Hi all!
The next one is also a remake, more faithful to the sole surviving sketch of the planned original than my first attempt.
Breguet Br.120 Orfraie (Sea Eagle)
When French government decided to proceed with the PA58 aircraft carrier in 1961 due to ongoing Soviet efforts to put carriers to sea, both vessels were planned to perform a nuclear strike role in addition to their normal antiship, ASW and air defense duties. To that end, France and Verdun were to embark four squadrons each: fifteen Sirocco air superiority fighters, nine Alizé ASW aircraft and, as their main punch, twenty-four specimens of a new airplane for attacking heavily defended targets on land. Dassault had promised to navalize the Mirage IV, but failed to get the high landing speed under control, and that project faltered in 1963, when both new carriers were already under construction. Dassault then was forced by the French government to team up with BAC to produce AFVG, a one-size-fits-all omnirole strike-fighter for both Armée de’l Air and Aeronavale. Dassault detested this project from the beginning; he hated not to be in full control, and feared the plane would supersede all his various Mirage projects. In 1967, Dassault’s strategy of stall and delay succeeded, and AFVG was cancelled. But it was Dassault’s prime contender Breguet who would reap the rewards.
Since 1962, Breguet Aviation was developing the Br.120 project for a heavy strike aircraft as a direct contender for the smaller AFVG. It had big fixed wings, a side-by-side cockpit for the crew and an internal weapons bay. A prototype took to the air in 1964, but showed unsatisfactory flying characteristics due to a stern design which provided lift in places it was not needed. Additionally, it had to make do with Atar 9C engines instead of reheated Speys, resulting in drastically reduced performance (Mach 2,4 had been planned, Mach 1,5 was attained). With AFVG an active project, Breguet’s plane was no longer subsidized after 1964 and shelved accordingly. But someone at Breguet sensed that AFVG would go south sooner or later, and kept the project alive. A new stern similar to the smaller Br.121 (a downscaled development of the Br.120 which formed the basis for the later SEPECAT Jaguar) was designed, Atar 9K-50 engines were substituted for the 9Cs, the internal bomb bay was deleted to accommodate more fuel, and the wing was re-designed with blown flaps and more area to get landing speed down. A second prototype was tested late in 1966 with much better results, just in time when AFVG blew up in 1967. Despite weighing 15 tons empty, the Br.120 was capable of Mach 2 with two Atar 9K-50 of 50/72 kN. The very large wings provided nimble flight characteristics for a plane of its size and allowed the Br.120 to take off at MTOW without RATO. Despite the poor fuel efficiency of the Atar 9K-50, internal fuel supply was sufficient for a fully loaded combat radius of over 800 kilometers on a lo-lo-lo mission profile. Seven external hard points could accommodate 8.500 kilograms of payload (500kg on each of the outer ones and 1.500 kg for the inner ones and the centerline pylon). Maximum take-off weight reached 30.500 kilograms, more than the Mirage IV; despite this, the Br.120 needed only half the runway length. A complex avionics suite including state-of-the-art ECM and self-defense systems and an Antilope terrain-following radar for low-level flight was provided. Gun armament comprised two 30mm DEFA 551 with 180 rpg for strafing and self-defence. An official presentation in 1967 rendered everyone very impressed; then the plane was rejected as too expensive. Unlike AFVG, which would have been fully omnirole, the Br.120 was a mission-specialized bomber without any anti-air capabilities; thus, requirement was limited to 80 machies for the Aeronavale (four operational squadrons for France and Verdun, plus a land-based squadron as OCU and some machines as material reserve) and 60 for the Armee de’l Air (three bomber squadrons replacing the Vautour), denying the project any kind of economy of scale. Breguet’s cost calculation amounted to $ 7.000.000 per plane (in 1967 dollars); as an F-4B could be had for $ 2.000.000 at that time and give full multirole capability, this was obviously unacceptable. Even Britain’s Hurricane was offered for less than four million dollars apiece, and the Buccaneer for even less. Breguet thus was told to cut price in half or forget it. Given the availability of foreign alternatives, they had no choice but comply; this was only possible by securing massive export sales. Fortunately, some of these were already in the works.
