by Staff Sgt. Danielle Johnston
442nd Fighter Wing Public Affairs
11/29/2012 - WHITEMAN AIR FORCE BASE, Mo. -- In
November, five service members reunited. They were never stationed
together, nor were they even in the same branch of service. But the
event that united them was one that will never be forgotten.
It was 2008. Three hundred reservists from the 442nd Fighter Wing here
were deployed to Bagram Airbase, Afghanistan. The A-10 Thunderbolt II
unit had been called up to support Operation Enduring Freedom, something
it had already done a few times post-9/11.
Col. James Mackey, the wing's vice commander, and Lt. Col. Anthony Roe,
both A-10 pilots, were scheduled to provide close-air support to protect
an Army convoy that day for a routine mission. However, after takeoff,
the pilots were told they would not be needed.
They were flying only a few minutes before they got a call over the radio.
"The (joint terminal attack controller) on the radio said, 'I'm not
sure, but I think there might be some soldiers taking fire, can you
check it out?'" Roe said.
Calling in the big guns
Communication was tough that day due to heavy radio traffic and
interceptions - something the pilots and the Army soldiers would
remember vividly for years to come.
Army Sgt. Mauricio Arias said 17 soldiers in three vehicles had been driving along when they came under attack.
"We were surrounded, and they were firing at us from three sides," he
said. "That's when one of our vehicles became disabled, and we knew we
couldn't fit everyone into just two vehicles even if we wanted to."
At that point, the soldiers began using their radios to call for help.
They were under attack for nearly 45 minutes before they received a
response. A JTAC eight miles away finally heard them calling for help
through a choppy, intercepted signal. That's when the JTAC called in the
big guns.
As the A-10s approached, Roe was able to make radio contact with the
soldiers, who gave him their coordinates. The sound of gunfire over the
radio filled the A-10 cockpit - making it even more evident to the
pilots that they move quickly and be incredibly accurate as they would
be firing the A-10's 30-milimeter Gatling gun within 150 feet of the
soldiers.
Roe recalls the difficulty of the mission.
"The soliders had set off a smoke grenade to show us their location, but
the smoke was extremely close to friendly forces, so we had to be
extremely careful," he said. "Normally we try not to get that close to
friendly forces, especially without a JTAC to give us exact coordinates,
but it quickly became an emergency close-air support mission."
The urgency was one that was felt both on and off the ground.
"If the A-10s had arrived two or three-minutes - at most seven minutes
later- we'd die," Arias recalls. "At that time, we were fighting and
fighting, and we were running out of ammo."
A few days after the firefight, Arias met Roe. Though physically and
mentally still in recovery, he offered all he could at the time - a
sincere thank-you to the Reserve A-10 pilot who saved his life. In all,
there were 17 soldiers on the ground that day. Some suffered minor
injuries as a result of the firefight - but all made it out alive.
A daily battle
In 2011, Arias moved to Central Missouri and joined the Missouri
National Guard. While exploring Whiteman AFB one day, he saw a plane
that brought back a whirlwind of memories and emotions - the A-10. While
he admits he doesn't know much about Air Force airplanes, he said he
recognized the gun that saved his life.
"I had been dealing with that event from Afghanistan for three years at
that point," Arias said. "When I saw that airplane, I didn't know if it
was from the same unit who saved us in 2008, but it took me an entire
year to build the courage to find out."
In August 2012, Arias walked past the A-10 static display through the
front doors of the 303rd Fighter Squadron, part of the 442nd Fighter
Wing here. Arias found out Mackey had already moved to a new assignment,
and Roe was out of town.
Arias returned home that day and called his comrades back in Kentucky.
Each of them encouraged him to return to the squadron and thank them -
on behalf of the battalion. Arias returned a few weeks later. Mackey had
heard the story and had flown from Hawaii to Missouri to meet Arias.
"This was a monumental mission in our lives also," Mackey said, "so when
I heard Sergeant Arias wanted to meet us, I wasn't going to miss it."
Neither was a dozen A-10 maintainers who were on the 2008 deployment.
Many of them had heard about the impromptu mission that day, and wanted
to meet one of the soldiers from the battalion they had heard about.
Roe and Mackey showed Arias an up-close view of the A-10 - something that brought
tears to Arias - who then spoke to a room full of Reserve maintainers.
Most of his audience were reservists who were in Afghanistan and helped
launch the jets for the mission that saved his life.
"I think about that day a lot," Arias told them. "Usually I think about
how thankful I am for those two pilots. But today, I see it's not just
about the pilots. Without all of you fixing and launching the Warthogs, I
wouldn't be here today. I wouldn't be about to get married and able to
see my daughter graduate. I would be dead, so thank you to each and
every one of you for keeping me alive."
Healing the wounds
After his fellow soldiers heard about the healing Arias received by
meeting the pilots, the maintainers and the Warthog, a few knew they
needed the same.
So, in November three of the soldiers made the eight-hour drive from
Kentucky to Missouri. Some of the soldiers have moved on to civilian
life, they said, but many of them never fully healed from the events
that occurred that day.
"I've dealt with anger for many years since that deployment," said Derek
Stephens, one of the soldiers on the mission that day. "I've been
angry, and I've grieved, but now I can finally be grateful."
The soldiers presented Roe and Mackey with a plaque and a flag flown in
Afghanistan - something the pilots will hold onto closely.
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