Development The Combat Talon was developed between December 1964 and January 1967 by
Lockheed Air Services (LAS) at
Ontario, California, as the result of a study by
Big Safari, the USAF's program office that modifies and sustains special mission aircraft. Two highly classified testbed aircraft (originally serial no.
64-0506 and
-0507, but with all numbers "sanitized" from the aircraft), were assigned to Project
Thin Slice to develop a low-level clandestine penetration aircraft for
Special Forces operations in Southeast Asia. In 1964, Lockheed was ordered to adapt the C-130Es after six
C-123B Providers modified for "unconventional warfare" under Project
Duck Hook proved inadequate for the new
MACV-SOG. The modifications under
Thin Slice and its August 1966 successor
Heavy Chain were code-named
Rivet Yard, and the four C-130Es came to be known as "Yards". Discreet modification tests were conducted by the
1198th Operational Evaluation and Training Squadron, out of Area II of
Norton AFB at San Bernardino, California, 30 miles east of Ontario. 's
919th Special Operations Wing taxis to the runway at
RIAT 2010 As the
Thin Slice aircraft were being developed, 14 C-130Es were purchased for SOG in 1965 for similar modification. The first aircraft were production C-130Es without specialized equipment that were produced at Lockheed's facility in
Marietta, Georgia. Three production airplanes per month were given the Fulton STARS (then ARS) system. As installation was completed, the Blackbirds were returned to Ontario for installation of the electronics package, code-named
Rivet Clamp. The modified aircraft became known as "Clamps" (two of the original 14,
64–0564 and
-0565, were diverted to
Heavy Chain in August 1966). The
Fulton surface-to-air recovery system was used to extract personnel and materials via air. A large
helium balloon raised a nylon lift line into the air, which was snagged by a large scissors-shaped yoke attached to the nose of the plane. The yoke snagged the line and released the balloon, yanking the attached cargo off the ground with a shock less than that of an opening parachute. A sky anchor secured the line and wires stretched from the nose to both leading
wing tip edges, protecting the propellers from the line on missed snag attempts. Crew members hooked the snagged line as it trailed behind and attached it to the
hydraulic winch, pulling the attached person or cargo into the plane through the rear cargo door. Following a death on 26 April 1982, at
CFB Lahr, Germany, the Fulton STARS system on the Clamp aircraft underwent intense maintenance scrutiny and employment of the system for live pickups was suspended. A major effort at upgrading the system,
Project 46, was pursued from 1986 to 1989, but at its conclusion, use of the STARS system for live extractions remained suspended. The Fulton STARS equipment of all Combat Talons was removed during 1998.
Rivet Clamp installation began with four STARS-equipped C-130s completed by March 1966, followed by installations in eight further aircraft in July 1966 and January 1967. Beginning in 1970, Texas Instruments and Lockheed Air Service worked to adapt the existing
AN/APQ-122 Adverse Weather Aerial Delivery System (AWADS) with terrain following/terrain avoidance modes to replace the original
AN/APQ-115, which suffered throughout its life with an unacceptably adverse
Mean-Time-Between-Failure (MTBF) rate. In 1970 they succeeded, and coupled the AN/APQ-122 with the
Litton LN-15J
Inertial Navigation System (INS). Known as MOD-70, the modified radar was installed in all 12 operational Combat Talons and the four
Heavy Chain test beds between 1971 and 1973. The system proved so successful that it continued in service until the late 1980s. Following the completion of MOD-70, the Combat Talons were divided into three designations: C-130E(CT) for the "Clamp" aircraft, C-130E(Y) for the "Yank" (formerly "Yard") Talons, and C-130E(S) for the "Swap". The Combat Talon I designations were consolidated in 1977 as the
MC-130 and have remained under that designation since. The Combat Talon became the
Combat Talon I in 1984 with the authorization for the modification of 24 C-130Hs to Combat Talon II specifications. The "Yank" Talons conducted
top secret operations worldwide, under the project name
Combat Sam, until late 1972. A major modification between 1986 and 1994, MOD-90, modernized the capability and serviceability of the Talon I to extend its service life. All 14 Combat Talon Is were equipped with upgraded navigational radars, an enhanced
electronic warfare suite and provided new outer wings. By 1995 all Combat Talon Is were equipped with helicopter-
air refueling pods.
