The Civilian Jet Call Sign That Silenced Three F-22 Pilots-xurixuri

At thirty thousand feet above Colorado’s eastern plains, the morning looked too peaceful for trouble.

The sky stretched pale and wide, brushed clean by thin clouds and cold sunlight.

On the NORAD watch floor, one small blip moved west.

Image

It was not fast enough to look dangerous.

It was not erratic enough to look panicked.

That was what made it wrong.

The aircraft had not given a proper transponder response.

Its registration handshake had failed twice.

Its route put it close enough to restricted airspace near Buckley that nobody on duty could pretend it was harmless.

At 8:17 a.m., the decision came down.

Three F-22 Raptors from Peterson Air Force Base were sent up to intercept.

First Lieutenant Jake Morrison took the lead, call sign Viper One.

He was young enough to still enjoy the sound of his own confidence over the radio and experienced enough to believe he had earned it.

That combination can make a pilot sharp.

It can also make him careless.

“Got eyes on target,” Morrison said as the Raptors climbed into the morning sun.

His helmet display found the aircraft ahead and boxed it in pale symbols.

Civilian L-39 Albatross.

Old Czech-built jet trainer.

Gray-blue paint.

Civilian markings, worn but visible.

No external pods.

No visible munitions.

Nothing about the aircraft looked like a threat in the way briefing slides teach threat.

Read More