Intelligence failure led to deaths of Hercules crew
By Michael Evans, Defence Editor

London Times

December 09, 2005






A LOW-FLYING RAF C130 Hercules plane with ten military personnel on board
flew into an ambush, set up by Iraqi insurgents on the ground, in ignorance
of US intelligence that may have saved their lives. 

All ten men were killed on January 30 when the Hercules was hit by ground
fire and burst into flames, according to an official board of inquiry report
published yesterday. It was the worst fatal casualty toll among British
servicemen in Iraq from a single incident. 


 


 

The barrage of ground fire coming from what was believed to be machineguns
and shoulder-launched rockets caused a fuel tank to explode and the right
wing was sheared off. The last radio message from the Hercules pilot at
1.30pm, only six minutes after taking off from Baghdad international
airport, was: "No duff [this is for real], no duff, we are on fire, we are
on fire." 

The crew, who had chosen the route carefully - a 40-mile journey from
Baghdad to Balad - was never told that two American Black Hawk helicopters
had come under fire on the same route that morning. The intelligence "does
suggest that insurgents had prepared an ambush site, probably for helicopter
traffic, and that XV179 [the aircraft's tail number] flew close to it", the
board of inquiry report said. 

Air Chief Marshal Sir Jock Stirrup, the Chief of the Air Staff, said that
intelligence was so "compartmentalised" for security reasons that there was
no system under which all coalition partners in Iraq shared the same
information. 

Sir Jock did not lay the blame on the Americans for the failure to pass on
the intelligence. It was just the way the system worked. He said that there
was a huge amount of intelligence coming in all the time, and if it was
passed to everyone, "they would have been overwhelmed". 

However, the board of inquiry gave as one of the reasons for the tragedy the
fact that the crew had not been warned of the groundfire attacks on the
helicopters earlier that day. The board's report said: "The crew of XV179
remained unaware of the earlier attack and, once airborne, flew close to the
Safire (surface-to-air) sites and crashed shortly afterwards." 

The report added: "It is not possible to prove that the earlier Safire and
the loss of XV179 were linked; however, the fact that the aircraft took off
without an accurate threat picture proves that the intelligence
dissemination system needs urgent review." 

Based on the information they had, the experienced aircrew had decided to
fly low all the way to Balad, a huge American logistics base, judging it to
be less risky than climbing steeply on take-off, a period of flight
recognised to be particularly vulnerable to enemy groundfire. But this
tactic is also now being reviewed. 

In a separate report on the board of inquiry's findings, Air Vice-Marshal
Iain McNicoll, Air Officer Commanding No 2 Group, highlighted the
intelligence gap as one of the most pressing issues. "The need for
operational security for some operations is well understood but, in air
operations particularly, there is a need to ensure that compartmentalisation
of information does not lead to elements of the force operating in ignorance
of vital information," he said. 

The board of inquiry said other contributory factors included the lack of
fire retarding technology, either foam or inert gas, in the fuel tanks which
could have prevented an explosive fuel-air mix to develop. It recommended
fitting a fire supression system to all Hercules fuel tanks; although Sir
Jock disclosed that there had been more than 870 surface-to-air attacks on
British and other coalition Hercules aircraft in Iraq from May 2000 to
January 30 this year, and there had been no other fatal strikes.

 




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