It is one of the most dangerous jobs in military aviation, and almost nobody talks about it. When a combat aircraft goes down over hostile territory — when a pilot ejects into enemy-controlled ground with search-and-rescue helicopters still minutes away — someone has to fly low and slow into that same hostile airspace to suppress enemy fire long enough for the helicopter to get in and out. That someone has, for decades, been an A-10 Thunderbolt II pilot flying the “Sandy” mission.
The A-10 is retiring. By approximately 2030, the last Warthogs will have left operational service with the United States Air Force. And combat search and rescue — one of the most operationally demanding, emotionally significant, and least publicly discussed specialties in American military aviation — will need to find a new way to do its job.
Quick Facts
Mission: Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR) — recovery of downed aircrew in hostile territory
Sandy role: Armed escort aircraft that suppresses enemy fire to allow rescue helicopter extraction
Current Sandy platform: A-10C Thunderbolt II
A-10 retirement timeline: Phased through approximately 2030
Rescue helicopter: HH-60W Jolly Green II (replacing HH-60G Pave Hawk)
Options under discussion: Armed MQ-9 Reaper, F-35 adaptation, enhanced HH-60W self-defense
What the Sandy Mission Actually Requires
The term “Sandy” dates to the Vietnam War, when A-1 Skyraider propeller-driven aircraft flew combat escort for rescue helicopters. The Sandy aircraft has one job: make it survivable for the helicopter to enter the rescue area. That means flying low — often below 1,000 feet — making repeated passes, suppressing anti-aircraft guns and ground forces threatening the downed aircrew. It means loitering over the rescue site for extended periods, sometimes an hour or more.
The A-10 is arguably the most capable aircraft ever built for this specific mission. Its titanium “bathtub” around the cockpit can absorb 23mm cannon fire. Its twin turbofan engines are mounted high on the fuselage, separated so a single hit cannot destroy both. Its GAU-8 30mm Avenger rotary cannon can neutralise light armoured vehicles. And it can loiter at low altitude for extended periods on internal fuel alone — something fast jets that might replace it fundamentally cannot do.

The A-10’s Achilles heel has always been its vulnerability to modern integrated air defence systems. Against a peer adversary with SA-15, SA-22, or similar short-range air defence weapons, an A-10 loitering at low altitude is an extremely vulnerable target. This is the argument that has driven the retirement decision — that the A-10’s combat environment in a future high-end conflict against a peer adversary is simply too lethal for the platform to survive.
The counter-argument, made by A-10 advocates and many CSAR professionals, is that Sandy missions rarely take place in environments with intact peer-level air defences. By the time a combat aircraft is downed and a CSAR mission is launched, the air defences in the immediate area have typically been degraded or suppressed. The Sandy aircraft does not fight the air defence system — it fights the ground forces converging on the downed pilot.

The Candidates — and Their Shortcomings
The F-35A is the aircraft most commonly cited in Air Force planning documents as the eventual A-10 successor. In the Sandy role, it has obvious advantages: survivability, significant firepower, and advanced sensors. Its limitations are equally obvious. The F-35 burns fuel at a rate that limits low-altitude loiter time to a fraction of what an A-10 can manage. Its internal 25mm GAU-22 cannon has a much smaller ammunition capacity than the Avenger. And its stealthy airframe is not designed to absorb ground fire and keep flying — it is designed to avoid being hit.
The armed MQ-9 Reaper is a more serious candidate than it might initially appear. The MQ-9 can loiter for sixteen hours or more. It is unmanned — which eliminates the risk of adding a second aircrew member to the personnel recovery equation. It can carry Hellfire missiles and laser-guided bombs. However, it is also relatively slow, lacks the survivability of a manned aircraft in a non-permissive environment, and its sensor-to-decision loop is still slower than a human pilot reading a dynamic ground situation in real time.

The HH-60W Jolly Green II itself is being fitted with enhanced self-defense systems — a better radar warning receiver, more capable countermeasures, and provisions for crew-served weapons. The logic is to reduce the rescue helicopter’s dependence on a dedicated Sandy escort by making the rescue platform itself harder to kill. It is a partial answer rather than a complete one. A more capable helicopter reduces but does not eliminate the need for armed fixed-wing escort.
What Is Actually at Stake
The CSAR debate matters beyond the technical question of which aircraft should fly escort. It matters because of what the guarantee of recovery means to combat aviators — and by extension, to the operational commanders who direct them.

This is not merely morale. Pilots who believe they will be recovered if they go down will accept more risk to complete their missions. Pilots who do not have that confidence will be more conservative — and in some circumstances, that conservatism has real operational consequences. The Sandy mission is therefore not purely a personnel recovery capability. It is an enabler for the combat effectiveness of every other aviation asset in the force.
The Air Force’s current answer to the Sandy question is, broadly, to defer it. The service has committed to retiring the A-10 on schedule, has not named a dedicated CSAR escort replacement, and has indicated that F-35s and other available assets will perform the mission on a case-by-case basis. Critics argue this represents a genuine capability gap that will not become apparent until the first high-tempo CSAR operation discovers it the hard way.
The Gap Between Now and Next
Military aviation history is full of capability gaps that existed in theory, were ignored in peacetime, and then became urgently visible in combat. The question of A-10 replacement in the Sandy role has exactly this structure. The aircraft is going away. The requirement is not. The bridge solution is unclear.
What seems most likely, based on current acquisition trajectories, is a period of genuine reduction in dedicated CSAR escort capability — filled partially by F-35s adapting to a mission they were not optimised for, partially by armed MQ-9s in lower-threat environments, and partially by updated HH-60Ws accepting higher risk. Whether that combination is adequate will depend heavily on the character of the conflict in which it is tested.
The Warthog was ugly. It was loud. Airline passengers on approach to a nearby airport sometimes mistook it for something out of a science fiction film. No one who has ever worked in personnel recovery or CSAR will be anything other than apprehensive about the world without it.
Sources: Air Force Times; Breaking Defense; Congressional Research Service reports on A-10 retirement (2023–2025); USAF Air Combat Command; Defense News; Aviation Week & Space Technology




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