Grumman F-14
Tomcat in combat
Vietnam war
1974-1975
The Tomcat was
in service just in time to see the closing
stages of the Vietnam war in 1975. It flew top
cover during operation Frequent Wind, the
evacuation of US personnel from Saigon in April
of 1975, just before that city fell to the
north. The North Vietnamese Air Force did not
interfere with the operation, but one Tomcat was
slightly damaged by anti-aircraft fire.
Libya, Gulf of
Sidra August 1981
On August
19,1981 two Libyan Sukhoi Su-22 Fitter-J
fighters were shot down by a pair of VF-41
Tomcats after one of the Fitters fired a missile
at the American fighters. Both kills were with
the AIM-9L Sidewinder.
Urgent Fury
October 1983
The invasion
of Grenada, TARPS (Reconnaissance Pod) equipped
F-14's provided intelligence on troop movements
for invading Marines and Army Rangers.
Hijacking
Italian cruise ship Achille Laura: October 19th
1985
The Hijackers
had found refuge in Egypt, where arrangements
had been made to fly them to sanctuary Libya
aboard an Egypt Air Boeing 737. Seven Tomcats
from VF-74 and VF-104 from the USS Saratoga
(CV-60) intercepted the airliner and forced it
to land at Sigonella in Italy.
Gulf of Sidra
March 24-26th 1986
Numerous
strikes were carried out by navy carrier based
aircraft against Libyan targets, with Tomcats
flying top cover, keeping Libyan fighters at bay
and dodging Sam's
Operation El
Dorado Canyon: April 14th 1986
USAF General
Dynamics F-111's attacking Tripoli (Libya) while
navy strike aircraft went after Benghazi. The
later raid was top-covered by F-14's.
Mediterranean
January 4th 1989
Two F-14A's
(159437 and 159610) from VF-32 flying of the
John F. Kennedy (CV-67) shot down a pair of
Libyan MiG-23 Floggers.
Persian Gulf
1988-1989
There were
some Sidewinders fired between US navy Tomcats
and Iranian F-4 Phantoms during the oil tanker
escort operations in the Persian Gulf, these
launches were all well out of parameters, and
scored no kills.
Desert Storm 17
January - 28 February 1991
Tomcats flew
mostly CAP operations in protection of the
fleets carriers and in the escort of strike
packages. The Tomcats are credited with only one
kill. A Mil Mi-8 Hip helicopter was shot down
with an AIM-9 Sidewinder missile. One F-14
Tomcat was lost in action on January 21st when
it was shot down by an Iraqi surface to air
missile, the crew ejected safely.
Southern Watch:
1 March 1991- 1 May 2003
During the
first days of 1999, 2 USAF F-15s and 4 US Navy
F-14D (VF-213) were engaged by about 13 Iraqi
MiG's and Mirage F.1s above the No Fly Zone in
southern Iraq. In accordance with the UN
resolutions, both the F-15s and F-14s fired
missiles at long distance at the Iraqi. No Iraqi
aircraft were hit, but one Iraqi fighter is said
to have crashed on approach to its airbase
because of a lack of fuel.
After this incident the UN continue to control
the No Fly Zones, undisturbed by Saddam's forces
... eventually firing at Iraqi installations if
provoked.
Deliberate
Force: Aug.- Sept. 1994
The U.S. Navy
aircraft carriers with CVW-8 onboard were on
station in the Adriatic Sea. In support of the
IFOR and SFOR troops in former Yugoslavia, F-14s
from several squadrons flew multi-role missions:
Air-to-ground strikes against hostile targets
(Close Air Support), Forward Air Control and
TARPS missions.
Allied Force:
24 March - 10 June 1999
To end
Yugoslavian terror NATO bombed Serbia for weeks
day and night. The US send among others the
aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt which
also ment launching F-14s. The role of the F-14s
was enemy fighter suppression, forward air
control, aerial reconnaissance and also
precision laser-guided air-to-ground attacks.
Enduring
Freedom 7 October 2001 -
On Oct. 7,
2001 aircraft carriers (CVN-65 with VF-14 &
CVN-70 with VF-213) launched long-range, heavy
loaded F-14 and medium-range F/A-18 strike
fighters day and night while the Air Force sent
long-range bombers deep into Afghanistan.
Targets were terrorist bases, weapons and
vehicles, training camps and Taliban military
units.
On Oct. 9,
2001 VF-14 led the first long-range tactical air
strike, flying over 1,700 miles round trip to
Mazar-e Sharif, where Taliban aircraft were
destroyed on the ground. Numerous strikes with
precision guided ammunition followed from VF-14,
VF-41, VF-102, VF-211 and VF-213.
Iraqi Freedom
20 March 2003 -
F-14 Tomcats
took part in the war as part of several Carrier
Air Wings. The deputy commander of CVW-41 (USS
Abraham Lincoln) stated, that even with the
arrival of the F/A-18E, the F-14 remains "the
platform of choice for precision targeting."
Land-based Navy F-14 Tomcats supported special
operations forces on the ground during multiple
strike missions over western Iraq. Details are
classified