Hellfire (48 page)

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Authors: Ed Macy

Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Modern, #War, #Non Fiction

BOOK: Hellfire
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JOC:
Joint Operations Cell - the functioning control centre of operations in the Helmand province

JTAC:
Joint Terminal Attack Controller (Jaytac) - soldier responsible to his commander for the deliverance of air ordnance from combat aircraft onto a target. The airspace controller for a battle, normal callsign is Widow

KAF:
Kandahar Airfield

KIA:
Killed In Action

Klick:
military slang for kilometre

LAV:
Light Armoured Vehicles. Canadian 8x8 wheeled Armoured Personnel Carrier

Leakers:
Taliban that are attempting to escape (leak) from a target area

L-Hour:
The moment the first helicopter lands on an LS during an operation

Lima Charlie:
Phonetic alphabet for LC - air speak for Loud and Clear

Loadie:
Loadmaster responsible for passengers and equipment in military troop-carrying helicopters or transport aircraft. Often mans one of the crew-served guns

LOAL:
Lock-On After Launch (low-al) - missile is launched then it acquires a laser lock

LOBL:
Lock-on Before Launch (lobel) - the missile locks onto the laser energy when it is still on the Apache

Longbow:
The Longbow radar is the Apache’s Fire Control Radar. It looks like a large Swiss cheese and sits on top of the main rotor system

LOS:
Line of Sight

LS:
Landing Site - any unprepared Helicopter Landing Site

LSJ:
Life Support Jacket - survival waistcoat - escape jacket

LWRS:
Laser Warning Receiving System

Lynx Mk7:
British Army anti-tank helicopter armed with missiles on each side

ManPADS:
Man Portable Aid Defence System - shoulder-launched heat-seeking missile

MAWS:
Missile Approach Warning System

Max chat:
As fast as possible

MC:
Military Cross - awarded in recognition of exemplary gallantry during active operations against the enemy on land.

MIA:
Missing In Action

Mission Net:
An encrypted frequency used to coordinate the mission during operations

MoD:
Ministry of Defence

Monocle:
The pink see-through glass mirror over an Apache pilot’s right eye that displays green symbology and images from the onboard computers and sights

Mosquito:
Taliban slang for the Apache

MPD:
Multi-Purpose Display - one of two five-inch screens on the console in each Apache cockpit

MPOG:
Minimum pitch applied to the main rotor blades when on the ground

MPSM:
Multi-Purpose Sub-Munition

Mujahideen:
Afghan opposition groups - fought the Soviets during the Soviet invasion and each other in the Afghan Civil War - plural for the word mujahid meaning ‘struggler’

Multiple:
A Northern Ireland patrol consisting of two or more bricks

MWR:
Moral, Welfare and Recreation. Large US facility in which to unwind with the freely provided games, refreshments, TVs, Cinema, computers, gaming stations, DVDs and the internet

NATO:
North Atlantic Treaty Organisation

Negative:
Air speak for ‘no’

Negative Lima:
No laser

Nimrod:
A long-range maritime patrol aircraft modified for surveillance

NVG:
Night Vision Goggles - night sights that magnify light by 40,000 times

OC:
Officer Commanding - major in charge of a squadron or company group

OP:
Observation Position

Ops:
Operations - as in Ops tent, Ops room, Ops Officer or literally an operation

ORT:
Optical Relay Tube - the large console in the front seat with PlayStation-type grips on either side

Pairs fire-and-manoeuvre:
One static soldier aiming or shooting whilst his buddy manoeuvres to a position forward or backwards of him. They swap roles and do this continually manoeuvring with one foot on the ground at all times

Para:
Nickname for a soldier from the Parachute Regiment or the Regiment itself

Pathfinder Platoon:
a small unit designed and trained to fight behind enemy lines; 16 Air Assault Brigade’s equivalent of the SAS

Pax:
Official military term for people

P-check:
Northern Ireland term for checking the details of a car from its number plate

PFL:
Practice Forced Landing - practising landing without the use of any engines

PID:
Positive Identity

Pinzgauer:
Small 4x4 all-terrain utility truck

PNVS:
Pilot’s Night Vision System (Pinvis) - the thermal camera that sits above the TADS on the Apache’s nose

Port:
Left-hand side of an aircraft or vessel

PRT:
Provincial Reconstruction Team

PMI:
Power Margin Indicator

QHI:
Qualified Helicopter Instructor - flying instructor

RA:
Royal Artillery

RAD:
Ram Air Decelerator

Radome:
A dome that shrouds a radar head

RAF:
Royal Air Force

Rearm:
Reload the Apache with ammunition

Red Top:
Gazelles painted anti-collision Day-Glo red, flown by range officers whose job is to ensure that troops, vehicles and aircraft are within safety limits

Replen:
Military slang for replenishment

RF:
Radio Frequency

RIP:
Relief In Place - Apache flights handing over the battle between each other, maintaining support to the ground troops

RMP:
Royal Military Police - British Military Police

RoC:
Rehearsal of Concept

ROE:
Rules Of Engagement - law set by a country’s government laying down the rules governing how arms are brought to bear

ROZ:
Restricted Operating Zone

RPG:
Rocket Propelled Grenade - shoulder-launched rocket with a powerful grenade warhead on the front

RQHI:
Regiment’s Qualified Helicopter Instructor

RTA:
Road Traffic Accident

RTB:
Return To Base

RTM322:
Rolls-Royce engines for the Apache

RTS:
Release To Service - the document that details what can and can’t be done with the Apache regarding flight, firing, etc.

