Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context UsefulNotes / WildWeasel

Go To

1'''Wild Weasels''' are the aircraft crews who try to [[AirstrikeImpossible sniff out and kill enemy anti-aircraft defenses]] ahead of other air missions, as well as the pop-culture name for that mission.[[note]]The name comes from the way weasels hunt, bouncing and "dancing" around their prey to confuse it, before making a kill. Also known as a "weasel war dance."[[/note]] They show up in some flight sims and a few pieces of war literature, but not quite enough to be their own trope; nevertheless, while stories of fighters-versus-[=SAMs=] aren't ''quite'' as glamorous as hot fighter-on-fighter action (and thus gets way less exposure in popular culture), they're still a very important component of aerial warfare, not to mention an eternal part of the Vietnam War for pilots. In short, they handle {{Escort Mission}}s where the main threat is a MacrossMissileMassacre from surface-to-air missiles instead of enemy aircraft.
2
3Not to be confused with WickedWeasel, which is on literal weasels.
4
5!!If I Can't Have It, Neither Can You: Surface-to-Air Threats
6
7The whole purpose of surface-to-air missiles and guns is to deny the airspace immediately above and around the launcher to enemy forces. These are covered under UsefulNotes/ModernBattlefieldWeapons, but for the most part they fulfill the same role: to make life hell for bomber and fighter-bomber crews, something they learned to do a few moments after pilots learned how to shoot at things on the ground (the machine gun emplacement predates the aeroplane). An early form of this mission would be launched in World War II and the Korean War, with fighter-bombers strafing enemy gun emplacements with rockets and gunfire while the bombers laid in their strikes, but it wasn't until the development of guided surface-to-air missiles that the US military found that they would need specialized aircraft, weapons, and tactics.
8
9As the UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks learned during the UsefulNotes/VietnamWar, trying to bomb targets without first suppressing air defenses can lead to truly horrific loss ratios. The vast majority of US aircraft lost over 'Nam were to ground fire and strategic SAM batteries, in particular the feared [[ReportingNames SA-2 Guideline]], the most widely-deployed long-range SAM. Antiaircraft gunfire and most infrared-guided missiles like the SA-7 and the Redeye could be avoided by flying high enough (4,000 feet to avoid the worst of the small arms for a fast-moving fighter, and 20,000 feet was usually plenty to dodge the heavy AA guns), but that puts you right in the center of the engagement envelope for SA-2s--and, as a certain Francis Gary Powers learned, you can't outclimb a missile. Unless the SAM commander was especially careless, there was no way to stay out of their engagement envelope while attacking the high-value target they were guarding. What was worse, the strategic [=SAMs=] were often located far behind the front line, meaning that the [[TacticalRockPaperScissors traditional RTS counter]]--namely, a ground assault--could not be used. (Besides, [[no self-respecting pilot would allow himself to owe those smelly ground-pounders down in the mud any favors.]]) So the only way to reach those pesky SAM Sites was, you guessed it, aircraft. You know, the very aircraft that the [=SAMs=] were designed to counter.
10
11!!Into the Den: Meet the Weasels
12
13The idea was basic enough: fit a "Wild Weasel" aircraft with basic radio-detection equipment, add in an additional couple of wingmen, and have it [[EscortMission accompany the flight of bombers]]. At some point, some enemy search radar--say, a "[[ReportingNames Fan Song]]" radar for the SA-2--will light up your formation. The Weasel chases down the direction of the radar signal with his wingmen right behind him; if the SAM locks on to him and launches, it's time to [[HighSpeedMissileDodge go low and evade]] (SA-2s were notoriously inaccurate below 3,000 feet). Keep this up until it finds the launch site and/or radar and hits it with rockets and cannon. After that, its wingmen perform their own strikes on the site to make sure it's dead, all while the bombers proceed serenely unmolested by the SAM site. WhatCouldPossiblyGoWrong, indeed?
14
15(Not coincidentally, the unofficial motto of the Wild Weasels was "YGBSM", for "[[YouHaveGotToBeKiddingMe You Gotta Be Shittin' Me!]]", reportedly [[OhCrap the response]] of the first Weasel [[strike:[[InsistentTerminology pilot]]]] [[GuyInBack Electronic Warfare Officer]] when he learned ''just'' what his mission entailed.)
