Soy Marcelo de argentina
Quick Facts
Biography
David Henry Spencer Morgan DSC (born 29 December 1947) is a former British Navy and RAF pilot who flew on attachment to the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy during the Falklands War in 1982 where he became the most successful British fighter pilot of the conflict and was also involved in the last dogfight by British fighter pilots in which enemy aircraft were destroyed.
Early life
Morgan was born on 29 December 1947 in Folkestone, Kent, his father was a World War II naval fighter pilot. He was educated at Sir Roger Manwood's School in Sandwich, Kent, and at the age of 16 he applied for a scholarship to join the Navy where it was discovered that he had a hole in the heart (atrial septal defect), this was successfully operated on. He attended the Britannia Royal Naval College in Dartmouth as an aviator and was commissioned in 1967 going on to be the first British serviceman to become a pilot after having had open heart surgery.
Early career
Morgan joined the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy in 1966 initially limited to flying helicopters owing to the operation on his heart but then transferred to the RAF in the hope of flying jets.He served first as an RAF Wessex helicopter pilot, notably in Northern Ireland with 72 Squadron in the 1970s during the Troubles. He then converted to Harrier jump jets serving in Germany, and after having accumulated nearly 1,000 hours was attached to 899 Naval Air Squadron of the Fleet Air Arm and was in the process of converting to Sea Harriers when the Falklands War began. He was subsequently attached as a Flight Lieutenant to 800 Naval Air Squadron on the aircraft carrier HMS Hermes, which was part of the task force sent to reclaim the islands following the Argentinian invasion.
Falklands war
Morgan took part in various strafing attacks notably of an Argentinian trawler, the Narwal engaged in intelligence gathering, which had refused an order to leave the area. He also participated in the first strafing attack of Argentinian aircraft, including Pucarás, on Port Stanley airport. During this attack his aircraft was hit by anti-aircraft fire. On 23 May, with his wingman Flt Lt John Leeming, he engaged a group of two Puma helicopters and an Agusta Westland A109 helicopter. The Pumas were forced down and destroyed by the pair after their crews had escaped, and the A109 was hit during the engagement and later destroyed by other aircraft after landing. One of the Pumas was confirmed as a kill for Morgan.
On 8 June during what was supposed to be a training flight as he approached Bluff Cove, he saw two British landing ships, Sir Galahad and Sir Tristram, on fire following an attack by Argentinian Skyhawks. Morgan and his wingman kept a protective flying patrol over the scene for 40 minutes, during which he spotted a landing craft in which a unit of the Welsh Guards were about to be attacked by four Argentinian aircraft. Two bombs were dropped in the direction of the landing craft. Despite only having two minutes of fuel left before having to return to his ship, Morgan engaged the first aircraft, flown by Danilo Bolzán, with an AIM-9 Sidewinder missile and destroyed it, killing the pilot. The second aircraft flown by Alfredo Vázquez was hit by fire from Morgan and destroyed, but the pilot managed to eject safely. The third plane flown by Juan Arrarás was shot down by Morgan's wingman Flt Lt David Smith, and the fourth aircraft, flown by Héctor Sánchez, had Morgan's Harrier in his sights but the guns jammed and it managed to escape despite being badly damaged and losing fuel. After the attack Morgan had to glide back to Hermes and landed with only ninety seconds of fuel left. His tally of two fighters and one helicopter destroyed and one shared destruction of a helicopter made him the most successful British fighter pilot during the conflict.As of March 2019 he was involved in the last aerial dogfight by British pilots in which enemy aircraft were destroyed.
Morgan suffered from PTSD after the conflict and his marriage failed because of this.
Award citation
Morgan was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for services during the operations in the South Atlantic:
"The Sea Harrier pilots of 800 and 899 Naval Air Squadrons embarked in HMS HERMES have shown great courage in the air battle over and around the Falkland Islands which started at the end of April and continued throughout May. They were required to fly sortie after sortie, sometimes as many as four per day, often in appalling weather conditions, but remained steadfast and determined under continuous stress and constant danger. Their contribution enabled the Task Force to gain air superiority and thus almost certainly saved many lives which would otherwise have been lost in enemy air attacks. Flight Lieutenant Morgan has flown 50 operational sorties. During one sortie, he attacked a Puma helicopter with guns causing it to crash into a hill and, on a separate occasion, he and his wing man attacked and destroyed an entire formation of four Mirages, Flight Lieutenant Morgan himself shooting down two enemy aircraft."
Postwar reconciliation
In 1993 Morgan was contacted by the journalist Maxi Gainza who asked him to participate in a meeting with Hector Sanchez, the Argentinian pilot of the 4th Skyhawk A-4B that he had engaged with on 8 June 1982. Sanchez was serving in the Persian Gulf and met with Morgan on his way home to Argentina. Morgan stated that this meeting and their subsequent friendship enabled him to overcome his PTSD particularly because Sanchez was also suffering from the same illness. This was part of a reconciliation effort by veterans from both sides and that included a number of encounters between servicemen highlighted in a series of portraits by the Argentinian anthropologist Rosana GuberSimon Weston met Carlos Cachon, the Argentinian pilot that bombed Sir Galahad with Weston on board. Morgan also had contact with Major Roberto Yanzi, the pilot of one of the Pumas that he had shot down. In 2018 he met Pablo Bolzán, the son of the pilot he had killed, accompanied him to the Falkland Islands, and placed a memorial next to the wreck of Bolzán's aircraft.
. Neil Wilkinson, an anti-aircraft gunner, met Mariano Velasco, the pilot that he shot down, andLater life
In 2007 Morgan published a book entitled Hostile Skies: My Falklands Air War, and has also written poetry about his experiences. After the conflict he continued to serve as a Harrier test pilot and instructor. Morgan transferred permanently to the Navy in 1984, and finally left in 1992 holding the rank of Lieutenant Commander. He then became a commercial pilot for Virgin Atlantic. Morgan is married and lives in Dorset, and has two children and four grandchildren.