Thiaria had acquired two old Essex-class carriers from the USA and purchased some Sirocco fighters and Alizé ASW planes from France; both carriers were to be heavily reconstructed for larger capacity and equipped with the most capable carrierborne strike aircraft available. Thiaria went for the high-risk option of an all-new plane, after the USA showed reluctant to deliver F-4s; in 1966, they placed an option on 80 Br.120s to be delivered in kits for local assembly. The option was converted to a firm order in 1967. At the same time, Germany’s naval aviation was interested in a new antiship platform, with the designed 10-year service life of their Scimitars drawing to an end by 1972/3; they also placed an order for 80 units in 1967. Both the Germans and the Thiarians were willing to pay $ 4.500.000 per plane. The fixed price of 3.500.000 dollars per plane for the French government still generated a net loss for Breguet, but with 300 orders, they decided to play vabanque and hope for more. With the price halved, the French government finally agreed to order 140 machines. At that point, the type was officially named Orfraie (Sea Eagle).
Deliveries of the Br.120M commenced in 1969 to the Aeronavale and were complete in 1972. All four operational squadrons achieved FOC in 1974. They were capable of carrying AN-22 free-fall nukes, but their main role was anti-shipping with the new Exocet missile; alternatively, the radar-guided Martel missile could be employed. For land-attack missions, all had built-in laser designators for LGBs or laser-guided AS.30 missiles. Of course, they could also employ up to 20 400kg-bombs, but at reduced internal fuel.
The AdA’s 60 Br.120B Orfraies were supplied from 1970 through 1972, equipping three operational squadrons. They were cleared for the same armament as the Navy planes and frequently trained land-based anti-shipping missions; their initial main role was tactical interdiction with conventional munitions.
The Marineflieger took delivery of 80 Br.120Ms (called Seeadler in German) between 1971 and 1973. All had folding wings, and during the 1970s and 1980s, most German Orfraie pilots acquired carrier qualification in joint exercises with French and US carriers. They were only equipped for anti-shipping missions and lacked laser designators; their main armament were Kormoran antiship missiles. Other than that, they were limited to dumb bombs. They achieved FOC in 1975.
In 1969, the Thiarian left-wing government had a mood swing and decided to scrap the carriers in order to teach some manners to their politically unreliable admiralty; the Orfraie M order was cancelled. At the same time, they were looking for a replacement of their Air Force’s Vautours in the bomber and ECM role, and no less than 112 Br.120B Orfraies (land version with fixed wings) were ordered to equip six squadrons of 12 (7th, 10th, 18th, 26th, 27th and 34th) and an OCU (16th), plus reserves. An initial batch of 36 machines, half of them with dual steering, was delivered from France in 1973 and 1974; another 76 were license-built by Thiaria’s defense industry conglomerate SCI (privatized 1977) under the local designator B1S-1 between 1974 and 1977. Delivery of these planes to the Thiarians was opposed by the USA, but the French were eager to comply because the Thiarian Air Force’s wish list contained large numbers of virtually anything France’s defense industry had to offer – Dassault Mirage F.4s, Breguet Alpha Jets, and C.160 Transalls – making them a customer the French did not want to disappoint by any means. Thiarian Orfraies were named Ionadh (Gaelic: Mystery). They became Thiaria’s standard bomber for the rest of the century and could use the same weaponry as the French Orfraies, including Exocets for antiship duties. The first Thiarian Ionadh squadron reached FOC in 1976, the last in 1978.
The Thiarian carrier project was revived when Brazil, in a move obviously directed against Thiaria’s left wing government, received two used Essex-class ships from the USA in 1971, complete with Crusader fighters and Skyhawk bombers. The Thiarians resumed work on one of their carriers in 1973, and the Navy ordered another 48 Ionadhs, all to be domestically license-built as the SCI T1S-2. Apart from their folding wings, they had the same equipment as the Air Force units. They were delivered in 1977 and 1978 and equipped three squadrons of 12 (2nd, 10th and 20th), one for each carrier and one serving as OCU. As the second carrier was never converted and eventually cannibalized, only one squadron at a time was embarked.
By 1970, the plane was considered hot shit, capable of everything a Buccaneer or an Intruder could do, at twice the speed (only at altitude, of course; at sea level, performance was pretty much identical, which was impressive enough). Additional orders now kept coming in. The first was placed by the Royal Canadian Navy in 1971, after that country had decided to scrap its carrier in favour of a British-designed sea control ship. The Navy wanted to retain some maritime strike capability, and was authorized to raise a single 18-ship Orfraie squadron. 28 of the naval version Br.120M were ordered and delivered in 1973 and 1974, named Sea Eagle and painted in the RCN’s old-fashioned livery. They reached FOC in 1975. As Canada did not receive Harpoon missiles before 1983, Canadian Orfraies had to rely on shorter-ranged Bullpups during the first decade of their career. They differed from previous planes by having a fixed aerial refueling probe, which would become standard for subsequent Orfraies.
