LAST MIG KILL OF THE VIETNAM WAR
On January 12, 1973, McDonald F-4B Phantom II, BUNO 153045 of Fighter Squadron One-Hundred Sixty-One (VF-161) departed from the carrier USS Midway (CV-41) on a barrier combat air patrol, watching for enemy aircraft attempting to approach the carrier group. Commander Victor Theodore Kovaleski was the pilot and LT James Allen Wise was the Radar Intercept Officer (RIO) in the rear seat. The plane orbited in a racetrack pattern ready to take on any North Vietnam MiGs that might appear.
Nearby an Air Force C-130 was operating reconnaissance drones off the North Vietnamese coast when a lone MiG-17 was detected coming from North Vietnam on an intercept route. The MiG was flying low and the F-4B was instructed to engage the MiG which was then 38 miles from the C-130. Searching the sky, Kovaleski managed to get a light reflection off the MiG’s canopy and immediately closed on his target. Kovaleski later reported, “I got a tally on the bogey at my 11 o’clock low and about four miles. As I approached a Sidewinder firing position on the MiG-17, at a six o’clock position about a mile away, the MiG broke hard port. To avoid overshooting, I pulled the nose vertical, rolled left, and placed myself in a lag pursuit position on the MiG-17.” After some hard maneuvering Kovaleski continued, “The MiG lost sight of me and turned back to the right. We pulled in behind him and shot two Sidewinders. The first knocked a bit off his tail. The second went right up his tailpipe, just exploding the airplane. By the time we did that, we were right over Hai Phog Harbor. We got out of there fast.” Following the war, intelligence reports revealed the North Vietnam pilot ejected but his parachute did not deploy. CDR Kovaleski and LT Wise were credited with the last MiG kill of the Vietnam War.
VF-161 F-4B PHANTON II WITH MIG KILL MARK ON INTAKE SPLITTER VANE
Submitted by CDR Roy A. Mosteller, USNR (Ret)