commander to see if there was any additional information in regard to the MiG 23s 13 8 There was no response to his call At 12 01 20 and at a range of 12 nautical miles 22 km Enwright fired an AIM 7 surprising Connelly who did not expect to see a missile accelerate away from their aircraft The missile failed to track toward its target At a distance of about 10 nautical miles 19 kilometres Enwright launched a second AIM 7 but it also failed to hit its target 1 The MiG 23s continued to fly directly toward the American fighters at 550 knots 1 020 km h 630 mph 12 The F 14s executed a defensive split where both aircraft made turns in opposite directions Both Libyan fighters turned left to pursue the second F 14 Gypsy 202 1 Connelly prepared Gypsy 207 for a right turn to get behind the MiG 23s as they went after the other American fighter 8 With the MiG 23s pointed directly at them the crew of Gypsy 202 fired a third AIM 7 from roughly five miles 8 0 km away and downed one of the Libyan aircraft 12 After executing a sharp right turn Gypsy 207 gained a position in the rear quadrant of the remaining MiG 23 1 As the Libyan fighter was turning left and from a distance of one and a half miles 2 4 km Connelly fired an AIM 9 missile which downed its target 12 8 The second MiG 23 was hit by the AIM 9 at 12 02 36 The F 14s descended to an altitude of several hundred feet and returned at high speed to the carrier group 1 The Libyan pilots were both seen to successfully eject and parachute into the sea but it is not known whether the Libyan Air Force was able to successfully recover them 1 14 Aftermath Edit A MiG 23 silhouette was painted onto Gypsy 202 after the engagement it was removed prior to returning from cruise The following day Libya accused the U S of attacking two unarmed reconnaissance planes which were on a routine mission over international waters Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi called for a United Nations emergency session to take up the incident 4 The U S claimed the American aircrews acted in self defense due to demonstrations of hostile intent by the Libyan aircraft 13 Two days after the engagement the Pentagon released photographs taken from the videotapes on the F 14s which according to U S naval intelligence analysts showed the lead MiG 23 armed with two AA 7 Apex missiles and two AA 8 Aphid missiles 4 11 The AA 7 can be either a semi active radar homing missile or an infrared homing heat seeking missile and it can be fired at another aircraft from head on The imagery was used to prove the Libyan fighters were armed and helped support the U S position that the MiG 23s were hostile 8 The intent for the Libyan aircraft on 4 January is not known for certain 9 15 Gaddafi could have believed the U S was preparing an attack on the chemical facility in Rabta and ordered his military to see if the aircraft offshore were bombers bound for targets in Libya 11 The possible reasons for the MiG 23s flight profile range from a deliberate attack against the battle group to a radio breakdown with ground controllers leading to the Libyan fighters merging with the F 14s 9 11 Details released three months after the incident revealed that the MiG 23s never turned on their fire control radars needed to guide their AA 7 missiles at maximum range The turns by the Libyan pilots prior to the first missile launch by the F 14s were considered too slight to be hostile according to U S House Armed Services Committee chairman Les Aspin 15 Despite these findings Aspin said the self defense claim by the U S was still justified due to the continued acceleration of the MiG 23s as they closed the distance with the F 14s and Libya s history of firing first 15 Legacy EditF 14 Tomcat Bureau Numbers 159437 159610 Edit At the request of the National Air and Space Museum the U S Navy provided Bureau Number BuNo 159610 to its Udvar Hazy location near Dulles International Airport 16 Although Tomcat BuNo 159610 downed the Libyan MiG 23 as a VF 32 F 14A model Tomcat it returned from that deployment and was entered into the F 14D re manufacture program later serving in a precision strike role as a VF 31 F 14D R As of June 2017 update BuNo 159437 was still stored at the Aircraft Maintenance and Restoration Group AMARG facility at Davis Monthan AFB One of eight F 14s remaining in the AMARG complex it has not been scrapped due to impending museum placement In popular culture EditParts of the audio of the engagement were used in the 1992 movie Under Siege and the soundtrack to MicroProse s 1998 video game Falcon 4 0 See also EditPortals United States Libya War Politics 1980s Hainan Island incident an incident involving aircraft between the U S and China Operation Odyssey Dawn Pan Am Flight 103 Ouadi Doum air raidReferences EditCitations Edit a b c d e f g h Stanik 2003 p 229 1986 Year in Review Strike on Qaddafi UPI www upi com Archives Audio Events of 1986 Strike on Qaddafi and Soviet Espionage Retrieved January 25 2021 Kaplan Eben How Libya Got Off the List Council on Foreign Relations 16 October 2007 Retrieved 4 August 2017 a b c d Stanik 2003 p 230 Pear Robert U S Downs 2 Libyan Fighters Citing Their Hostile Intent Chemical Plant Link Denied New York Times 5 January 1989 Retrieved 5 August 2017 a b c Trainor Bernard E Bonus to U S From Clash Intelligence New York Times 6 January 1989 Retrieved 8 August 2017 a b Stanik 2003 p 228 a b c d e f g h i Gillcrist 1994 p 154 a b c Stanik 2003 p 231 a b Gillcrist 1994 p 155 a b c d e f g h Wilson George C Secretly Acquired MiGs Aided Navy Pilots In Libya Combat Washington Post 13 January 1989 Retrieved 8 August 2017 a b c d e f g Halloran Richard U S Says Tape Shows Missiles On a Libyan Jet The New York Times 6 January 1989 Retrieved 8 August 2017 a b c d Rosenthal Andrew Pentagon Defends Tactics of Pilots Off Libya The New York Times 11 January 1989 Retrieved 8 August 2017 The American Fighter Aces Association F 14 Tomcat Panel Discussion Youtube uploaded by The Museum of Flight 23 June 2018 a b c Wilson George C Despite New Details Libyan MiG Incident Is Still Puzzling The Washington Post 26 March 1989 Retrieved 13 August 2017 Tomcat Sunset Saturday Celebrate the Retirement of the F 14 Tomcat Archived from the original on 2007 07 09 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Bibliography Edit Cooper Tom July August 2002 Floggers in Action Early MiG 23s in Operational Service Air Enthusiast No 100 pp 56 67 ISSN 0143 5450 Gillcrest Paul T Tomcat The Grumman F 14 Story Atglen Pennsylvania Schiffer Publishing Ltd 1994 ISBN 0 88740 664 5 Stanik Joseph T El Dorado Canyon Reagan s Undeclared War with Qaddafi Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 2003 ISBN 978 1 55750 983 3External links EditBrief description of the incident January 16 1989 Time Europe story with details of the radio broadcasts and times Air aces record VF 32 photo gallery Audio recording of the engagement Libyan Wars 1980 89 Part 6 Chemical Reaction Tom Cooper video footage of the incident Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1989 air battle near Tobruk amp oldid 1122790902, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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