The_Assimilator
Executive Member
This is what happened when the F-117 was shot down by Yugoslav forces in the Balkans war. It was coming in for an attack run, opened the bay and got targeted.
Actually, it got targeted because the Yugoslavians were able to guess the bomber's attack path, partly due to sloppy procedures by NATO (reusing the same flight path, really?). Thus they stationed their SAM sites along that path, but because of NATO SEAD they had to keep them powered down. They used a human spotter to visually confirm the F-117's presence, then powered up their SAMs up at the same time the bomber was above them and had opened its bay doors, got a lock and fired 2 missiles, then powered down again. Even then, only one of those missiles hit.
It's a very shrewd approach by the Yugoslavians, but at the end of the day it was down to split-second timing and a lot of luck, which is something you really shouldn't rely on in a combat situation. If the NATO bombers had been taking randomised routes as they should've, the Yugoslavians would never have had the chance.