Hirosaki Takagi, a former F-15J pilot, explains that the episode took place after a previous DACT session during which JASDF F-15s won easily against US Navy F-14s.
Four F-15Js from the Japan Air Self-Defense Force’s 304 Squadron were in a dissimilar air combat training (DACT) with US Navy F-14As many years ago as when they lost the fight, the Tomcats chose to employ their AIM-54 Phoenix missiles instead of entering into dogfights with the Japanese pilots, Hirosaki Takagi, a former F-15J pilot, recalls in an article that appeared on the Japanese website News.Nifty.com and was briefly translated by Alert 5.com.
The piece, which was written to commemorate the arrival of the F-15J in Japan 40 years ago, features several interviews with early-generation Eagle pilots who transitioned to the F-15 and trained future pilots.
Takagi explains that the episode took place after a previous DACT session during which JASDF F-15s won easily against US Navy F-14s.
What happened during the previous engagement against US Navy Tomcats, according to Takagi, was that 304 Squadron’s Eagles emerged as winners, scoring multiple kills against American F-14s: “No matter how many times we did it, we always won,’ Takagi said. What gave the more maneuverable F-15 an advantage was its edge over the F-14 in Within Visual Range (WVR) engagements.
But during the second engagement of the day, while he was leading the four-ship formation of F-15s to another dogfight against US Navy F-14s, Takagi was contacted by a ground control officer in charge to follow the drill, who informed him that all the Eagles had been shot down.
Takagi was surprised: he never visually confirmed the F-14s, and the lock-on warning system never rang in his cockpit. The Tomcats had chosen to use their AIM-54 Phoenix missiles and, according to Takagi, fired them from a distance of 130 miles (210 Km), ending the engagement before merging with Japanese F-15s.
Besides confirming that the F-15 was more maneuverable than the F-14 during dogfights, Takagi’s story also highlights that the AIM-54 was more than capable of shooting down fighter-sized targets (and not only bomber aircraft, as many still believe).
The AIM-54 Phoenix missile was an airborne weapons control system with multiple-target handling capabilities, used to kill multiple air targets with conventional warheads. Near-simultaneous launch was possible against up to six targets in all weather and heavy jamming environments. The improved Phoenix, the AIM-54C, could better counter projected threats from tactical aircraft and cruise missiles.
Photo by U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force