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1994 British Army Lynx shootdown

Coordinates:54°4′33.5″N6°36′32″W / 54.075972°N 6.60889°W /54.075972; -6.60889
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
IRA helicopter shootdown in Northern Ireland

1994 British Army Lynx shootdown
Part ofthe Troubles
1994 British Army Lynx shootdown is located in Northern Ireland
1994 British Army Lynx shootdown
Location54°4′33.5″N6°36′32″W / 54.075972°N 6.60889°W /54.075972; -6.60889
Crossmaglen,County Armagh,Northern Ireland
Date19 March 1994
20:27 (GMT)
TargetBritish Army base
Attack type
Mortar
Injured4
PerpetratorProvisional IRA
1960s and 1970s

1980s


1990s


On 19 March 1994, aBritish ArmyLynx helicopter was shot down by theProvisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) inNorthern Ireland. A unit of the IRA'sSouth Armagh Brigade fired a heavyimprovised mortar at the British Army base inCrossmaglen,County Armagh. The mortar round hit and shot down the helicopter,serial number ZD275,[1] while it was hovering over thehelipad. Three British soldiers and aRoyal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) member were wounded.

Background

[edit]

Since the 1970s, theIRA developed aseries of home-made mortars. The goal was to produce devices to be used as "stand-off" weapons, capable of being launched from safe ranges upon police or military outposts and easy to conceal on dead-ground.[2] The development by the provisionals of the Mark 10 mortar multiple-launched mortar led the IRA South Armagh Brigade to conceive the idea of using this type of weapon to engage helicopters as they were hovering over border bases. On 22 June 1983, the IRA attempted to shoot down a Wessex helicopter with a battery of Mark 10 improvised mortars over Crossmaglen, County Armagh. The pilot was forced to undertake an evasive manoeuvre, dropping the helicopter's cargo into the street below. Four mortars failed to explode and the rest landed in the vicinity of the base, causing some damage and slightly injuring a British soldier. A subsequent investigation found that if the mortar base plate had been aligned "five to ten degrees" differently the projectiles likely would have hit the helicopter.[3]

The different improvised mortar designs evolved in 1992 into the Mark 15 mortar, widely known as the "barrack buster". The mortar shell consisted of a one metre long metalpropane cylinder with a diameter of 36 cm that contained around 70 kg of home-made explosives and with a range between 75 and 275 m. The cylinder was an adaptation of a commercial 'Kosangas' gas cylinder for heating and cooking gas used in rural areas in Ireland.[4] The first use of the "barrack buster" took place on 7 December 1992 against a joint RUC/British Army base inBallygawley,County Tyrone.[5][6] On 11 June 1993, there was a previous IRA bid to shoot down a Puma helicopter taking off from the Crossmaglen base with a Mark 15 mortar. The barrack buster, fired from the back of a local baker's delivery van, exploded on the helipad shortly after the pilot had managed to take off. Two Lynx helicopters escorting the Puma were unable to prevent the attack. The IRA action was carried out to coincide with a one-day visit to Northern Ireland byQueen Elizabeth.[7]

The attack

[edit]
IRA barrack buster mortar showing base plate and detonator wires

On the evening of 19 March 1994, a Lynx helicopter, serial number ZD275, was in the process of landing at the large British Army base inCrossmaglen. Meanwhile, an IRA unit had mounted a Mark 15 mortar on a tractor, concealed behind bales of hay. The tractor was parked 150 yards (140 m) from the intended target, on waste ground. At 20:27, there was a sudden blackout across Crossmaglen's square and at the same time, a single mortar shell was lobbed into the barracks. The IRA had used themains for thecollapsing circuit of the firing pack, turning off the street's power supply and allowing the mortar's own battery to trigger the launcher. When the Lynx was hovering 100 feet (30 m) over thehelipad, the mortar round hit the aircraft on the tail's boom, which was severed from the fuselage. The machine spun out of control, but the pilot was able to crash-land the Lynx inside the base. AGrenadier Guards' patrol spotted the resulting huge orange fireball from a mile away. Three members of the crew managed to get out with minor injuries, but a member of theRoyal Ulster Constabulary was trapped inside the blazing wreckage. The constable was rescued just before the fuel tanks and the ammunition started to explode.[8]

AuthorToby Harnden described the incident as the most successful IRA operation against a helicopter in the course ofthe Troubles.[8][9][10]

Aftermath

[edit]

After the incident, the IRA andSinn Féin were criticised by theSocial Democratic and Labour PartyMember of the Parliament for the areaSeamus Mallon, who said:

God knows how many people could have been killed. When you realise this mortar was lobbed over a number of houses it brings home the enormity of the danger so many people faced. Yet again you have Sinn Féin talking peace in the morning and carrying out these murderous attacks through the IRA in the evening.

John Fee, a local SDLP councillor who described the attack as "an act of lunacy", was later severely beaten by three men, one of them hooded and wearing military-style gear, outside his home.[11] The IRA denied responsibility.[12] Fee was admitted to hospital with broken legs, broken ribs and head injuries.[11]

Corporal Robert Tomlinson of theRoyal Military Police was awarded theQueen's Commendation for Valuable Service for his part in coming to the aid of the wounded constable and organising hismedical evacuation.[13]

Corporal Wayne Cuckson of theRoyal Logistic Corps was awarded theQueen's Gallantry Medal for dragging the wounded constable out of the crashed aircraft.[8] Cuckson, who reached the rank of Warrant Officer Class Two, died on 6 April 2011 in a crash while driving his motorcycle betweenAbingdon andOxford.[14]

There was a second mortar attack on a British military helicopter on 12 July 1994, atNewtownhamilton, when anRAFPuma carrying 11 soldiers and an RUC constable crash-landed on a soccer pitch after its tail was hit by shrapnel from a near-miss by another Mark 15 mortar launched from a tractor.[15] The helicopter was lifting off from the local military base. No serious injuries were reported.[8][16] The Puma, serial number XW225, sustained Category 3 or Category 4 damage on the RAF scale. After returning to service, the machine was definitively written off and scrapped after suffering another, this time deadly, crash-landing inGermany on 15 February 1997.[17][18][19]

The downing of two helicopters by mortar fire, along with the increasingsniper activity of the IRA, was both a morale and military blow to the British forces in south County Armagh.[20]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^"UK Military Aircraft Losses - 1994".www.ukserials.com. Retrieved24 September 2020.
  2. ^Geraghty, p. 187
  3. ^Taylor (2018)
  4. ^Geraghty, p. 193
  5. ^The Irish Emigrant,1 February 1993
  6. ^Ryder, p. 256
  7. ^Taylor (2018)
  8. ^abcdHarnden, p. 398
  9. ^Geraghty, pp. 198–199
  10. ^English & Oppenheimer, p. 233
  11. ^ab"MONTH IN FOCUS",Police Beat, Volume 16 No. 4, Police Federation for Northern Ireland, 1994
  12. ^Geraghty, p. 199
  13. ^"Royal Military Police". Retrieved31 July 2014.
  14. ^Abingdon crash victim was soldier. BBC News, 15 April 2011.
  15. ^Taylor (2018)
  16. ^IRA downs British HelicopterThe Telegraph, 13 July 1994
  17. ^Air pictorial: journal of the Air League, Volumen 59, p. 196, 1997
  18. ^"UK Military Aircraft Losses - 1997".www.ukserials.com. Retrieved27 November 2020.
  19. ^"Aircraft Accident to Royal Air Force Puma HC1 XW225"(PDF).ukserials.com. Minister of Defence - Military Aircraft Accident Summary. August 1999. Retrieved27 November 2020.
  20. ^Harnden, p. 399

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