Of the 17 SAM-7s fired at our formation in less than 20 seconds, 16 of them, failing to lock on to a target, spiralled off harmlessly into the sky.
The remaining missile, however, probably fired by a more patient operator, streaked directly for my gunship, probably because I had reacted far too slowly to avoid it. When I saw it heading for me, my perspective somehow shifted from sitting in the pilot’s seat of the Alo to watching the events unfold from a position outside the aircraft, about five metres in front and to the right of the nose.
In my mind’s eye, I can still see the missile leaving the launcher tube near the back of the truck.
I see the moment, just a split second later, when the rocket motor ignites and a great cloud of white smoke forms behind the missile.
I see the approaching metallic tube, with its staring glass eye, waggle slightly as it searches for an infrared light source on my gunship.
I see it nod its head almost imperceptibly as it locks onto a shiny spot on the Alo.
By this time, the missile was already travelling at over a thousand kilometres per hour, but in that super-stressed situation, it seemed to be crawling towards me in ultra slow motion. Strangely, I also knew that I had more than adequate time to avoid it.
When the missile was about 300 metres away, some heightened instinct urged me to bank the Alo. I just knew, at that precise moment, thanks forever to my overworked guardian angel, that the incoming projectile was locked on to the Alo’s shiny left-hand main wheel shock strut extension, and that by pointing the shock strut directly at the supersonic missile, the shiny bit would be screened from the infrared sensor.
This action broke the lock-on, and although the missile continued towards us, it suddenly seemed to become confused and turn slightly to the left, which meant it passed just in front of the gunship, around six metres away. As it rushed past, I became entranced by its little guidance vanes shimmering in the supersonic airflow and its tiny movements as it sought vainly for a target to obliterate.
Then it disappeared. From the time the missile was fired to when it disappeared after passing my gunship, no more than six seconds had elapsed.
Back at treetop level, in the immediate aftermath of my close encounter with the SAM, the gunship formation regrouped and we took a decision by radio to resume the attack on the convoy, but with modified tactics. We agreed to form the normal wide attack circle around the target, but instead of going in at 600 to 800 feet (200 to 250 metres) above the ground, we would do so at treetop level. We knew this was outside the operating parameters of the SAM-7, and would make redundant any further use of missiles by the enemy.
The convoy was parked in the open at the eastern edge of the
Done correctly, the bad guys in the missile-equipped GAZ trucks would be subjected to an extremely unpleasant and almost continuous stream of 20 mm cannon fire for around 60 seconds each time our formation passed by.
As tail-end-Charlie, this arrangement made it likely that I would experience the least hostile response from the convoy, provided that the damage caused by the first five gunships was effective. Conversely, if their damage was light, the enemy would be best prepared for my arrival when I wafted by at the rear of the formation.
As we were lining up a couple of kilometres north of the
The gunships were already on the way in to the target when suddenly Telstar interrupted proceedings with an instruction that went something like this: ‘Shotgun formation, this is Telstar. You are to immediately break off the attack on the convoy and return to the HAA.’
‘What?!’ said one of the Alo gunship pilots. ‘These okes have been shooting the
Someone else then said, ‘There is a lot of interference and we can’t hear you, Telstar.’
Telstar, urgency and tension apparent in his voice, shot back, ‘Shotgun formation, I repeat, you are to break off the attack… I repeat… you are to break off the attack immediately!’