Wednesday, May 20, 2020

B-17 "City of Savannah" Volunteer Human Interest Story - Jeff Hoopes


We Are Not Alone
by
 Jeff Hoopes
__________________________________________________________
The year was 1986.  I was 26 years old.  Assigned to Patrol Squadron 8 (VP-8), our home port was Brunswick, Maine.   At the time of this story, our squadron was deployed to Keflavik, Iceland.  
There were 75 officers and 200+ enlisted men in the squadron.  We had nine $60 million, almost brand new, P3C aircraft, and 12 Combat Aircrews of 12 personnel per crew (5 officers, 7 enlisted).  Three of the 5 officers were pilots.  The other two were NFO’s (Naval Flight Officers), one was the navigator/ Communications Officer, the other was the Tactical Coordinator. That was me.  As the Tactical Coordinator my job was to coordinate the efforts of the aircrew in order to detect, locate, and fix the position of Russian submarines in the area we were patrolling. 




The enlisted aircrew were comprised of two Flight engineers, two Acoustic Warfare Operators, and three technicians with specialties in maintenance of radar, ordinance and electronics. 
 As the TACCO for Combat Aircrew Three, I was the youngest officer in my squadron to hold that title, something for which I was quite proud.  All 5 officers on our crew were junior Officers (O-3 or below) which we liked to think of as being without adult supervision - part of our bragging rights.  Being an all junior officer crew, we got a lot of the short straws, like flying in the dead, dark of night when everybody else was back in their warm racks sleeping.
My story concerns one of our night missions. We were flying north of Iceland searching for a Soviet submarine off of the extreme northwest coast of Norway.  We were operating under the “Big Sky - Little Airplane” theory of maritime patrol aviation, as we did nearly 100% of the time, under strict radio silence so that the Russians couldn’t find us via radio transmissions. 
 Several hours into the mission, my radar operator asked me to re-initialize (turn off/turn on) his ESM pod.  I asked him what the problem was and he told me that he had a constant contact with the bearing of 180 degrees relative….(our six o’clock position).  
At first, I didn’t think anything of it. But after his 3rd request to re-initialize, I began to think that there was a more serious problem than equipment failure.  I got out of my seat and went into the cockpit to confer with the pilot, our crew commander. After less than a minute of discussion we both came to the same conclusion….WE HAD BEEN INTERCEPTED AND HAD A FIGHTER ESCORT TRACKING US FROM BEHIND!    
The pilot immediately turned on our aircraft’s exterior anti-collision and strobe lights and started broadcasting on the open guard frequency, announcing that we were a U.S. Navy aircraft operating in international waters, and for our tracker to break off and leave the area.
Almost immediately the intruder broke off - - and we went back to searching for Russian submarines.  
Later we learned that our visitor was a Norwegian F-16 that came out to investigate what their shore-based radar had located cruising off of their coastline.  
While the episode was exciting, it was frightening as well.  

A couple of years into our City of Savannah adventure, Jeff Hoopes and Guy McDonald got to talking about their time in the military.  They learned that each had served in the late 1980's as aircrew members in their respective branches, Jeff in the Navy  and Guy in the Air Force.  As their conversation developed, they realized that they both served deployments at the same base, in the same alert facility, at the same time!!  The location was at Lajes Field, Azores, in the middle of the North Atlantic Ocean.  Jeff's P3 crew was hunting Russian submarines and using Lajes as a forward operating base to put them closer to their targets.  Guy's EC-135 crew were flying CINCEUR Airborne Command Post missions, doing their best to stay far enough away from the Russians to provide a survivable communication platform.  Yes, it is a small world.

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