tlb wrote:kzt wrote:The NATO standard for air defense statuses is:
Weapons Hold, where you don’t engage a target even if hostile without further orders
Weapons Tight, where you can engage targets positively ID as hostile without further orders
Weapons Free, where anything not identified as friendly may be engaged without further orders
So at weapons free anything inbound that isn’t ID as friendly will get shot at as soon as the system prioritizes it in the queue and it’s reaches the right range.
That is how you can get the incident in 3 July 1988. Under orders issued after the USS Stark was hit by missiles a year earlier, essentially designed to err on the side of protecting US lives -- and with just minutes to decide if his vessel was within range of missiles carried by an Iranian warplane -- the captain of the guided-missile cruiser USS Vincennes gave the order to fire.
Seven minutes after takeoff, the Iran Air Airbus A300 was struck by surface-to-air missiles fired from the US cruiser. The US military later called it "a tragic and regrettable accident after "US Navy investigations of the incident showed the Iranian airliner was in an approved commercial airway and was identifying itself on air traffic control frequencies as a civilian flight.
Without fighters in the sky to intercept and identify the plane as a passenger jet, there was no alternative.
Well, given the systems of the day and what the crew thought they were seeing. There were apparently some issues with how the data was presented that caused the crew to misunderstand what the computers were telling them the plane was doing; leading them to think it was on a much more aggressive flight profile. Improved presentation of data would likely have avoided the incident.
But that's a downside of taking an air defense system, Aegis, designed to deal with waves of Soviet cruise missiles in the mostly empty mid-Atlantic and stick in very close to an unfriendly nation is a very constricted and very high air traffic area. It wasn't designed to show all that nuance as that wasn't a design goal given its expected uses.