Astrophotographer
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 3, 2004
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Lt. Col. Ed Jones is probably related to John doe since Lt. Col. Ed Jones never stated publicly he was one of the flare droppin' Warthog pilots. Lt. Col. Ed Jones murmered this to Ron Ball in 2000 who announced it before he dropped dead in 2000. The official statement from the USAF National guard of Maryland is the ufo event of march 1997 was actually A10 Warthogs "dumping" unused flares,("And we can prove it!" thats the last we've heardfrom them 10 years later) and A10 warthogs carry no more than 4 flares each. The reason they dump them before returning is safety reasons, explain the AF. 9 flares(notice I didn't quote flares this time) appeared in sequence and order from right to left as if by one plane. I am not saying this is ET darn it. I'm saying maybe the flyboys are screwing with us and think it's funny. Happens all the time, just search the vids.
Hmmm....I don't think we established that Ball is dead. However, let's move on beyond this point because I think you need to examine that the real source of all this discussion is the Arizona Republic articles of February 25 and March 1, 2007 by Scott Craven. He was the actual source for the information about Lt. Col. Ed Jones, whose authenticity can be verified. The articles states, "He now is assistant director of operations for the 104th Fighter Squadron of the Maryland National Guard." So feel free to check up on Craven's work but I am one to accept the fact that there is probably a Lt. Col. Ed Jones at the 104th fighter squadron (not to be confused with the 104th fighter wing in Mass.). If you want to check up on it, feel free to contact the PAO for the 104th (remember it is the fighter squadron and not the wing).
As for the number of flares per plane, I believe that Bill Hamilton was the one who stated there were four per aircraft but a little research revealed that this was not the case. As best I can tell the aircraft carried an SUU-25 F/A dispenser pod (or possibly the newer SUU-42). Each carries 8 flares. So each plane carried at least one dispenser with 8 flares. However, these are mounted on the hardpoints of the aircraft of which there appears to be 11. Theoretically, all 11 hardpoints could have had a pod mounted on them. I don't think that is likely but my guess is they may have mounted at least two (one per wing) meaning the aircraft probably carried 16 flares each and a minimum of eight. Jones states in the February 25th article:
He and the rest of his colleagues were cruising the night skies of southwestern Arizona on the last night of Operation Snowbird, so named because they were winter visitors. Pilots dropped flares to light the night but had no idea they were about to ignite controversy as well.
On the way back to Tucson, not far from Gila Bend, Jones says, he reminded pilots to eject their leftover flares. Since this was their last night on maneuvers, it was more cost-effective to eject the flares than to offload and store the munitions upon returning.
"One of our guys had about 10 or so left, so he started to puke them out, one after another," Jones says. "So every few seconds or so, when the next flare was ready to go, he hit the button and launched it."
Jones looked behind him and saw an evenly spaced string of lights over the desert, floating ever so slowly to earth. Each was extremely bright, a "couple million" candle power, Jones knew. They seemed to hover because heat from the flare rose into the parachute, as if each were a tiny hot-air balloon. The planes headed for the base.
Jones and the rest of the crew returned to Maryland. Several weeks later, Jones says, "All this stuff just blew up."
So it may have been just one aircraft from the formation that dropped the flares or it may have been more. We really do not know. Hopefully, this clarifies things a bit.