[Excerpt: Though the Harrier's nemesis has been its engine, its best
systems include a 2-year-old camera pod attached like a torpedo under
its stubby right wing....The tool was designed to guide bombs but can
spot enemy fighters and vehicles in almost any weather, at distances
unlikely for subjects to know they are being watched. In a war that has
often involved guerrillas fighting in urban areas, the camera has proved
more useful than even its designers believed it would be.]

http://198.65.138.161/org/news/2005/050319-harrier-iraq.htm

Chicago Tribune March 19, 2005
Harrier jet shakes off past to prove itself in Iraq

By James Janega, Tribune staff reporter.

Lt. Col. Robert Kuckuk helped redesign the Harrier fighter jet after a
series of deadly accidents killed 45 of his fellow Marine pilots. Now he
is helping rebuild the plane's reputation.

With every hour in the air, he believes, his VMA-311 Tomcat squadron is
slowly vindicating the single-seat Harrier, which can take off
vertically but has been plagued by a checkered history.

A decade ago, the Harrier was known as the most accident-prone aircraft
in the American arsenal, a mark that sidelined it from many major
missions in Operation Desert Storm and Afghanistan. But since the
invasion of Iraq nearly two years ago, and especially after November's
fighting in Fallujah, Marines say the Harrier has played a key role in
the fighting in Iraq's Anbar province, and in ways few envisioned.

Just after midnight last Sunday, Kuckuk tipped his Harrier over the
provincial capital of Ramadi, high above Marines under mortar attack.

The Marines thought the incoming rounds were coming from insurgents in a
car, moving from spot to spot to fire mortars--a common tactic to evade
counterfire. But the Marines on the ground couldn't see for themselves,
and in a heavily populated area they were worried about shooting back.

Hovering above, Kuckuk looked down "and sure enough, there's a car going
by," glowing gray-green on the cockpit monitor by Kuckuk's right knee.
It was flouting a curfew and bouncing off-road through the desert,
fleeing an area where the Marines thought their assailants had been.

Kuckuk called in an artillery strike. Moments later, the shells began
landing. "No more car," he said.

Such are the successes that make Harrier fighter pilots say they are at
last living up to the promises made a generation ago.

Of British design

The Marines first bought the British-designed Harriers in 1971, replaced
them with a newer model in 1985, upgraded them in 1993 and fixed them in
2000.

But safety issues have plagued the aircraft, notably problems with the
engine that allows the plane to take off vertically.

As engine program manager for the Marines' Harrier program office,
Kuckuk helped redesign both the Harrier's engine and its maintenance
program.

Congressional overseers have said that while they are satisfied with the
new engine, rigid attention to its maintenance is key to the Marine
Corps' seven squadrons of Harriers. No more are being made, and the
aircraft is expected to be replaced with another vertical-takeoff
fighter in a decade.

After the Harrier's most recent engine redesign overhaul, serious
accidents dropped from 39 every 100,000 flight hours to 3.17 per 100,000
flight hours in 2001.

The Navy reported two serious accidents in 2004, comparable to previous
years. During the current fiscal year, there have been two more: an
engine fire in Arizona and a crash at sea. Both pilots ejected safely.

But in Iraq, Harriers have now flown nearly 11,000 hours without a
mishap since May 2004.

Jet's strong points

Though the Harrier's nemesis has been its engine, its best systems
include a 2-year-old camera pod attached like a torpedo under its stubby
right wing.

The tool was designed to guide bombs but can spot enemy fighters and
vehicles in almost any weather, at distances unlikely for subjects to
know they are being watched. In a war that has often involved guerrillas
fighting in urban areas, the camera has proved more useful than even its
designers believed it would be.

"Certainly the utility of the improved sensors to manage close air
support has attracted attention in certain parts of the Pentagon," said
John Pike, a military expert at watchdog group GlobalSecurity.org. "They
are being noticed in some places."

The Marines on the ground are noticing too. Within hours of landing at
Al Asad last November, the Harriers were flying missions over Fallujah.
They brought "total confidence," said Maj. Andrew Hesterman, air officer
for Regimental Combat Team 7, part of the Marine force that attacked
Fallujah last fall.

Of the 170 air strikes RCT-7 called in, half were delivered by Harriers.
It was a remarkable step forward, Hesterman said. "I was calling
ordinance drops within 150 meters of friendlies," he said.

Still, for every one hour the Harrier flies, a crew of maintenance
technicians spends an average of 25 man-hours working on the plane's
frame and engine.

A status board in the maintenance office of Kuckuk's squadron tells the
tale. Of 16 Harriers, four were ready for flight Thursday night. Among
the others, one had a radio altimeter problem, another needed a routine
inspection. There was a troublesome hover mechanism, a fuel meter
problem, one with lingering gripes after an engine replacement, one OKd
as a backup.

In a repair hangar a short walk away, two Harriers were being dismantled
and reassembled. "This aircraft requires a lot of attention to details,"
said Sgt. Francisco Martinez, part of the repair crew. "Anything you
might miss would really take a toll. . . . It's a great job if you like
to turn a wrench."

So far, so good

When the Tomcats shipped to Al Asad from Yuma, Ariz., they took over the
former home of an Iraqi MiG-21 squadron. Arab lettering and unit
insignias still cover the walls.

Shortly after arriving, Kuckuk added a document called the Commander's
Intent to the bulletin board just inside the unit's front door. His
Tomcats were beginning what would be their current 4,700 flight hours
without a serious accident.

"KEEP DOING WHAT YOU'RE DOING," Kuckuk wrote in capital letters.

A few paragraphs later: "I see our critical vulnerability as
complacency," he wrote. "We are one mishap away from being heroes to
being goats."

� Copyright 2005, Chicago Tribune Company


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