Sea Harrier Over the Falklands: A Maverick at WarSharkey ward commanded 801 Naval Air Squadron, HMS Invincible, during the Falklands War of April to June 1982, and was senior Sea Harrier adviser to the Command on the tactics, direction and progress of the air war. He flew over sixty war missions, achieved three air-to-air kills, and took part in or witnessed a total of ten kills; he was also the leading night pilot, and was decorated with the Distinguished Service Cross for gallantry. Those are the bare facts, though they do no sort of justice to this remarkable and outspoken book, nor to its author. For what, after all, could twenty Sea Harriers, operating from a flight-deck bucketing about in the South Atlantic, do against more than 200 Argentine military aircraft flown by pilots who, as the raids against British shipping proved, displayed enormous skill and gallantry? The world knows the answer - now; as it knows the debt owed to the author and his fellow flyers. What is puzzling, therefore, is this book's truthful depiction of the attitudes of some of the senior non-flying naval officers, and of the RAF, towards the men (and indeed the machine) that made possible the victory in the Falklands. This extraordinary first-hand account charts, in clear and forthright detail, the naval pilots' journey to the South Atlantic, and how they took on and triumphantly conquered the challenges they faced. It is a dramatic story, leavened with brilliant accounts of air-to-air fighting and of life in a squadron at sea and on a war footing. But it is also a tale of inter-Service rivalry, bureaucratic interference, and the less-than-generous attitudes of a number of senior commanders who should certainly have known better; indeed, some of them mighteven have lost the campaign through a lack of understanding of air warfare - particularly if all their instructions had been followed to the letter and without question. The author puts the record straight - no one interested in the Falklands, or in aircraft and air combat as a whole, can afford to miss this marvellous book. |
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Common terms and phrases
able action airborne aircraft airfield alert allowed already approach Argentine arrived attack better Blue bombs Boss boys brief called Captain carry chance clear close cloud combat Command continued deck defence enemy engine Falkland feet fighter fire Flag fleet flight flying Force fuel getting give going ground Group hard heading Hermes intercept Invincible islands knew landing later launch less looked low level miles mind Mirage missile mission Morts night officers operational pair passed pilots planned Port position possible prepared problem radar range returned Robin Sea Harrier SHAR Sharkey ship short soon sortie Sound speed squadron Staff Stanley station Steve target Task things thought threat took turn weapon Wings
References to this book
The Official History of the Falklands Campaign: War and diplomacy Lawrence Freedman No preview available - 2005 |