by Staff Sgt. Luther Mitchell Jr.
56th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
11/15/2013 - LUKE AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. -- "It
was dusk, one of the worst times to use night vision goggles. The sun
was going down over my right shoulder. The Mediterranean was dark and
the sky was dark, like being in a gigantic black hole. It was hard to
tell which way was up and which way was down. We started looking for
targets outside of Tripoli. We had determined, by the amount of
surface-to-air equipment there, the Gaddafi regime would be using it to
target coalition aircraft. Eliminating the equipment was a high
priority."
Maj. Adam Thornton, 56th Training Squadron instructor pilot, says he
will never forget this mission. It was the longest mission he had flown,
one in which he eliminated multiple enemy targets and earned an Air
Medal for going above and beyond the call of duty.
Thornton was in an airplane on his way to Nellis Air Force Base, Nev.,
from Shaw AFB, S.C., for a temporary duty assignment, when in midflight
his plane changed course and headed back to Shaw. His unit had been
activated in response to Operation Odyssey Dawn, the 2011 U.S.-led
operation in Libya to implement a no-fly zone and prevent forces loyal
to President Muammar Gaddafi from carrying out air attacks on rebel
forces.
Two weeks later, on a Thursday afternoon, Thornton got word he was
deploying to Aviano Air Base, Italy, without word of how long he would
be there.
"We got to Aviano on a Monday afternoon and by Thursday night I was flying my first combat mission into Libya," he said.
By then Operation Odyssey Dawn had transitioned into Operation Unified
Protector, which was led by North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces.
Coalition forces spent the next three weeks gathering information and
preparing to move in, Thornton said.
"We were kind of standoffish over the Gulf of Sidra, waiting to shoot
down radars," he said. "That progressed into us going over land into
Africa looking for surface-to-air radars and missile sites."
Thornton flew his longest single sortie mission in Libya on July 10,
leaving the lush landscape of Italy behind and descending into the
darkness of Africa.
"We took off out of northern Italy just before dusk," he said, "and I
could see the snow caps of the Alps going off into the distance,
something I'm probably never going to see again in my life."
Thornton "fenced in," after arriving in the combat zone, checking his
aircraft's avionics first, doing chaff and flare, ground system checks
and getting ready to go into hostile territory.
It was not long after arriving there he found his first target.
"We located a straight flush radar that had been broken down into travel
mode," he said. "We positively indentified it as part of the Gaddafi
regime and in 15 minutes we had clearance to engage."
Thornton, along with his wingman, readied to move in.
"We pressed in using the sniper pod to generate coordinates for the
bomb," Thornton said. "Typical time of fall for a bomb is about a
minute, which is the longest minute of your life. When it struck the
SA-6 radar, it was right on target."
The bomb hit the chassis and exploded, leaving the target burning neon orange.
Thornton and his wingman were then asked to assist another coalition
strike force that needed their support. Thornton and his wingman, while
on station, found another radar used for strategic SAM sites. Thornton
again dropped his bombs and took out the target.
"It was a direct hit," he said. "When the bomb hit, the site looked like
it was made out of paper mache. It left nothing behind but a hotspot in
the ground."
Thornton had flown in the dark throughout these hits. All the lights on
his jet had been turned off in order to remain undetected by enemy
radar.
Thornton flew a total of 11 hours from takeoff to landing. For this
mission, Thornton would earn an Air Medal, which is awarded to U.S.
military and civilian personnel for single acts of heroism while
participating in aerial flight in actual support of combat operations.
For Thornton, the most satisfying part of his deployment was not
receiving a medal, but doing the job he'd trained for over the previous
eight years.
"There were a lot of guys who received medals, but none of the guys who
were there felt like they did anything special," he said. "I feel
flattered for the decorations, but the most rewarding thing is doing the
job you trained for."
Monday, November 18, 2013
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