Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Injections in Both Arms--So Army!
This week I went to my family doctor to get two injections. One was a tetanus booster so the woman giving me the shot asked me to stand up and let my arm hang loose. Usually at civilian doctors, I get shots or blood drawn sitting down. Standing with my arm loose is just what they told me to do in basic training in 1972 when they used the air injectors like the one in the picture above.
As the line moved slowly between the medics with the injector guns, the drill sergeant told us to be sure and stand still because if we flinched the air gun would rip our arm open. I never saw that happen, but we all believed it. The real story of terror was the Square Needle in The Left Nut on the 10th Training Day. That was scary. I wrote about that shortly after re-enlisting.
Forty-four years later, the needles are thinner, the technicians are older and I had no ill effects in either arm, just the memory of waiting for the air gun.
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
Surprising Follow Up with a MEDEVAC Pilot
I do not have a photo of MEDEVAC Pilot Suzy Danielson
But this poster covers her attitude towards life
Yesterday I posted a story on the DUSTOFF Facebook page I wrote about a MEDEVAC pilot I served with in Iraq. The story is here. She was a pilot in the Gulf War in 1991, left the Army in 1993 and forgot she was still a reserve officer. In 2009, the Army reminded her with a FEDEX package telling her to report for duty. She was 44 when she returned to active service and deployed to Iraq.
After I posted the story, I sent Suzy an email, not knowing if she was still using that address. At midnight, I got an email back from Suzy. She is in Afghanistan! Apparently she liked returning to the Blackhawk helicopter cockpit. I asked her to follow up with me when she returns.
Thursday, October 6, 2016
Cold War Draft Army: Best Army I Served In
Cold War Training Exercise
When I climbed into my bunk in basic training in 1972, the other 39 soldiers sharing my room were men between 18 and 20 years old. None of us were married. We were from nearly 30 states, from both coasts, mostly from the American South and West, but "Jersey"and I were actually from the Northeast--very rare in the active military.
No one planned to make a career of the military. We were all going to "do our time" and get out. Half of us were planning to use the Vietnam War GI Bill to pay for college, although the reality then and now is fewer than one in ten actually would use their education benefits. At our active duty stations, we all referred to anyone who re-enlisted as a LIFER: Lazy Inefficient Fuckup Expecting Retirement. More than 80% of draft-era soldiers served one enlistment and left the military. We shined our shoes, ironed our starched uniforms, told extravagant lies, and had a common enemy in the sergeants in charge of us.
Five years later in 1977, I was a tank commander in Germany. The draft effectively ended in 1973, and formally ended in 1975, ushering in the era of the Volunteer Army. In 1973, new soldiers joining a unit were 19-year-old single males on short enlistments, usually 2 or 3 years.
From 1975 on, when a new soldier joined our tank unit, that soldier was between 19 and 21 years old. He was married, had one child and his wife was pregnant again. That was the reason many of these guys had enlisted. Most had enlisted for four years because the longer enlistment in Combat Arms had a $2,500 bonus. So my new crewman was married, poor and a father.
The great increase in the number of married soldiers between the early and late 70s meant a lot of soldiers were living off base in poverty in Germany because Base Housing went by rank. And if their young wives were not in country for their two-year tour, there would eventually be a night when the soldier received a Dear John letter. Later he would be blind drunk on 80-cent per bottle Mad Dog, MD 20-20. (Actually the MD stood for Mogen David. MD 20-20 was the cheapest drunk possible and it always made me smile that the mostly southern boys swilling the stuff were getting drunk on Jewish wine.)
By this time I was a sergeant, I had re-enlisted so I was a LIFER. They still called us LIFERS, but with more married soldiers, more of them were re-enlisting. By the late 70s, LIFER had little of the sting it had during the Vietnam War. The Army was a job. The Vietnam War was over and until the Gulf War, the military was a pretty safe job.
Then I re-enlisted into yet another Army in 2007. No one made fun of LIFERs. I could not find anyone under 40 who had ever heard the acronym. In 2007 I enlisted in the 28th Combat Aviation Brigade, Pennsylvania Army National Guard. The unit had more than 100 pilots and several hundred mechanics and flight crew. More than half of the 2,000 soldiers in the brigade were at least considering a career in the Army, if they were not already committed to Army life.
The current Army, including active, reserve and National Guard, is a professional army. The Army of World War II really represented a huge cross-section of America. Every family either had a soldier in their family or a soldier next door. After World War II, for the first time in U.S. history, the wartime Army was not demobilized. Most of the soldiers went home, but the draft continued and a sizable force remained ready for war as well as occupying the countries of former enemies.
By the time the draft ended almost 30 years later, the Army represented the south and west much more than the northeast. But it was still not a professional Army. When I re-enlisted in 2007, I was the only soldier that many of my co-workers actually knew. The museum where I worked had a staff of 55 and had been in business for more than a quarter century. I was the third veteran who had ever worked there. When I deployed they had to write a policy for National Guard service. They never had a serving guardsman before. My co-workers, to use the southern expression, had more degrees than a thermometer: more than two degrees per person on average including the maintenance staff. People from cities in the northeast mostly don't even think about military service.
The result is an Army that does not represent America. It is an Army that is easier to send to war because the people who make the decisions never served and the soldiers who go to war will not come from every city, town, village and neighborhood.
A draft Army is much tougher for politicians to send to war, and the soldiers want to go home when the war is over. That, to me, is a better Army for the soldiers and for the nation.
