At H-hour two
F-117A stealth attack aircraft delivered two 2,000-lb. precision bombs in an attempt to stun and confuse the PDF garrison of two heavily armed infantry companies defending the airfield. Instead of landing at their targets both bombs set off nearby waking the garrison. Michael Durant, a helicopter pilot described the opening bombs as “A gigantic flash, followed by a boom … [like] the largest lightning strike you’ve ever seen in your life." This was the first time F-117's were used in combat. Thirteen
C-130 Hercules transport aircraft, having flown nonstop from the United States with troops from the
75th Ranger Regiment, parachuted in the entire
2nd Ranger Battalion (2/75) and one company from the
3rd Ranger Battalion (3/75), with the remainder of 3/75 going to
Howard Air Force Base in reserve as a reactionary force. The jump was conducted from a dangerously low altitude of , as intelligence had stated that the PDF anti-aircraft weaponry could not track accurately below . Regardless, 11 of the 13 aircraft were hit by ground fire including 23mm anti-aircraft (AA) fire from at least one
ZU-23-2. The combination of a faster than normal air speed of and the low altitude contributed to the several dozen that were injured while landing. Multiple Rangers were also wounded by ground fire coming through the aircraft, with several more wounded while under canopy also from ground fire. At least one Ranger was killed and one paralyzed when their static lines were cut from AA fire. Gathering quickly in the darkness, two companies of Rangers fanned out to isolate the airfield, cut the Pan-American Highway running through it, and seize a nearby ammunition dump. At least two military trucks filled with PDF soldiers drove down the runway and adjacent dirt road, raking the wounded and the assembling Rangers with small arms and
.50 BMG fire. These were dispatched by a Ranger platoon sergeant from 3/75 with a
M72 LAW rocket; a non-commissioned officer from A Company, 2/75, fired on a truck with his
M1911 pistol and inadvertently hit the gas tank, exploding said vehicle. At least one PDF armored personnel carrier engaged the Rangers on the west end of the airfield. It was dispatched with simultaneous fire from Rangers firing LAW rockets and from a
AC-130H Spectre gunship. However, in one case of mistaken identity, a US attack helicopter mistook a squad of Rangers for a group of PDF and fired, killing two and wounding four others. Meanwhile, a Ranger company attacked a nearby NCO academy complex and yet another struck the two PDF companies deployed to defend the airfield. The fighting turned into a ferocious exchange of fire, with the ground fire of the Rangers heavily reinforced by support from an AC-130 Spectre and several attack helicopters. The contested buildings fell in room-to-room fighting, including grenades and automatic rifles at close ranges. The Battle of Rio Hato Airfield lasted roughly five hours, by which time the Rangers had secured Rio Hato, as well as
Manuel Noriega’s lavish beach house nearby. ==Casualties==