Southeast Asia operations The aircraft received for modification as Combat Talons were assigned in July 1965 to the
464th Troop Carrier Wing at
Pope Air Force Base,
North Carolina. Because of a lack of ramp space caused by the buildup of forces for deployment to
South Vietnam, they were temporarily housed at
Sewart Air Force Base,
Tennessee. The wing's
779th TCS was designated as the training squadron for the modified C-130E(I)s, under Project
Skyhook, in addition to its normal airlift function. Selected crew members received instructor training in their respective systems and returned to Pope by 1 May to begin crew training of six crews for deployment to Vietnam under Project
Stray Goose. On 9 October 2009, Detachment 1, 314th Troop Carrier Wing received the
Presidential Unit Citation (PUC) for its support of MACV-SOG activities.
Chief of Staff of the Air Force General
Norton A. Schwartz presented the award to the unit during a ceremony at Hurlburt Field, culminating a six-year campaign by former
Stray Goose member Richard H. Sell to achieve the recognition after the unit was not included in a PUC awarded 4 April 2001, to MACV-SOG for the same period. By 1970 twelve Combat Talons were operational in three units of four aircraft each: •
7th Special Operations Squadron (SOS),
Ramstein Air Base, Germany; • 15th Special Operations Squadron, Nha Trang Air Base, South Vietnam; and • Detachment 2,
1st Special Operations Wing, Pope Air Force Base, North Carolina, (redesignated 318th SOS in 1971 and 8th SOS in 1974). The 15th SOS was redesignated the 90th SOS on 23 October 1970, relocated to
Cam Ranh Bay Air Base, then moved to
Kadena Air Base,
Okinawa, in April 1972 as part of the drawdown of U.S. forces in Vietnam. It was again redesignated, becoming the 1st SOS on 15 December 1972, and began transition from the "Clamp" to the "Yank" variant.
Kingpin Two Combat Talons were employed as navigation escorts and for airborne control during
Operation Kingpin, the operational phase of the attempted rescue of
prisoners of war from
Son Tay prison camp in North Vietnam on 21 November 1970. 64-0523 was drawn from the 15th SOS at Nha Trang and 64-0558 from Det. 2, 1st SOW at Pope AFB. The aircraft were modified at LAS Ontario with installation of FL-2B
FLIR sets borrowed from the
Heavy Chain project to compensate for difficulties in terrain-following created by the slow speeds necessitated by the mixed aircraft force. 24 primary and five backup crew personnel, all
Stray Goose/
Combat Spear veterans detached from 7th SOS (
Combat Arrow) and 1st SOW (
Combat Knife), developed helicopter-fixed wing formation procedures for low level night missions and jointly trained with selected Special Forces volunteers at
Eglin Air Force Base, Florida. Between the end of August and 28 September 1970, Talon, helicopter, and
A-1 Skyraider crews supervised by Combat Talon Program Manager Lt. Col. Benjamin N. Kraljev rehearsed the flight profile in terrain-following missions over southern
Alabama, flying 368 sorties that totalled more than 1,000 hours. A month of intensive joint training with the Special Forces rescue force followed at a replica of the prison camp. In early November the task force deployed to
Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand. The 24 primary crew members, a 7th SOS crew (
Cherry 01) under Major Irl L. "Leon" Franklin and a 1st SOW crew (
Cherry 02) commanded by Lt Col Albert P. "Friday" Blosch, conducted the mission, which was successfully executed without loss of any personnel. However the operation failed when the prison was found not to contain any prisoners.
