Swedish Pilots Win Medals for Top Secret 1987 SR-71 Incident
The Swedes, trained to intercept the SR-71, became
one Blackbird’s guardians.
NOV 29,
2018
GREG MATHIESONGETTY IMAGES
Three decades ago, a group of Swedish fighter
pilots who were trained to intercept America’s high-flying SR-71 suddenly became
guardian angels for the crew of one stricken Blackbird. This week, the pilots
were awarded U.S. Air Medals for bravery.
The incident happened in 1987 in the skies over
the Baltic Sea. Back then, SR-71 Blackbirds based at RAF Mildenhall in the
United Kingdom flew weekly missions out over the Baltic Sea, toward Soviet
bases in Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, and Kaliningrad. The SR-71s flew a loop
that took them across the length of the Baltic States, then back around and in
between the Swedish mainland and the island of Gotland.
Swedish pilots in Viggen fighter jets regularly trained to
intercept the SR-71, though for the sake of practice, not malice. During this
fateful flight of the “Baltic Express,” a Blackbird piloted by Lt. Cols. Duane
Noll and Tom Veltri experienced engine trouble, losing power in one of the
plane’s powerful Pratt
& Whitney J58-1 afterburning turbofan engines.Remaining Time -3:04
The stricken plane apparently veered off course
and flew into Swedish airspace over Gotland, descending more than ten miles to
an altitude of 25,000 feet. The plane received an escort from two Swedish Air
Force pilots who prepared to defend the SR-71 from possible interception by
Soviet fighter jets.
As one of the four Swedish pilots involved in the
incident explained
at the medal ceremony: “We were performing an ordinary peacetime
operation exercise. Our fighter controller then asked me are you able to make
an interception and identification of a certain interest. I thought immediately
it must be an SR-71, otherwise he would have mentioned it.”
Swedish Viggen fighter.
SAAB
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The Viggens, piloted by Swedish air force Col.
Lars-Eric Blad, Majs. Roger Moller and Krister Sjoberg, and Lt. Bo Ignell,
caught up with the SR-71—perhaps the only time in history an aircraft has ever
intercepted a SR-71. Once they noticed it was flying on just one engine, the
Air Medal citation says, they “decided to render support to the aircraft by
defending it from any potential third-party aircraft that might have tried to
threaten it. The pilots then accompanied the aircraft beyond the territorial
boundaries and ensured that it was safely recovered.”
The Air Medal ceremony was held in Stockholm,
Sweden, on November 28, with one of the SR-71 pilots and all four Swedish Air
Force pilots in attendance.
MIG-25 GETTY IMAGES
Why would the SR-71 need an armed escort? The
Baltic Express flew near Soviet airspace on a weekly basis, taunting the USSR’s
best pilots who struggled in vain to intercept it. The Soviet Air Force
maintained a squadron of MiG-25PD
“Foxbat” high-speed interceptors based in East Germany and always sent one
MiG to attempt an intercept of the Baltic Express—without firing weapons. If
the Soviets had gotten wind that the SR-71 was crippled and vulnerable, they
could have attempted a shoot-down. Although a provocation, the use of deadly
force by the Soviets was not
unknown.
According to a U.S. Air Force article, the
incident was classified by the Pentagon top secret until last year. However,
part of the story shows up in the book Lockheed Blackbird: Beyond the Secret
Missions. In it, a retired Swedish
Air Force fighter controller mentions Swedish attempts to intercept the fighter
and one incident in which a SR-71 was photographed by Viggen pilots flying on
one engine. The photographer was obviously one of the four Swedish pilots
honored this week.
From left to right, Col.
Lars-Erik Blad, Maj. Roger Moller, Maj. Krister Sjober, and Retired U.S. Air
Force Lt. Col. Tom Veltri stand beside the official photo which depicts the
event that earned the Swedish pilots their U.S. Air Medals in Stockholm,
Sweden, Nov. 28, 2018.
U.S. AIR FORCE PHOTO BY SENIOR AIRMAN KELLY O'CONNOR
The U.S. Air Force citation says the Swedish air crew
was prepared to defend the SR-71 from “third parties,” but the complexity of
the Cold War means the truth was probably a little more nuanced. Sweden was
neutral during the Cold War and theoretically treated all parties, capitalist
and communist, the same. In any fighting between the United States and Soviet
Union, Swedish forces would likely observe strict neutrality—unless the
fighting took place in Swedish territory.
The Viggen pilots could have been prepared to
defend the SR-71 as a stricken aircraft as long as it was in Swedish airspace,
and cut it loose once it moved on. (U.S. fighters were undoubtedly racing from
bases in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and West Germany to take over
escort duties once the Blackbird had left Sweden.)
Today Sweden and the United States are much
closer, with U.S. forces regularly exercising with the Swedish armed forces in
ways that were unthinkable during the Cold War.
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