Banja Luka incident

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Banja Luka incident
Part of the Bosnian War and Operation Deny Flight
110303-F-OT300-001 - Banja Luka incident of 1994.jpg
Artist's depiction of the incident
Date28 February 1994
Location
Southwest of Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina
44°32′8.54″N 16°34′57.42″E / 44.5357056°N 16.5826167°E / 44.5357056; 16.5826167Coordinates: 44°32′8.54″N 16°34′57.42″E / 44.5357056°N 16.5826167°E / 44.5357056; 16.5826167
Result NATO victory
Belligerents
 Republika Srpska

 NATO

  •  United States
Strength
6 J-21 Jastrebs
2 J-22 Oraos
4+ F-16s
Casualties and losses
5 aircraft downed[1][2][3][a]
3 pilots killed
1 wounded
None

The Banja Luka incident, on 28 February 1994, was an incident in which six Republika Srpska Air Force J-21 Jastreb single-seat light attack jets were engaged, and four of them shot down, by NATO warplanes from the United States Air Force. U.S. F-16 fighters southwest of Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina successfully engaged and destroyed several Bosnian Serb warplanes which had attacked a Bosnian factory, while suffering no casualties of their own. It marked the first active combat action, air-to-air or otherwise, in NATO's history.[5]

Bombing of Novi Travnik[]

In February 1994, the 526th Fighter Squadron, "Black Knights", based at Ramstein AB, Germany, was attached to the 401st Operations Group (Provisional) operating out of Aviano AB, Italy, as part of NATO's Operation Deny Flight. On 28 February, a flight of two 526th F-16s, "Knight 25" and "Knight 26", were crossing over Croatian airspace to conduct Close Air Support training near Sarajevo, Bosnia, when they detected six unidentified radar contacts eastbound in the No Fly Zone. These contacts were not immediately visible to the NATO AWACS aircraft flying over Hungarian territory because of distance and hilly terrain. After several minutes, AWACS was able to establish contact south of Banja Luka at 6:35 a.m. Two other 526th Squadron F-16s, Black 03 and Black 04, were vectored to the area and intercepted six J-21 Jastreb and two J-22 Orao aircraft that were bombing the "Bratstvo" military factory at Novi Travnik.[6]

In accordance with the UN and NATO rules of engagement, orders to "land or exit the no-fly zone or be engaged" were issued twice, but both warnings were ignored. While warnings were issued, the violating aircraft dropped bombs over their target, which was left in flames. In such circumstances NATO has a "single key", meaning that only one clearance was needed, so the Combined Air Operations Center was immediately able to clear the F-16s to attack.

Air engagement[]

The Bosnian Serb Jastrebs headed northwards, back to their base. At 6:45 a.m., the NATO fighters engaged their opponents. Captain Robert G. Wright fired an AIM-120 AMRAAM, downing the first Jastreb which was flying at 1,500 metres (4,900 ft). The remaining Jastrebs dropped to a few hundred metres, flying at low level to use the mountainous terrain to hide from radar and make their escape back to Udbina. Wright pressed on, closing to within AIM-9 Sidewinder range. He engaged two aircraft with heat-seeking Sidewinder missiles, shooting them both down.

After he had expended all his missiles and low on fuel, Wright handed over the chase to his wingman, Capt. Scott O'Grady, who had been flying 'top cover' above his flight leader. O'Grady dropped down to engage and fired an AIM-9M; the missile locked on and near explosion of the warhead triggered by the proximity fuse severely damaged the tail of the targeted Jastreb. Black flight was now approaching "bingo fuel", the point at which a plane will not have enough fuel to return, so they pulled off to refuel from a KC-135 Stratotanker circling in orbit over the Adriatic.

At the same time the other pair of F-16Cs, "Knight 25" and "Knight 26",[7] had been vectored to the area by the AWACS. At 6:50 a.m., "Knight 25", piloted by Capt. Steve "Yogi" Allen, managed to get in behind a single Jastreb flying at a very low altitude. He launched a Sidewinder, downing another J-21 Jastreb. Knight 25 flight turned back hard to the south, where Knight 26, Col. John "Jace" Meyer, established radar lock on another aircraft fleeing to the northwest. After a minute of pursuit, radar contact was lost and the flight broke off the attack. Low on fuel, Knight 25 and 26 returned to the tanker over the Adriatic. After refueling, they resumed combat air patrol over Bosnia. One remaining Serb aircraft was able to land as it ran out of fuel at Udbina Air Base in the Serbian Krajina in present-day Croatia.

The USAF credited three kills to Captain Robert Gordon "Wilbur" Wright,[8] flying F-16C-40 #89-2137/RS,[9] using an AIM-120 AMRAAM and two AIM-9 Sidewinders; and one kill using an AIM-9 Sidewinder to Captain Stephen L. "Yogi" Allen[10] flying F-16C-40 #89-2009/RS[11] of the same unit. The Bosnian Serbs acknowledged the loss of five aircraft in the incident; the discrepancy probably stems from the fact that an additional aircraft crashed after being hit by a missile explosion[12] while trying to escape in low-level flight.[13]

This engagement was the first wartime action conducted by NATO forces since its formation in 1949.

Bosnian Serb pilots[]

The Bosnian Serb pilots involved in the incident were:

  • Capt. 1st Class Ranko Vukmirović[13] KIA.
  • Capt. 1st Class Zvezdan Pešić[13] KIA.
  • Capt. 1st Class Goran Zarić[13] ejected at low altitude, KIA.
  • Maj. Uroš Studen[13] ejected near Jajce, survived.
  • Capt. 1st Class Zlatko Mikerević[13] ejected probably near the villages of Bravsko and Crkveno, 14 kilometres (9 mi) west of Ključ, survived.
  • Capt. 1st Class Zlatan Crnalić[13] landed at Udbina Airport with his J-21 Jastreb Sr.nr. 24275 badly damaged; the aircraft later re-entered service.

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Only 4[4] recognized by AFSOUTH, NATO, and the USAF.

References[]

  1. ^ Serbian officially admitted 5 Aircraft lost
  2. ^ "Hronika Republike Srpske Krajine www.krajinaforce.com". krajinaforce.com.
  3. ^ "USAF F-16s shoot down 4 Serb attack aircraft – F-16 News". f-16.net.
  4. ^ AFSOUTH Fact sheets Archived 2006-08-21 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/first-nato-military-action
  6. ^ Tucker, Spencer (2012). Almanac of American Military History, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 2180. ISBN 978-1-59884-530-3.
  7. ^ Call sign of the aircraft
  8. ^ Capt. Robert G. Wright nickname (sometimes a.k.a. Capt. Bob G. Wright)
  9. ^ "Airframe Details for F-16 #89-2137". f-16.net.
  10. ^ Capt. Stephen L. Allen nickname (sometimes a.k.a. Capt. Steve L. Allen)
  11. ^ "Airframe Details for F-16 #89-2009". f-16.net.
  12. ^ See the aircraft's tail picture on Bushev F-16 u praksi
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Lista gubitaka/ostecenja vazduhoplova u Ex-JRV od 1945 godine do danas

Further reading[]

  • Philip Handleman, Combat in the Sky: The Art of Air Warfare, Zenith Press 2003. ISBN 978-0-7603-1468-5.

External links[]

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