16
17So, in 1965, the US Air Force authorised a special unit of aircraft and aircrew to tackle this mission. Flying two-seater F-100F fighter-bombers, they marked the first time in the history of aerial warfare where aircraft had to seek out and neutralize the threat of surface-to-air missiles like the [[ReportingNames SA-2 Guideline]]. The F-100 proved unsuitable and was replaced successively by the F-105G Thunderchief and the F-4E Phantom, two of the most iconic Vietnam-era aircraft (the Navy used A-4 Skyhawks and A-6B Intruders to cover their own strikes). At the start, the aircraft had to perform two missions: "Iron Hand" to suppress enemy radar sites (by launching Shrike missiles and forcing them to stay off the air) and "Wild Weasel" to seek out and kill the missile batteries themselves. As time went by, both terms were [[PopCulturalOsmosis merged under the Wild Weasel name]]; technically, the ''mission'' is called "SEAD", for "'''S'''uppression of '''E'''nemy '''A'''ir '''D'''efenses", while the ''planes'' are called "Wild Weasels", after the very aggressive predator that would chase its prey into its den if it had to[[note]]They were originally going to call the whole thing "Project Ferret", but [[OlderThanTheyThink that name was already taken by a World War II project for countering air defenses, in this case bombers carrying ECM and Chaff]]. The first Weasel "kill" came in December 1965, as recounted [[http://edefense.blogspot.com/2005/11/in-their-own-words-8-eleven-stories.html in the pilot's own words]].[[/note]].
18
19!!Shrikes and Standards: Antiradar Missiles
20
21One of the biggest problems with the first Weasel missions was actually ''finding'' the radar site to attack. Even with the radar broadcasting all the way, the direction-finding equipment was pretty primitive; it couldn't tell you how far the radar site was, and it wasn't precise enough to triangulate on a specific site. Plus, the radars and missiles tend to be disguised (like, say, under a thatched roof). Finding a radar site often meant flying low in the direction of the radar, ''praying'' that some machine-gunner on the ground [[MillionToOneChance doesn't get lucky]], and trying to notice when your direction-finding gear is telling you that the radar's suddenly behind you. Not particularly easy.
22
23Then, somebody got a great idea for an anti-radiation missile (ARM): instead of the ''aircraft'' chasing down the radar site and having to find it, why not fit sensors into a missile that would seek out the strongest source of radar signals and home in on it? And thus, the [[UsefulNotes/AirLaunchedWeapons AGM-45 Shrike]] was born, produced by simply taking an AIM-7 Sparrow air-to-air missile and giving it the ARM seeker head. The whole idea was that you could close in on the radar and launch your Shrike missiles without having to pinpoint its location; after the Shrike hits the radar, the Weasel and its wingmen follow up with rockets and bombs to make the site is well and truly dead. In practice, the Shrike was a bit of a letdown: its warhead was too small to do anything more than damaging the radar antenna (which was easily replaceable), its range was quite short (15 miles versus 30 miles for an SA-2), and each individual missile could only home in on one kind of radar per mission. Its biggest problem was that it only could attack an actively broadcasting radar: North Vietnamese SAM crews learned to turn off their radars when a Shrike was on the way, causing it to lose guidance, and turn it back on after the missile had gone wild. Nevertheless, the Shrike was useful enough and cheap enough that it became the primary tool of the Wild Weasel flights.
24
25The Shrike was quickly followed up by the Navy-built AGM-78 Standard ARM, a modification of their "Standard" family of surface-to-air missiles. These were bigger, faster, and--most importantly--had a function that allowed them to "remember" the location of a SAM site, so that they had a chance to hit even after the radar had shut down, albeit with reduced accuracy. However, they were much more expensive than the Shrike and much heavier--a given aircraft couldn't carry as many Standards as Shrikes. The AGM-78 was mainly used as a supplement to the AGM-45 in Vietnam.
26
27!!Exploiting the Terrain: GeoEffects [[RecycledInSpace IN THE AIR!]]
28
29The whole business of SAM hunting was a fair bit more complicated than just lofting Shrikes and Standards at whatever Fan Song radar lit up the sky. One big problem was that of range: a single SA-2 weighed 5,000 pounds, and most of that was rocket propellent; that gave it a far longer reach than the short-ranged Shrike missiles. The antiradar missiles would rarely put an entire SAM site out of commission for long: the standard SA-2 battery consisted of six launcher vehicles in a "Star of David" formation around the radar van, plus a small fleet of support vehicles and stockpiled missiles. The missile would only kill the radar van, if it hit at all (and if the radar was turned on--always a big ''if''). Plus, there was the question of flight time: the SA-2 was ''fifty percent'' faster than the Shrike, and still significantly faster than the Standard, meaning that a SA-2 could launch its missile, guide it to its target, and turn itself off to avoid the incoming ARM.
