When Hornets Growl
The new, supersonic face of e-warfare.
- By D.C. Agle
- Air & Space magazine, March 2011
No soft underbelly here: The EA-18G Growler hauls missiles, fuel tanks, and electronic warfare pods.
Ted Carlson/Fotodynamics
(Page 2 of 4)
“If [e-warfare aircraft] are not airborne to support the strike, the strike does not go,” says Commander Jeff Craig, the Scorpions’ commanding officer. “Guys are recognizing the threat today is much more diverse.”
That realization trickles down to the people on the ground who get cover from the electronic warfare mission.
“You come back to the chow hall maybe a couple of weeks after working with [the troops] and actually sit and eat dinner with them,” says Lieutenant Kristen Levasseur, another Scorpion electronic warfare officer. “And they ask you, ‘Were you guys the ones out there that night?’ You say yes, and they tell you the crazy stories about what went on, and thank God you were there.”
E-WARFARE first broke out on the high seas during the 1901 International Yacht Races, now called the America’s Cup. Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi had planned to provide radio-telegraph updates from a boat to the Associated Press on shore. But a competitor, the American Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company, eager for an exclusive, constructed a more powerful transmitter. As the racing yachts Columbia and Shamrock II tacked around Sandy Hook at the northern tip of the New Jersey coast, the airwaves that should have carried the Morse code dots and dashes of Marconi’s transmitter were instead saturated with noise from American Wireless, rendering his dispatches indecipherable.
It took just three more years for electronic jamming to truly go to battle. During the 1904 Russo-Japanese War, Russian radio-telegraph stations at Port Arthur on the Chinese coast interfered with wireless communication between Japanese ships trying to shell the Russian naval base there. A decade later, radio jamming went to the battlefields of World War I, but both sides opted more often to gather enemy transmissions. In World War II, Germany struck a blow in the expansion of e-warfare: On February 12, 1942, as the German warships Scharnhorst, Gneisenau, and Prinz Eugen bolted from the bombed-out French port of Brest via the English Channel to the relative safety of German waters, all behind a curtain of German electromagnetic interference, English radar screens turned to gibberish. Known as the Channel Dash, it compelled the Brits to start waging e-warfare in earnest.
Among their first tasks was to address Bomber Command’s losses due to the early warnings enabled by German radar. The RAF turned to the unsung Boulton Paul Defiant, a two-seat, four-gun, one-turret fighter that failed to achieve the stardom of the Hawker Hurricane and the Supermarine Spitfire.
“The Defiant was designed to pull alongside and below German bombers and pour rounds into the engines and fuel tanks, protected from return fire by the bomber’s own structure,” says Les Whitehouse, a British aircraft historian with the Boulton Paul Association. “It could out-turn the Hurricane, Spitfire, and Messerschmitt Bf109. What it could not do was outrun the Bf109.” This made the Defiant vulnerable, so the RAF assigned it to training, air-sea rescue, night patrol, and work with airborne radar countermeasures.
Five months after the Channel Dash, eight Defiants were flying formation over the south coast of England, using “Moonshine,” a new radar technology the Brits had created, to try to fool one of Germany’s powerful Freya early warning radars, this one near Cherbourg, France. Moonshine reradiated Freya’s radar waves back with a larger, identical pulse combined with the natural pulse off the Defiants, giving the appearance that a pack of a hundred heavy bombers was approaching. Before the last pulse of Moonshine had been sent, 30 German fighters were in hot pursuit of a phantom bomber group. Less than two weeks later, Defiants again fooled Luftwaffe ground controllers, who vectored 144 fighters toward an imaginary air raid while a dozen B-17s and their fighter escorts attacked the rail yards at Rouen, France.
“England was not the only country to get into airborne electronic countermeasures during the war,” says Daniel Kuehl, director of the Information Operations Concentration Program at the National Defense University in Washington, D.C. “Everyone did. But the Brits and the Americans were the best at it, and they won. From World War II on, electronic warfare becomes essential to operating and winning a war.” The airborne jamming genie was out of the bottle, and the Defiant had shown that you didn’t have to be fast or glamorous to get the job done.
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Comments (10)
While it is likely the case that no movie will be made with the main focus on a jamming plane, they do appear in movies -- the EA-6A appeared in Flight of the Intruder, as I recall; the main characters would sometimes rotate to it when not flying the normal A-6 bombing missions.
Posted by Michel S. on January 26,2011 | 05:32 PM
The Prowler Slow?? Don't think so. Ask any F-14, F-18 pilot who has met one headon and wondered why they had to burn so much gas in burner to get anywhere close to them. True, no afterburner, but 600 knots on deck no sweat. The real comment should be how comparatively slow the Growler will be when loaded for missions. The base a/c is a fighter yes, but not as a Growler with pods and tanks to do it's EW mission. You don't pickle off your ew stores to fight or egress, a bit expensive to say the least. It will prove itself to be a great EW platform and learn to be defensive when needed. Hornets will be along for fighter protection. Greg Tritt, "Humble" Prowler pilot
Posted by greg tritt on February 1,2011 | 12:25 PM
"The new, supersonic face of e-warfare."