The next customer was the Royal Norwegian Air Force, which wanted to establish a maritime strike capability around the North Cape. 24 of the land-based variant Br.120B were ordered in 1972 for delivery in 1975. The Norwegians named the plane the Havornen and equipped a single 15-ship squadron, achieving FOC in 1977. They were typically armed with domestically built Penguin missiles. They were the last Orfraies without aerial refueling probes.
In 1971, HM government rejected South Africa’s request to purchase a second batch of 20 Buccaneers, and the French were happy to step in. The South Africans decided to raise two Orfraie squadrons (named Zeearend in Afrikaans) and ordered 32 machines of the land version Br.120B, which were delivered in 1975 and 1976 to equip two 9-ship squadrons and a 6-ship OCU. Unusually, they were not fitted for maritime strike missions (which were exclusively assigned to the Buccaneer force) but usually employed as a bomb truck in the bush wars. They had aerial refueling probes from the start, as had all later Orfraies.
The third and last customer to use the Orfraie as a carrier based bomber was the Koko Kaijou. In 1970, their two WW-II-era Yonaga class fleet carriers operated a mix of F-11s and A-4s. In 1973, Koko decided to replace them with two 50.000-tonners carrying the best planes money could buy, at that time translating to F-14 fighters and Orfraie bombers. Two operational 18-ship squadrons and a 12-ship OCU were to be raised, and an order for 60 Orfraies was placed. They were delivered in 1976 through 1978 (30 as kits to be assembled in Koko, 30 locally license-built) and named Umiwashi (Sea Eagle). FOC was achieved in 1980, before the first new carrier was completed; Yonaga had to be refurbished at some expense to allow another five years of Orfraie operations. They typically carried ASM-1 missiles for the antiship role, but were fitted to deploy the full US-sourced bomb and missile inventory of the Koko Kaijou, including Bullpups, Standard ARMs, and LGBs.
The final export customer was one of the largest. After the 1971 war against India, Pakistan needed replacement for the many Canberras and B-57s they had lost and purchased a first batch of 36 Br.120Bs in 1973. Deliveries commenced in 1976, and as soon as the first squadron was operational in 1977, a second batch of 48 was ordered to replace the remaining Canberras. When all 84 machines were delivered in 1980, Pakistan operated a total of five 12-ship squadrons including one OCU. They were tasked with interdict and strategic bombing missions, but not for anti-shipping; in that respect, they were identical to the South African machines.
The last Pakistani machine concluded eleven years of continuous series production. Including Thiarian and Kokoan license-production, a total of 608 Orfraies were built – 454 in France, 124 in Thiaria and 30 in Koko. All operators considered the Br.120 a reliable machine with good range and a mean punch, but by 1980, it was no longer competitive on the world market. A developed version with M53-2 engines (55/85 kN thrust) was offered in 1979 to a variety of customers, but at that time, there was no requirement for the naval version, whilst the land-based version could not compete against the more modern Tornado and the more versatile F-18L.
The Orfraie racked up a long and active service record. Norway used them to patrol the Barents Sea throughout the cold war; when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1996, the Norwegians quickly retired their Orfraies without replacement. Their machines were overdue for a mid-life modernization at that time and were retired without ever having received one; 15 ex-Norwegian Orfraies were sold to Pakistan. The South African machines also were never modernized, in their case not for fiscal reasons, but due to the international arms embargo against the Apartheid regime. They were intensely employed in Namibia against the Angolans and also took part in the Rhodesian civil war. They proved hard to intercept for Angolan and Cuban MiGs; only five were lost, all to ground fire. Aanother five were lost to accidents, all of them after 1995. The survivors were retired in 2000 upon arrival of the first Hale Tempests in South Africa.
All Aeronavale machines were refitted in 1982 through 1984 with the latest ECM, internal jammers and flare launchers, allowing them to operate without external countermeasures pods. The Orfraie took part in hostilities against Libya during the 1970s and 1980s, Desert Storm in 1991, NATO intervention in the Yugoslav civil war, and several African conflicts in the 1980s and 1990s. The Aeronavale machines, which flew from the carriers Verdun, France, Charles de Gaulle and Richelieu, were replaced with Rafales starting in 1998; they were entirely withdrawn in 2001, after 32 years of faithful service. Eleven of eighty were lost in combat, nine in accidents and three were written off for other reasons.