RV:
Rendezvous - designated meeting place

RWR:
Radar Warning Receiver

SA80:
British Forces rifle - 5.56 mm automatic

SAL:
Semi-Active Laser

SAM:
Surface-to-Air missile

SAS:
Special Air Service - an independent British Special Forces unit of the British Army

SBS:
Special Boat Service - an independent British Special Forces unit of the Royal Navy

Scratcher:
Military slang for bed

SF:
Special Forces - e.g. SAS and SBS

SFI:
Senior Flying Instructor

Sitrep:
Situational Report

Starboard:
Right-hand side of an aircraft or vessel

Stinger:
US-designed Surface-to-air ManPADs (Man Portable Air

Defence System) Missile. Taliban slang for any shoulder-launched surface-to-air missile

SupFAC:
Supervisory Forward Air Controller

SWO:
Squadron Weapons Officer

Symbology:
Flying and targeting information beamed onto the monocle

T-33:
Lockheed T-33 Shooting Star. An old military jet built under licence by the Canadians and renamed the CT-133 Silver Star

TA:
Territorial Army

TADS:
Target Acquisition and Designation Sight - the ‘bucket’ on the nose of the Apache that houses the Apache’s cameras

Taliban:
Collective term used in this book for Taliban, Al-Qaeda and Hezb-I Islami Gulbuddin (HIG)

Tanky:
A member of one of the tank Regiments - tank commander, driver or gun loader

TFAD:
Task Force Availability Date

Theatre:
Country or area in which troops are conducting operations

Thirty mike mike:
Military slang for thirty millimetre or the Apache’s cannon rounds

Thirty mil:
Alternative name for thirty mike mike

TOC:
Tactical Operations Cell

Topman:
Callsign for the British Harrier

TOW:
Tube-launched Optically tracked Wire-guided missile - fired from the British Army Lynx helicopter

Tracer:
Bullets that burn with a red, orange or green glow from 110 metres to 1,100 metres so that they can be seen

TSD:
Tactical Situational Display

UFD:
Up Front Display - an LED instrument that displays critical information to the Apache crews

USAF:
United States Air Force

Venturi:
A tubed duct that changes pressure to speed air up

VP:
Vulnerable Position

WAH-64D:
British version of the Apache

WI:
Weapons Instructor

Widow:
Callsign for JTACs in Afghanistan

Wildman:
British Apache callsign from May 2006 to October 2006

Wingman:
The other aircraft in any pair of aircraft

WMIK:
Weapons Mounted Installation Kit - an odd-looking Land Rover with bars all over it to which weapons can be attached

WO1:
Warrant Officer Class One - a soldier who holds a Royal Warrant is known as Warrant Officer; Class One is the highest non-commissioned rank in the British Army

WO2:
Warrant Officer Class Two

Zero-zero:
A term used to describe a specific type of approach to land in a helicopter

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I owe a great debt of gratitude to Captain Paul Mason, Army Air Corps, the Apache guru who (as he constantly reminds me) taught me all I knew. You were an inspiration to me Paul.

My sincere thanks to the Attack Helicopter Force Commander, Lieutenant Colonel David Turner AAC, and the Director of Army Aviation, Brigadier David Short CBE ADC, for their support throughout, and for letting me tell it the way it was.

A special thank you to Paula Edwards at the MoD for her habitually elegant tightrope act.

The dedication, time, enthusiasm and friendship of the HarperCollins team has been nothing short of monumental. John Bond and Arabella Pike, thank you for believing in me.

I couldn’t have written this book without the guidance of Nick Cook and Martyn Forrester. You have helped nurture and shape my narrative in a way that I could never have achieved on my own. Thank you both so much.

Thanks to all my army buddies, friends and family for your continued support.

I owe my sanity to TFM’s Gary Philipson for letting me in the Zoo at night to talk to the Love Slug!

I’d always assumed an agent was someone who took money off you for licking the odd stamp when he could find the time. I now realise it doesn’t stop there. I can’t thank Mark Lucas enough-for your tireless promotion, advice and, above all, priceless edits. You’re my agent, literary scholar, adviser and above all friend.

Emily, you are my foundation. You support everything that I dream of and you always hold firm when times are rough. Without you I could never even begin to chase my dreams.

To my children, my little AAC: you are my world.

INDEX

The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.

Entries in
italics
indicate maps, photographs or illustrations.

EM indicates Ed Macy.

ABFAC (Airborne Forward Air Controller) 68-71

Afghan National Army (ANA) 145, 146, 168, 333

Afghan National Police (ANP) 145, 146, 168, 179, 188, 201, 299-300, 301, 333, 338, 339, 363

Afghan National Security Force (ANSF) 168, 339, 344

Afghanistan:

British Army bases in
see under individual base name
British Army objectives in 145-7
British Army operations in
see under individual operation name
climate 157, 165-6, 211, 214, 215, 357
map of
xiii
narcotics trade within 146, 147, 227, 333, 392
reconstruction of 145-6, 147, 154, 392
smell of 157, 158, 159
see also under individual area and place name

air support 200, 233, 341

A-10 166, 234, 236
Apache
see
Apache WAH-64D
B1B 4, 154, 166, 253, 254, 260, 355, 360, 362
B-2 95
C-17 161, 162
C-130 95, 156, 177
Chinook, CH-47 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 11, 97, 129, 130, 132, 147, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 181, 183, 194, 195, 196-7, 199, 200, 202, 203, 212, 226, 253, 255, 258, 259, 260, 265, 290, 292, 293, 295, 296, 298, 299, 300, 330, 333, 338, 340, 341, 345, 346

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