30
31So, despite the addition of the Shrike and the Standard to the Wild Weasel arsenal, flying SEAD often entailed closing in on the radar site and hitting it the hard way, with unguided bombs and rockets. Just getting close enough was a real challenge: aircraft had to skim the treetops and hide in valleys to avoid radar exposure. Low-altitude flight, in turn, meant increased vulnerability to shoulder-fired missiles and antiaircraft guns, the number-one cause of aircraft losses in Vietnam. Add in the ''many'' tips and tricks on the propagation of radio waves, jamming, chaff, ECCM, and you could see why Weasel crews call it "a game of chess in 3-D, and the opposition cheats". Because Wild Weasel missions take place at low altitude, terrain matters. (This is also why what applies for land-based SEAD doesn't always work for attacking navies: over a flat ocean, there are no canyons to hide in. Barring stealth technology or truly exceptional ECM work, you're not getting within 30 miles of a competent radar screen without being detected.)
32
33!!Post Vietnam
34
35The US piloted Wild Weasel techniques in Vietnam, so most cases of pop culture that ''do'' feature SEAD missions are drawn from/inspired by the Vietnam-era missions. However, in the roughly forty years since the war, the fighter-versus-SAM conflict has continued in various parts of the world, although not on the same scale as Vietnam. The most immediate example came just after the US pulled out from Vietnam, during the [[UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict 1973 Yom Kippur War]], where new Egyptian and Syrian SA-6 missiles and [=ZSU-23/4=] antiaircraft guns hurt the Israeli Air Force very badly; as the IAF learned the hard way, what worked against the long-ranged SA-2 wasn't necessarily applicable against the short-ranged SA-6. The Israelis would return the favor in 1982, where imaginative use of decoy drones over the Bekaa Valley and some very intense training post-1973 paid off nicely ([[CurbStompBattle 30 SAM sites and 80 Syrian fighters destroyed versus zero Israeli losses]]).
36
37For the US, the F-4G Wild Weasel-dedicated variant and the AGM-88 HARM (High-speed Anti-Radiation Missile), the successor to both the Shrike and the Standard, came into service, where they proved very deadly against Soviet-made [=SAMs=] in Libya and Iraq. As a measure of ''just'' how far the Wild Weasel mission has come since its birth, note that Baghdad's air defense system [[UsefulNotes/TheGulfWar in 1991]] was estimated to be ''triple'' the thickness of Hanoi's. [[TechnologyMarchesOn It was comprehensively smashed in a matter of weeks, thanks in no small part to new weapon systems like cruise missiles and the F-117 stealth fighter.]] The USAF is one of comparatively few services to maintain a dedicated Wild Weasel platform, the F-16CJ; most other air forces have taken the US Navy approach of fitting EW pods and antiradar missiles to multirole aircraft for the SEAD role.
38
39The advent of armed remote controlled drones combined with improvements to stealth technology has further changed the nature of Wild Weasel missions. As drones are unmanned and relatively cheap, they can be used to great effect in distracting air defenses. Drones (which are no-where near as fast or dangerous as figher-bombers, and are not attractive targets for [=SAMs=]) crowd the radar screen and draw fire while stealth aircraft power in and attack. While there is no such thing as a perfect stealth, when they are visible on radar they produce very small signatures, comparable to drones. In practice it makes it incredibly difficult for SAM crews to know what to shoot at, and what is actually attacking them.
40
41Similarly, the advent of AWACS air-born radar/control centres and space base surveillance technologies has greatly reduced losses in anti-SAM missions. Knowing where [=SAMs=] are positioned practically eliminates the need to place aircraft in harms way. Modern terrain skimming cruise missiles can hit with superb effectiveness at extreme ranges and are next to impossible to shoot down. In response to this, SAM crews move their positions constantly and place radar reflectors, although this does not protect them from commando units marking targets. Similarly, once a SAM site goes active and gives its position away, modern GPS, inertial guidance and AWACS control can guide a weasels missiles to where they need to be with a great degree of certainty, regardless of radars being active.
42
43As with most things in modern combat, the advantages are all with the attackers. Even assuming that you have no knowledge of a SAM site's location and have no ability to kill it from safe range, wild weasel missions are not as dangerous as they once were. Stealth technology allows planes to get into position with decreased risk, and improved on-board computers allows for faster tracking and (combined with smarter missiles) the ability to strike at targets even when radars are off.
44
45In practice, SAM systems by themselves can only really slow down a large, modern airforce. The only real defense is a similarly sized and funded air force, and even then the defenders are still at a huge disadvantage, as they have to spread their forces around the clock.

Top