The AdA Orfraies, of which two full squadrons served in the Gulf war in the SEAD role with Armat missiles, were withdrawn from frontline service from 1994, at an average age of 25; as they were still in good shape, they were stored as spare donators for the navy’s Orfraies. Throughout their service, they had suffered only four combat losses, plus seven accidents. They were replaced with Mirage 4000Ds.
German Orfraies were modernized with a slightly simplified countermeasures suite and a locally made electro-optical sensor including FLIR and laser designator. From 1984, they could operate the Jumbo ASM, Germany’s equivalent to Popeye, which could deliver a 750kg warhead against a heavily fortified target over a distance of 50 km. They were usually TV guided, but could be fitted with the guidance kit of the Kormoran for antiship service. Germany retired her Orfraies in 1998 through 2000 at an average age of 27 without replacement; antiship duties were assumed by Air Force Tornadoes. 35 airframes were sold to Koko for cannibalization.
The Ionadh served with the Thiarian Air Force from 1974 to 2012; some of them were flying for 35 years. They received new radars and a unique ECM fit in the late 1980s, and about half of them were refit to fly SEAD missions with ARMAT missiles (7th, 18th and 27th Sqn). They also could employ Israeli Popeye missiles, which were acquired from 1992. They were active in Thiaria’s brief skirmish with Brazil in 1985, the Second Gulf War in 1990 and the New Portugal War of Independence in 1997. Seven were lost in the wars against Brazil, two in the Gulf War and ten in accidents. Those not fitted for SEAD were replaced from 1999 at an average age of 25 years by T3S-6 Siolpaire multirole fighters; the SEAD machines served a decade longer and were phased out from 2012 after being grounded due to material fatigue. They were slated to be replaced by the twin seat bomber variant of the Asarlai 5th generation fighters, which however did not become available prior to 2020, so single-seat Asarlais were substituted from 2016.
The Thiarian Navy flew the Ionadh from the carriers Oirion, Treighdin, Andraimeide and Chros Deiscirt. They were used to shadow the Royal Navy during the Patagonian-Argentine war in 1982 and fought in the Second Gulf War of 1990, the New Portugal War of Independence in 1997 and the Madagaskar intervention in 2000. A total of thirteen were lost in action, but only one in an accident. Several of them used SM.39 missiles to sink Brazilian ships in 1985 and 1997. Three Thiarian Navy machines were the only Br.120 who ever scored kills in aerial combat, all of them using Magic II missiles against Brazilian Hurricane and Mirage III interceptors. They were modernized in a similar way as the Air Force machines in the late 1980s, and became the first operational launch platforms for the ANS supersonic anti-shipping missile in 1998. Due to material fatigue, they had to be phased out from 2001 after an average of 24 years of hard use and replaced with the final batch of naval T3S-7 Siolpaires.
The Canadian Orfraies were only ever used in the anti-shipping role, carrying Harpoons from 1983. They were modernized in the mid-1980s to the same standard as the French machines. Like the Norwegians and Germans, the Canadians were eager to scrap them after the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1996 and cash in the peace dividend.
Koko’s Uniwashis served for 28 years from the carriers Yashima and Kii. Due to the stress of constant carrier operations, they were quite worn out at the turn of the century and had to be kept operational by cannibalizing some ex-German airframes. In 2002, the first license-produced F/A-18E was delivered to the Koko Kaijou, which will serve till a domestic Japanese/Kokoan sixth-generation fighter will become available in the late 2020s. The last Uniwashi was retired in 2005. By that time, they had been adapted to Type 93 antiship missiles and Type 90 AAMs.
The Pakistani Br.120s had some run-ins with the Russians alongside the Afghan border during the 1980s and were regularly called upon during various border skirmishes with India, losing 21 of their number, mostly to accidents. They received similar modernizations as the French Br.120s in the early 1990s, and in 1999, two squadrons were cleared for the nuclear strike role, although the presence of Pakistani free-fall nuclear bombs was never confirmed. Pakistan is still operating a sizeable force of about 50 Orfraies, cannibalizing the same number of phased out airframes to keep them aloft, among them a dozen ex-Norwegian. Another complex refurbishment including new ECM, jammers and targeting equipment was applied in 2010 through 2012.
By 2022, the Pakistani Orfraies, all of them more than 40 years old, are the last of their kind in active service. Elsewhere, about 80 Orfraies are preserved, among them eleven in a flyable condition (three each in Thiaria and South Africa, two each in France and Koko, one in Canada).
Cheers
GD