PDA

View Full Version : Legendary F-14 leaves Atsugi — and legacy — to history



thedrifter
09-26-03, 01:44 PM
Legendary F-14 leaves Atsugi — and legacy — to history


By Juliana Gittler, Stars and Stripes
Pacific edition, Friday, September 26, 2003


ATSUGI NAVAL AIR FACILITY, Japan — The jetfighters made famous by Tom Cruise in the movie “Top Gun” flew into their last overseas’ horizon Wednesday, leaving behind Japan and their place on the USS Kitty Hawk.

“It’s a sad day for us,” said Capt. Pat Driscoll, Air Wing 5 commander.

Squadron VF-154, part of the air wing, was one of a handful of F-14 Tomcat squadrons left in the Navy.

Wednesday, the planes departed and the squadron began packing up for a new duty station in Lemoore, Calif. The move affects about 200 sailors and their families. Another 30 or so will be reassigned to other squadrons in the region, Driscoll said.

The Navy has not announced what squadron or type of jet will replace VF-154 in the air wing, which also includes two squadrons of F-18 Hornets.

VF-154, called the Black Knights, has flown the skies of the Pacific for 12 years and participated in combat missions in Grenada, Lebanon, Desert Storm and Operation Iraqi Freedom.

In Iraq, the squadron flew more than 300 sorties and outperformed all other aircraft from every U.S. service, Driscoll said. “The F-14 has done a great job for the United States Navy.”

The F-14 has been one of the Navy’s most memorable fighters for the past three decades. But its mission evolved from an air superiority fighter to that of a strike fighter, Driscoll said.

The Navy is phasing it out in favor of the F-18 Hornet and its modified version the Super Hornet.

The squadron’s move means a quick permanent change of station for several hundred Atsugi residents. The move will be easier, though, because the group is going together, said Elizabeth Waters, wife of Cmdr. Doug Waters, commander of VF-154.

“That’s really nice,” she said. “How often do you get to move with all your friends?”

The squadron will transition to an F-18 squadron at Lemoore Naval Air Facility and the pilots and radio intercept operators like Waters, will learn to fly F-18s.

Elizabeth Waters said it will be tough for her husband to bid the Tomcat farewell after so many years.

Those who know it say the F-14 represents a different era in war fighting. The F-14 was designed for mid-air fights

“The art of dogfighting is dead,” said Airman Joey Zirnheld, a VF-154 plane captain.

“It’s the best jet there is,” said Airman Thomas Earle, an aviation machinist’s mate and plane captain. “The 18s can turn sharper but they can’t catch us.”

The aging Tomcats are costly to maintain and are older than most of the sailors in the squadron.

“We’re tired of working on them but sad to see them go,” Earle said.

“It’s old but it’s a workhorse,” said airman Ashe Bridges, also a plane captain. “It’s the end of an era.”

http://www.estripes.com/photos/17697_925125417b.jpg

Courtesy of U.S. Navy
With afterburners lit, an F-14 departs Naval Air Facility Atsugi, Japan.

A brief history


The squadron began in 1946 with the creation of VFB-718. They flew Hellcats and Corsairs from their base at Naval Air Station Floyd Bennet in Brooklyn, New York.

After a few redesignations, the squadron became VF-154 in 1953 while embarked on the USS Princeton in San Francisco.

In 1957, the squadron adopted the name “Black Knights,” symbolic of the fight for freedom and protection for those unable to defend themselves. It joined Carrier Air Wing 5 in 1991 until Wednesday, when the 11 jets took off for Naval Air Station Lemoore, Calif.

The squadron flies the Grumman F014A Tomcat, a supersonic, twin-engine, variable sweep wing strike fighter.

The pilot and radio intercept operator (RIO) perform navigation, target acquisition, electronic counter measures and weapons employment. Missions include precision strikes against ground targets, air superiority and fleet air defense.

As a strike fighter, the Tomcat is capable of deploying an assortment of air-to-ground ordnance (MK-80 series GP bombs, LGBs and JDAM) in various configurations, while simultaneously carrying the AIM-7, AIM-9 and AIM-54 air-to-air missiles.

The F-14 also has the LANTIRN targeting system that allows delivery of various laser-guided bombs for precision strikes in air-to-ground combat missions and for battle damage assessment. With its Fast Tactical Imagery (FTI) system, the F-14 can transmit and receive targeting/reconnaissance imagery in-flight to provide time sensitive strike capability. A number of F-14s also carry the Tactical Air Reconnaissance Pod System (TARPS) providing in-theater tactical reconnaissance.

— Courtesy of the U.S. Navy

http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=17697


Sempers,

Roger
:marine: