The Daily Telegraph - Features

The Hercules’ great peacetime adventure

In May 1972, a bomb scare on board the QE2 led to a rescue mission so high-stakes and daredevil it inspired a star-studded film.

- By Scott Bateman

Since entering RAF service in 1967, the C-130 Hercules transporte­r, one of our largest and most recognisab­le aircraft, has often flown under the radar. Only a few of the exploits of “Fat Albert” (as the C-130 is nicknamed) have made the news. For instance, following the 1984 fundraisin­g phenomenon Band Aid, the Hercules delivered life-saving aid to Ethiopia; it was also crucial, during the six years of Balkan conflict, in supporting the besieged people of Sarajevo. But many will have forgotten one of its greatest exploits: scrambling from RAF Lyneham to the mid-Atlantic in 1972 to aid the ocean liner Queen Elizabeth II. The event would go on to inspire the 1974 action thriller Juggernaut.

Early on the morning of May 18, Lt Richard Clifford, commanding officer of a specialist unit of Royal Marines, was told via a phone call from the Ministry of Defence to prepare two of his men to parachute operationa­lly into the sea. Lacking any further intelligen­ce, Clifford decided to go himself, taking Cpl Tom Jones as his number two; after travelling by helicopter from their base at Poole to RAF Lyneham, they were greeted by SSgt Clifford Oliver, an IED specialist, who’d been hastily pulled out of a training course he was conducting that morning.

The fourth team-member, Capt Robert Williams, an ammunition technical officer, was slightly delayed; he’d been diverted to another air base to have a hasty lesson in parachutin­g. Only just before noon GMT were all four assembled on the runway at RAF Lyneham – as ready as they could be for whatever it was they were about to do.

Meanwhile, for one 47 Squadron Hercules crew at Lyneham, the day had begun in similar style. All they had been told, via a phone call from their Operations Group, was that the Ministry of Defence had sent notificati­on of a bomb threat that was considered valid. The crew would therefore be flying elite forces to the scene without delay, along with a team from Air Despatch, with a quantity of dinghies. They were told to prepare their Hercules for a lengthy flight to the mid-Atlantic. Only when they were 15 minutes into the journey, flying somewhere over Cornwall, were the full details of the operation revealed to the men, via a secure channel from an accompanyi­ng Nimrod aircraft.

In a phone call to the QE2’s captain, William Law, the previous day, an anonymous man claimed that he had planted bombs in suitcases aboard the liner, which was then halfway through its journey from New York to Southampto­n via Cherbourg, and by this time close to the Azores.

There were also, apparently, two accomplice­s hidden among the passengers, one of whom, the voice said, was “a cancer sufferer with not long to live”. The devices would explode on May 18 if a $350,000 ransom, in $10 and $20 notes, wasn’t paid.

The objectives of the mission were therefore straightfo­rward: the Hercules was to rendezvous with the QE2, and enable the soldiers to parachute in, locate the bombs, and make them safe.

The weather had been forecast to be clement; it was not. As the flight

headed out over the ocean, squally winds buffeted it relentless­ly. Williams was violently sick for the entire four-hour journey. It was decided that Jones and Oliver, dropping first, would take the bulk of the kit, leaving the two officers to drop behind them, consecutiv­ely, on a second run. (“To ensure you don’t drown when you hit the water,” Clifford offered as reassuranc­e to the green-looking Williams.) From the surface of the Atlantic, they would be picked up by the QE2.

Yet the weather continued to work against them, with the cloud base as low as 400 or 600 feet. As the Hercules approached the liner, at around midday local time, the crew couldn’t see the ship. The wind was at 20 knots, and there were five-foot waves to contend with – conditions so poor that a drop would never usually have been attempted.

With almost 2,500 lives at stake, however, there was no option, so on the flight deck, the pilot decided to approach the liner at just 300 feet above sea level. As soon as he saw it, he would apply full power, and “pop up” to 800 feet, the minimum dropping-height. The four-man team, including Williams – now weak from vomiting – would jump blind into the turbulent water.

On the first run in, with the port side-door open, the team clung on to the aircraft, tossed around at barely 100 feet above the churning sea. Those QE2 passengers who were brave (or sea-sick) enough to be out on deck must have been bemused, albeit impressed, to see the Hercules appear at the base of the clouds then immediatel­y shoot up into them. Aboard the Hercules, it was a more stressful story: as the pilot took the plane into a steep climb, the parachutis­ts went into negative G-force – floating in the back of the aircraft and clinging tightly to the airframe – until, finally, the green light came on. The men jumped in sequence, and all hit the water hard and fast, going some way under before bobbing back up. The liner’s crew, having already got a lifeboat into the water, were quick to rope them in and bring them abroad.

While the QE2’s captain and crew corralled the astonished passengers as far away as possible, Clifford and Williams set about examining three suspicious suitcases that had already been discovered. Oliver and Jones, meanwhile, went to search the cars down below, several of which were without their owners, who’d opted to fly back from America to Britain instead of sailing. But by the time the cars, and two of the three cases, had been searched and found empty, only 18 minutes remained until the supposed detonation time. The decision was made to conduct a controlled explosion on the final case. The soldiers blew its lock – and were relieved to discover that it, too, contained nothing more menacing than crackling cellophane around new clothes. The QE2 had been the victim of an elaborate hoax.

With it now clear that the back-up lifeboats weren’t going to be needed, the Hercules crew made their way back to Lyneham; the bomb-disposal team were left at sea, and keen to remain incognito till they disembarke­d. The military concurred – but the MoD had other ideas. Keen to capitalise on the chance to garner some good publicity for British forces, they demanded that someone from the press be allowed to join the ship at Cherbourg, so that the soldiers’ heroics could be splashed across the British newspapers. The men agreed, as long as they could meet the passengers first, wearing clothes hastily assembled from the liner’s onboard shops, and take their meals in the wardroom, not the captain’s table.

The hoaxer, it transpired, was a 48-year-old New York shoe salesman named Joseph Landisi. He was soon arrested and charged with the threat to the QE2, as well as similar ones against American Airlines aircraft and air terminals, and was sentenced to 10 years in jail. Clifford, Williams, Oliver and Jones, meanwhile, were all awarded the Queen’s Commendati­on for Brave Conduct.

The Hercules crew, however, received nothing; for them, it was all in a day’s work. And for the trusty plane itself, that would be the case for another 40 years. It remained the first in and last out of any skirmish or conflict, right up to its last RAF mission in the summer of 2023, when it evacuated hundreds of people from the war raging in Sudan. Today, the QE2 has become a floating hotel in Dubai, where it still welcomes paying guests. But the Herc, perhaps the most recognisab­le and reliable aircraft that military aviators have ever known, has deservedly retired. The RAF may never see Fat Albert’s like again.

‘Hercules’ by Scott Bateman is published by Michael Joseph tomorrow

As the plane climbed steeply, the parachutis­ts on board went into negative G-force

 ?? ?? The labours of Hercules: the C-130 transporte­r, above; the QE2, below
The labours of Hercules: the C-130 transporte­r, above; the QE2, below
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 ?? ?? Tension: Richard Harris (standing) and co in the 1974 thriller Juggernaut
Tension: Richard Harris (standing) and co in the 1974 thriller Juggernaut

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