Post-Vietnam developments In 1974 the Combat Talon program was nearly dismantled as the Air Force sought to reverse its Vietnam emphasis on special operations. The 1st Special Operations Wing was redesignated the 834th Tactical Composite Wing and its Combat Talons of the 8th SOS became a
TAC asset. However the use of 1st SOS "Yank" Talons in a sea surveillance role off
North Korea in 1975 revived interest in the Combat Talon, as did the Israeli
hostage rescue at Entebbe Airport. The same year, a Combat Talon of the 1st Special Operations Wing was deployed in support of US Marines forces on
Koh Tang island during the
Mayaguez incident, dropping a single
BLU-82 6,800 kg (15,000 lb) bomb to enable their extraction. However, as late as 1978–79, Air Force Special Operations Forces was still disregarded by many staff planners, who saw it as a drain on resources and not a force enabler, and wanted the entire Talon force transferred to the
Air National Guard. In early 1977 the Combat Talon was redesignated
MC-130E by Headquarters Air Force for all three variants of the aircraft. •
1st Special Operations Squadron, Kadena Air Base, Okinawa – (four MC-130 Yanks); • 7th Special Operations Squadron, Ramstein Air Base, Germany – (four MC-130 Clamps); and •
8th Special Operations Squadron,
Hurlburt Field, Florida – (six MC-130 Clamps).
Eagle Claw Following the
seizure of the U.S. embassy in
Tehran, Iran, on 4 November 1979, training operations for a rescue mission of the 53 hostages began as early as 7 November by Talon crews at Kadena AB, and 26 November by crews at Hurlburt. At that time only seven Combat Talons had the
in-flight refueling capability necessary for the mission, which was to be mounted out of either Egypt or
Diego Garcia (
Masirah Island did not become available as a base until April 1980). All were assigned to the operation, The four Talons (including a spare) of the 1st SOS staged to Masirah Island off the coast of
Oman on 19 April 1980, to lead the Night One infiltration phase, while the three of the 8th SOS deployed to
Wadi Qena, Egypt, on 21 April to lead the Night Two exfiltration phase. To establish a "normal" C-130 presence in Egypt, Talons of the 7th SOS (none of which had aerial refueling capability) conducted regular flights using
Military Airlift Command call signs in and out of Wadi Qena between 2 January and 8 April 1980. They also used the deception to discreetly pre-position needed equipment, including ammunition for
AC-130 gunships, at the staging base. The Talon crews also manned three borrowed
EC-130E ABCCC aircraft configured to carry 68,100 L (18,000 U.S. gal) of jet fuel in six collapsible bladders for refueling the helicopters. After returning to Masirah, three of the 8th SOS Night One crews would be flown to Wadi Qena to carry out the Night Two mission. The first phase of the rescue mission began the evening of 24 April, led by Lt Col Robert L. Brenci of the 8th SOS in Talon 64-0565,
Dragon 1. The 1st SOS Talons successfully secured the forward operating location ("Desert One") in the Iranian Desert, but the helicopter portion of the mission ended in disaster. Although the mission was an embarrassing failure costing eight lives, seven helicopters, and an EC-130E aircraft in a ground accident, the MC-130s performed nearly flawlessly. Planning initiatives for a second rescue attempt, under the project name
Honey Badger, began two weeks after the failed raid and continued through November. Combat Talon participation in
Honey Badger amounted largely to tactics development, but ECM improvements included
chaff and
flare dispensers and new ALR-69 threat receivers that improved its defensive countermeasures capability well beyond that existing prior to
Eagle Claw.
Urgent Fury Five Combat Talons of the 8th Special Operations Squadron participated in
Operation Urgent Fury, the United States invasion of
Grenada between 25 and 31 October 1983. Unlike previous operations that involved months of planning, training, and reconnaissance, the 8th SOS prepared in less than 72 hours after being alerted. Its assignment was to insert Rangers of the 1st and 2nd Ranger Battalions at night to capture
Point Salines International Airport, defended by both Cuban and Grenadan troops, in the opening moments of the operation. The five Talons divided into three elements, two of them leading formations of Special Operations Low Level-equipped (SOLL) C-130 transports. In clouds at above the sea and west of its objective, the lead Talon (64-0562) experienced a complete failure of its APQ-122 radar. Reorganization of the mission formations delayed the operation for 30 minutes, during which U.S. Marines made their amphibious landing. To compound the lack of surprise, the
U.S. Department of State, apparently in a
good faith but inept diplomatic gesture, contacted Cuban authorities and compromised the mission, further alerting the defenses, including a dozen
ZU-23-2 antiaircraft guns. An
AC-130 Spectre gunship, directed to observe the main runway for obstructions, reported it blocked by construction equipment and barricades. Loadmasters aboard the inbound Combat Talons reconfigured them for a parachute drop in less than thirty minutes. Talon 64-0568, flown as
Foxtrot 35 by 8th SOS commander Lt Col James L. Hobson and with the commander of the
Twenty-Third Air Force, Maj Gen William J. Mall, Jr., aboard as a passenger, combat-dropped runway clearing teams from the Ranger Battalions on the airport, despite being targeted by a searchlight and under heavy AAA fire. Two Spectre gunships suppressed the AAA so that the other Combat Talons and the SOLL C-130s could complete the parachute drop of the Rangers, with the only damage to the Talons being three hits by small arms fire to 64–0572. For his actions, Hobson was awarded the
MacKay Trophy in 1984.