Thursday, September 29, 2016
MEDEVAC Story from Iraq I Never Posted: Brett Feddersen, Pilot
My supervisor at Camp Adder, Iraq, in 2009 was Medevac pilot, Brett Feddersen.
Major Brett
Feddersen sits alone in the ready room next to the Medevac hangar at 11pm
hunched over his personal computer editing a document for a meeting the next
day. “I’ve got to get some sleep in case
we get a 2am call,” he says mostly to the air.
The rest of his crew is asleep or resting, waiting for the call.
Feddersen
is a senior staff officer with 2-104th General Services Aviation
Battalion, but two to four days every week he is a Medevac pilot on a 48-hour
rotation with Alaska-based Charlie Company, 1st Battalion 52nd
Aviation, an active Army unit attached to 2-104th for the current
deployment. His shift will be over at
9am the following morning, but he had a long flight in the afternoon and a long
day of meetings either side of the flight.
“I have to stay balanced, I have to stay rested, I have to complete the
mission,” he said.
It’s a
challenge he faces both in civilian life and on deployment. Senior Trooper Feddersen has served with the
Pennsylvania State Police since 1995, most recently flying Aviation Patrol Unit
One in the southeastern area of the Commonwealth. Adding Medevac pilot to his staff duties
makes life hectic, but Feddersen lives to fly.
He arranges his life to complete the staff tasks to the best of his
ability, making the time necessary to fly Medevac Blackhawks every week. He is serious and professional when
discussing staff duties, but is all smiles and broad hand and arm gestures
describing a favorite Medevac mission.
Even crawling on top of the Blackhawk underneath the rotors for
pre-flight checks before starting the engines, he is clearly enjoying himself
whether under, at the controls, or on top of a Blackhawk helicopter.
Feddersen
said flying Medevac in Iraq has many similarities with flying for his civilian
job. “Flying for the state police is
always on an emergency basis,” he said.
“The mission can be a lost child, lost hikers or hunters, or a bad guy
pursuit. We get the call. We go.”
Medevac is
the same. On the first 24 hours of his
48 hours shift, Feddersen and his crew are “second up,” the backup team that
goes if a call comes in and “first up” is already on a mission. During the first day, the crew must be ready
to take off within a half hour and can travel a short distance from the ready
hangar. On the second day the crew moves
to “first up.” The Army standard said
they must to fly within fifteen minutes of receipt of the Medevac call. In Charlie Company, the standard is eight
minutes.
Whether at
Ali Air Base or in Pennsylvania’s Twin Valley the emergency response mission
gives Feddersen a real sense of accomplishment, “We make a difference
here. When a soldier is down we do
everything we can to get them care and get them home. At home we find the lost child, get the bad
guy, it’s a great feeling.”
“One big
difference here is we have to be more vigilant when landing at a point of
injury,” Feddersen said. Scanning for
mines, IEDs (Improvised Explosive Devices), and the enemy who just came in
contact with an injured soldier are part of every mission in Iraq.
Feddersen
will turn 37 on this deployment. He
served as an enlisted military policeman for the first 5 of his 17 years of
service and also attended college. He
went to Officer Candidate School in 1997 followed by Army Aviation School. Feddersen is married and the father of two
boys. His current deployment is his
second. He was deployed to the Balkans
with the Pennsylvania National Guard in 2005.
Friday, September 23, 2016
MEDEVAC Training at Fort AP Hill
These photos are from MEDEVAC Training at Fort AP Hill at Annual Training in 2013 for 28th Combat Aviation Brigade. SFC Jeff Kwiecien is supervising the training.
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
Flight Medic Training Soldiers in Combat Medicine
These photos are from Annual Training 2014 for the 28th Combat Aviation Brigade. Flight Medic Staff Sergeant Pamela Leggore is training medics to work under combat conditions.
Thursday, September 15, 2016
One More Medal Reminds Me of Stuff That Doesn't Get Awards
On Sunday, September 11th, I received what is very likely the last medal I will get from the military. My unit gave me the Pennsylvania Meritorious Service Medal. The citation talks about all the things I did for the unit. It was about writing stories, taking pictures and re-enlisting after a quarter century as a civilian.
In other words, it talks about the kinds of things I did which got praise at the time I did them. So the 200 words of praise in Army prose was about the stuff I did right and made someone higher in the chain of command happy.
The things I did in the military that were the most difficult and that I was most proud of were not the kind of things that people get medals for.
In 1973 when I got blinded in a missile explosion, I got no award. Since the explosion happened on a test range in Utah, it was not a combat injury. I recovered my sight and the use of two fingers that were bent and broken in the blast. I will always be thankful for the surgeons who got the wire and other bits of shrapnel out of my eyes, but they had to operate six times to get all the metal out. Facing he next surgery and that feeling of a wire being pulled from my eye was one of the more difficult moments of my life. As was the night after the blast when I overheard a nurse say I would be permanently blind.
There was a moment in Iraq when I got aboard a Blackhawk helicopter in Iraq in a brownout sandstorm so bad we could only occasionally see the other Blackhawk we were flying with. At that moment, I thought about the big turbine engines on the roof of the Blackhawk just above the passenger area and about the big gear box between the engines that drive the big rotor blades. In the crash I imagined, my guts were squeezed like toothpaste out of my Kevlar vest when all that machinery on top of the helicopter crushed everyone inside. The flight was fine. The weather cleared on the way back, and I got the pictures the commander wanted.
I am grateful for the award, but every award reminds of the actual best and worst moments I had in the military, not the ones for which I got the medal.
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