Not quite, Agle. The aircraft is Mach limited to .95 with pods hung. Also a clean, let alone dirty, Super Hornet cannot exceed Mach 1 below 10,000 feet.
Posted by A.A. Cunningham on February 2,2011 | 02:42 PM
" -- the EA-6A appeared in Flight of the Intruder, as I recall; the main characters would sometimes rotate to it when not flying the normal A-6 bombing missions." Michel S. on January 26,2011
Although it's been more than a decade since I last watched "Flight of the Intruder" I believe your recall is mistaken. The only squadrons operating the EA-6A during the VietNam war were Marine Corps VMCJs. The Intruder variants featured in the movie were the A-6A and the A-6B which, although configured as a SEAD - aka "Iron Hand" - platform, was not an EA-6A.
Posted by A.A. Cunningham on February 2,2011 | 03:24 PM
It was great to see the EA-18G on the cover of A&S in same edition that salutes 100 years of Naval Aviation. Since the Growler is the 4th generation Navy/USMC jet Electronic Warfare aircraft, (EF-10B,EA-6A, EA-6B)could it be that this is a belated "make up" by NASM for not including a picture or story on any EW aircraft in their book FLIGHT 100 YEARS OF AVIATION?? Over to you General Dailey! Wayne "Flash" Whitten, Col.USMC (ret)
Posted by Wayne "Flash" Whitten on February 7,2011 | 09:20 AM
Gotta stand up for St. Louis here. The caption on the billboard photo is not correct. That billboard is on McDonnell Blvd. in the heart of the Boeing-St. Louis complex. Go Growler!
Posted by George A. on February 10,2011 | 11:02 AM
Very nice article on the Growler! It shows how critical they are in air warfare.
I think it should be kept in mind, though, that it's the SIGINT (especially ELINT) and MASINT spooks who work in the background, unheralded, to make this effort successful. Without their work at detecting and analyzing opponents' electronic emanations, how possible would the success of EW platforms be? Perhaps an article on the history & current unclassified work of those specialists and their role in military aviation is in order.
Posted by John on February 12,2011 | 02:11 PM
While I appreciate the great job done in the writing of this article I cannot for the life of me understand how you can write such an article and never once mention the role of other EW platforms. For example the US Air Force operated F-4 "Wild Weasels" and EF-111 EW platforms for many years. The EF-111 in particular was a very capable platform and conducted support and escort missions for both Air Force as well as Navy and Marine Corps strike packages and were crucial in the success of "Gulf War I". The B-52G and H as well as the B-1B aircraft had/have a robust organic EW capability and didn't/don't require additional EW support.
The EA-6B was a wonderful aircraft and did a great job for many years. I believe the EF-18 Growler has a ways to go in terms of maturity but will do a very capable job for many years to come. The article did a great job of illustrating both of them, but it certainly could have been much better had it been more comprehensive and inclusive.
Posted by Warren W. on February 21,2011 | 08:39 PM
No discussion of electronic warfare is complete without including the Douglas B-66, which the U.S. Air Force operated from 1955 through 1975. Although the original airplanes did not include a serious offensive jamming capability, all B-66's did include some electronic jamming capability. In the late 1950's the USAF converted 13 B-66B nuclear-capable bombers to a "Brown Cradle" configuration with a large complement of jammers inserted into the bombay. These aircraft were assigned to NATO along with 12 RB-66C electronic reconnaissance models. The "Brown Cradle" aircraft and the electronic reconnaissance models were in 1965 detached from NATO and moved to Thailand to support the Rolling Thunder missions flown by F-105 units. The B-66 jammimg support was so successful in suppressing radar controlled anti-aircraft guns and missiles that the air force retrieved 55 photo reconnaissance models (RB-66B's) from storage at Davis-Monthans AFB and upgraded them with extensive state-of-the-art jamming capabilities. All B-66's then in service were redesignated as EB-66B's and EB-66C's and flew until the end of offensive operations against North Vietnam. Some were then redeployed to Europe in support of NATO and all were eventually removed from service in 1975. The story of the EB-66 role in electronic warfare is described in detail in a study by titled "Sparks Over Vietnam. The EB-66 and the Early Struggle of Tactical Electronic Warfare" by Gilles Van Nederveen of the Air University, Maxwell AFB. The study is available for purchase at http://www.stormingmedia.us/54/5415/A541583.html
Gerry Parker
Former Electronic Warfare Officer
42nd Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron
10th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing
Posted by Gerry Parker on February 26,2011 | 12:18 AM
So many individuals took the time to expound upon their unique knowledge of the aircraft/platforms this format would be thought of as remiss if mention of the F-4J's and F-4N's [2] of each were modified to carry out special OPS missions north of Hanoi. Beginning in May 1968 through September 1968.... Equipped with the ALQ-119 Jamming Pods with great effect in discharging the duties. To those who remain forever young and fresh faced, we salute you.
Posted by Brig. Gen. F.F. Haggard (Ret.) on March 30,2011 | 09:32 PM