Other Combat Talon operations Just Cause Talons supported
Operation Just Cause, the United States invasion of
Panama in December 1989 and January 1990. When Panamanian General
Manuel Noriega surrendered on 3 January, he was immediately flown to
Homestead Air Force Base, Florida, by a Combat Talon.
Desert Storm The 1990
invasion of Kuwait by
Iraq resulted in the deployment of four Combat Talons and six crews of the 8th SOS in August 1990 to
King Fahd International Airport in Saudi Arabia as a component of
Operation Desert Shield. During
Operation Desert Storm, the combat phase of the
Gulf War in January and February 1991, the Combat Talon performed one-third of all
airdrops during the campaign, and participated in psychological operations, flying 15 leaflet-drop missions before and throughout the war. Two 7th SOS Talons deployed to
Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, as part of
Operation Proven Force. They supported the first
Joint Search and Rescue mission over Iraq, attempting to recover the crew of
Corvette 03, a downed
F-15E Strike Eagle. However permission from the Turkish government to fly the mission was delayed for 24 hours, and the crew was not recovered.
Air Force Reserve Command On 6 October 1995, the Air Force began shifting the Combat Talon I force with the transfer of MC-130E, AF Ser. No. 64-0571, to the
Air Force Reserve Command's
919th Special Operations Wing,
711th Special Operations Squadron, based at
Duke Field (Eglin AFB Auxiliary Field # 3), Florida. The 919th had previously flown the
AC-130A Spectre in the gunship / close air support mission, and the increasing age of the AC-130A aircraft necessitated their retirement. Six MC-130E aircraft went to the 711th SOS over the next year for crew training, and the squadron became operational on 1 March 1997. On 5 March 1999, the
8th Special Operations Squadron became the first active force squadron to become an Associate Unit to an
Air Reserve Component organization, co-located with the 711th SOS, but without aircraft of its own, flying those of the reserve unit. Ten of the Combat Talon Is were Primary Assigned Aircraft (PAA), two were assigned to crew training, and two were placed in Backup Inventory Aircraft (BIA) storage. A Combat Talon I was the first aircraft to land at
New Orleans International Airport after
Hurricane Katrina in August 2005. On 14 July 2006, the 8th SOS flew its last Combat Talon I mission and began conversion to the
CV-22 Osprey, ending 41 years of active service for the MC-130E Combat Talon I. Although retired from the Regular Air Force, an MC-130E continued to remain in service with the
Air Force Reserve Command's
919th Special Operations Wing until 2012.
Retirement The MC-130E Combat Talon I has been replaced by the MC-130J Commando II, which has the capability to complete missions faster and more efficiently than its MC-130H Combat Talon II and MC-130P Combat Shadow counterparts. Recapitalization was a stated priority of Lt Gen Donald C. Wurster, former commander of
Air Force Special Operations Command. Only eight MC-130E aircraft were still active in 2009, The MC-130E Combat Talon I was finally retired on 25 April 2013 in ceremonies at
Duke Field. Three of the aircraft were then flown to the
309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group at
Davis-Monthan AFB, Arizona, while the fourth aircraft, AF Ser. No. 64-0523 (nicknamed "Godfather") was flown to
Cannon AFB, New Mexico on 22 June 2012, for eventual display at that base's airpark. The retirement date marked the 33rd anniversary of the Desert One, the mission to free American hostages in Iran, of which several MC-130Es were a part. ==MC-130H Combat Talon II==