‘The VC10 captain announced that as it was Bastille Day he had been told that we would have to look after the ‘trade’ alone and that, consequently, we could not anticipate any form of relief from Mirage units,’ Alan Winkles, former RAF Phantom pilot
For more than two decades, the Phantom was an essential part of the Royal Air Force’s combat aircraft arsenal, providing the service with one of the most capable strike fighters in the world. The Royal Air Force began using two models of the Rolls-Royce Spey-powered Phantom. Germany deployed the FGR2 for ground assault and tactical reconnaissance, and the FG1, which was also used by the Royal Navy, for interceptor roles.
From 1977, all Royal Air Force Phantoms were almost entirely used as interceptor fighters over UK airspace.
“The French, without doubt, are proud of their way of life, and French folk will usually be eager to claim the virtues of their je sais quoi factor. Sometimes, however, the quoi in question can cause a problem or two for everyone else. I discovered myself in July 1987, on a day known as Bastille Day, or La Fête Nationale. The day when the storming of the Bastille prison on 14 July 1789, is remembered as a symbol of the modern nation and thus a cause of considerable celebration all over the place,” says Alan “Al” Winkles, a former RAF Phantom pilot, in Robert Pike’s book Phantom Boys.
“The day for me and for my navigator started well enough. It was an unexceptional Tuesday with the two of us on duty with another pilot/navigator crew. We were supported by a team of squadron engineers in the quick reaction alert (QRA) set-up at RAF Leuchars. Two Phantoms kept at readiness to be airborne in a matter of minutes when ordered by the ground radar controller at RAF Buchan, were in a special hangar next to a couple of crewrooms, one for the aircrew and one for the engineers. As the commanding officer of 43(F) Squadron at the time, I was not often on QRA duty, although I liked to ensure I was rostered for the occasional stint. If, as the saying goes, all was quiet on the western front, it was, for one thing, an opportunity for me to catch up on irksome paperwork from HQ,” Winkles continues.
However, on Bastille Day 1987, Al Winkles was scrambled to patrol east of the Faeroes to await the expected transit of two Bear Deltas to Cuba—a routine event.
“Sure enough, my trusty navigator made radar contact with them at an astounding range, and we motored in behind them. First, we closed in on the rear Bear to read its door number, before edging forward to the leader to read its number. Fully satisfied, we then stayed with the Bears for the next 30 minutes or so, seeing them safely off on their westerly heading over the Atlantic. Turning away to the southeast, we headed for home—or so we thought.”
Benbecula radar guided Al and his backseater to a rendezvous with a VC10 tanker as they coasted in over Scotland’s northwest coast. However, as Jimmy Bedle noted in The Fighting Cocks, more trade was undoubtedly expected. Having tanked to full, they were unexpectedly vectored southward down the Irish Sea, arriving at a location 100 miles southwest of Cornwall.
Then Portreath radar reported that, strangely, their earlier trade had veered south down the west coast of Ireland and seemed to be going for the Bay of Biscay, rather than continuing towards Cuba. They had dispatched another VC10 tanker to their area in order to shadow and intercept the Bears. The targets did indeed emerge to the west, and the Phantom executed a 120° maneuver to intercept.
Al Winkles resumes narrating the story.
“We were joined by a VC10, pulled off its training sortie over the North Sea. The tanker fell into line astern as we stationed ourselves on the Bear’s port side. By this time, the two Russian aircraft had joined together in loose formation. About 150 miles south of Cornwall, my navigator announced in a small voice that we had fallen off his map. However, as we entered the Bay of Biscay, we were certain that we would soon be relieved by the French Air Force, and we therefore kept a sharp lookout for Mirage fighters.
“By now, we had lost contact with Portreath radar and had just the VC10 for company. The tanker captain then announced that, as it was Bastille Day, he had been told that we would have to look after the ‘trade’ alone and that, consequently, we could not anticipate any form of relief from Mirage units. Far be it for me, I reasoned, to deny French their day of Bastille celebrations, but surely there were other considerations too. I could not avoid a feeling of irritation when I pictured our Mirage colleagues as they attended their Bastille barbecues on this mid-summer’s day.
“The VC-10 captain said he was trying to find a selection of French airfields that might be open for any possible diversion if we got into difficulties. However, thus far, the airfields he had tried had not even replied to his radio calls! Having given us this good news, he then said he was getting short of fuel, that he would give us what he could spare, and then he would leave us as there was another VC10 due to pitch up in around 30 minutes or so. We took on a few thousand pounds of fuel, and he left us, having given us a selection of vectors towards the nearest airfields in the St. Nazaire/La Rochelle areas—all probably closed.
At this point, we felt very vulnerable. We had no maps of France, no specific diversions, no weather information, and no radio contact with anyone except for the departing tanker. At this point the Bears seemed quite friendly and, possibly having been monitoring our situation over the radio, they turned towards the northwest. At least now we felt we were heading home. A very long 30 minutes passed, and then very faintly, we heard what appeared to be a distant conversation between our departing VC10 and the one arriving. Sure enough, the new tanker soon appeared and carried out an immaculate join-up using our air-to-air Tacan. The return route was flown in reverse by the Bears and ourselves, and we finally handed the Soviets over to Norwegian fighters who escorted them on their way back to Murmansk.”
Following his amazing five-hour sortie, Al gave the order to equip all 43 Squadron QRA aircraft with maps of Northern France in the future. It’s better late than never!
Photo by Crown Copyright and U.S. Air Force