At 75,000 feet over the Baltic Sea, the world is dark blue above and curved below, and the only sound in the cockpit is the hiss of the pressure suit. On the morning of 29 June 1987, that calm ended with a bang.
The right engine of Lt. Col. Duane Noll’s SR-71 Blackbird exploded at Mach 3. In moments the fastest aircraft on Earth went from untouchable to vulnerable — slowing, sinking, and drifting toward the most heavily watched airspace in the Cold War. What saved it was not an American rescue. It was four Swedish fighter pilots.
QUICK FACTS
| When | 29 June 1987, over the Baltic Sea |
| The aircraft | A Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird flying the “Baltic Express” route |
| The crew | Lt. Cols. Duane Noll (pilot) and Tom Veltri (RSO) |
| What happened | Right engine exploded at Mach 3; jet fell from ~75,000 to ~25,000 ft |
| The rescuers | Four Swedish JA-37 Viggen pilots |
| Recognition | U.S. Air Medals awarded in Stockholm in 2018 — 31 years later |
Eighty thousand feet and falling
Noll and his reconnaissance systems officer, Tom Veltri, were flying the “Baltic Express,” the Blackbird’s regular run looping the Soviet coastline near the island of Gotland. When the engine let go, the jet decelerated hard and dropped from the edge of space toward 25,000 feet — slow enough, and low enough, to be caught.
The Soviets knew it instantly. They launched a MiG-25 Foxbat to intercept, with orders to force the Blackbird down or shoot it. Behind it came wave after wave of fighters — around twenty aircraft scrambled to corner one crippled spy plane that could no longer outrun anyone.

The unlikely rescuers
As the Blackbird sagged out of its protective altitude, it strayed into Swedish airspace — and four Saab JA-37 Viggens were already climbing to meet it. The pilots were Colonel Lars-Erik Blad, Major Roger Möller, Major Krister Sjöberg and Lieutenant Bo Ignell. The Viggen, with its powerful radar and clever interception tactics, was one of the only fighters in the world that could reliably get a lock on the SR-71 at all.
Technically, the Blackbird had violated Swedish neutrality. The Swedes could have simply escorted it out. Instead they closed in and stayed, flying tight on the wounded jet as it limped south. Their presence drew an invisible line: the Soviet fighters, unwilling to provoke Sweden, held off. Two neutral fighters, then four, became the wall between the Blackbird and the Foxbats.
A secret kept for 31 years
The Viggens shepherded the Blackbird until it could limp to a safe landing at Nordholz Air Base in West Germany. Noll and Veltri walked away. And then the whole thing vanished into the classified files of two air forces for three decades.
It was not until 2018 that the United States was finally able to say thank you out loud. At a ceremony at the U.S. Embassy in Stockholm that November, the four Swedish pilots — by then old men — each received an American Air Medal. Noll, who had spent thirty-one years quietly grateful, later said the sight of those Viggens on his wing had been the most welcome thing he had ever seen. Coming from a man who flew the fastest aircraft ever built, that is no small thing.
Sources: The Aviation Geek Club; The War Zone; Air Force Times; Osprey Publishing.




0 Comments