The success and speed of operations in Afghanistan can be attributed to technology. Small, light, and highly mobile Special Forces units used lasers to designate targets for aircraft flying high above them. These targets were hit almost immediately with accuracies measured in feet. Precision-guided munitions multiplied the effectiveness of every sortie. In Desert Storm, US forces launched ten aircraft to hit one target on average. In Enduring Freedom, one aircraft hit two targets. The targeting cycle itself was reduced from days to minutes. Night vision systems formed rules instead of exceptions. The use of unmanned aerial vehicles permitted around-the-clock surveillance of enemy locations and movements.
Tankers and airlifters played critical roles in getting fuel and supplies to the region. Every service and almost every platform in the US military participated in the operation. US fighter pilots flew missions lasting more than fifteen hours, some of the longest missions in the history of aerial combat. Surveillance missions of twenty-six hours also set records. And though they were not readily apparent in the news coverage of operations over Afghanistan, F-16 units were involved in the earliest mission. The first occurred on 22 October from a deployed location originally intended to support Operation Southern Watch missions over Iraq. F-16s began operating from a second location in early November.
While Fighting Falcons constituted only a small percentage of the military aircraft in the region, they played a significant role in the overall operation. What follows are excerpts from more than twenty hours of interviews with pilots, maintenance personnel, and weapon loaders from several F-16 units that took part in the operation. The excerpts dont provide a complete picture of air operations over Afghanistan. They do, however, provide a first-hand account of the ingenuity, sacrifice, and resolve of some of those who contributed to the success of Enduring Freedom.
Eric Hehs, Editor of Code One