Michael Yon dispatch: Seven
posted at 12:55 pm on February 9, 2010 by Ed Morrissey
Michael Yon occasionally allows Hot Air readers a first read on his dispatches. Today, Michael takes us along for a ride with the US Air Force in Afghanistan, providing a glimpse of the critical role they play in the fight against the Taliban and al-Qaeda in the Af-Pak theater. As with most of his dispatches, Michael also includes some incredible photographs that put us literally in the cockpit with the pilots and crew that carry out these dangerous but vital missions.

Left seat Pilot Thomas Sonne; Right seat: Major Bill Tice.
SEVEN
Kandahar, Afghanistan
09 February 2010
American forces are stationed at bases far and wide around Afghanistan. Some bases are like towns, such as Camp Bastion, Kandahar Airfield, and Bagram Airfield. But mostly they are small, often occupied by only a handful of troops.
Logistics into Afghanistan is a nightmare, and it only gets worse after you cross the border from the north or from Pakistan. By comparison, Iraq “logs” was like a run to a convenience store down the road. Afghan logs are more like driving from Miami to Seattle for grocery shopping, and then driving the groceries back to Miami while under threat of attack. Not a speck of exaggeration in that statement. Enemy logs interdiction was a large constituent of the Soviet defeat, despite that the Soviet Union comprised the entire northern border of Afghanistan. When the Soviet hammer tried to crack the Afghan rock, the hammer shattered. The Soviets can easily put people in space and keep them there, but they couldn’t handle backdoor logistics during their Afghan war. It’s easier to keep people in space than to supply our war here.
Our Coalition is stunningly more effective at logistics than were the Soviets. For instance, when the British were resupplying small FOBs near Sangin last year—just a short drive from the origin at Camp Bastion—the monthly convoys were major operations that drained needed combat power, and still vehicles were destroyed with casualties. So powerful are some of the bombs that they can launch the ultra-armored American MRAPs into the air, flipping them like turtles, often breaking the backs of soldiers. Even today, U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates is making moves to facilitate allies to get more counter-IED gear, such as MRAPs, which seems like a good move because some allies are risk-averse to the point of being ineffective (not that MRAPs are going to save them). By air, when a civilian helicopter was trying to resupply at Sangin, it was shot down just outside the base, killing the crew and at least one child on the ground. Make no mistake: this is a worthy enemy.
Without the U.S. Air Force, we would need thousands more troops here just to run convoys, and bringing in those troops would require more convoys to supply their needs. It’s okay to use contractors to bring supplies in from Pakistan or from the north, but driving up into those mountains and other remote locations would be suicidal.

The United States Air Force invited me on a resupply mission, and when I showed up at 0400 to the trailer where the crew lives, one of their doors had been blown off the night before, leaving all else intact. Nobody knows what caused the door-ripping, though SSG Michael Jeffries was outside and said he got pounded in the face by gravel. Michael Jeffries said the winds were at least 60MPH and lasted only a few seconds. The pilots inside hit the deck. Anyway, Afghan mysteries aside, we drove to a chow hall, got breakfast to-go, and drove to the flightline.
The 772 Expetionary Airlift Squadron (EAS), from Little Rock, is comprised of elements from the 19th Airlift Wing, which they call the “Black Knights.” During January 2010 the 772 EAS conducted 119 missions in Afghanistan that comprised 454 sorties. That’s a lot of convoys saved.
Today’s mission would consist of six sorties. A sortie consists of a takeoff and landing, and hopefully the landing was controlled. We would fly from KAF to Shindand to unload supplies, pick up passengers, then fly back to KAF. That would be two sorties. The crew would pick up more supplies and passengers and fly to a small base in Farah Province, then back to KAF to pick up another load, then fly to Camp Bastion, then back to KAF—mission complete—for a total of six sorties. Arguably this could be called three missions, but the Air Force is conservative and calls it one mission. The pilots would not shut down the engines which would be running all day.
Before starting engines, Captain Thomas Sonne, the pilot, adjusted an oxygen mask and showed me how to use it. He handed over a Bose noise-cancellation headset, then plugged it into the comms and demonstrated how to adjust volume on several radios and the internal.
I asked Captain Sonne if we have enough C-130 lift in Afghanistan (knowing we don’t have enough helicopters). Captain Sonne said we enough C-130 lift—not extra capacity, but enough, which coincides with what others have said. “Is the Haiti relief hurting us here?” Captain Sonne confirmed what others have said: no, they can’t feel the Haiti mission affecting our effort. Captain Sonne explained we are short on ramp space to park the aircraft, so they are busy building more ramp. This coincides with something General Petraeus told me in late 2008.
The pilot and copilot started through the strange checklist. The instrument panel showed we had 24,590 pounds of fuel. The weather was looking dicey for the landings on the rough airstrips, but takeoff would be easy, the pilots said. There were eight passengers and eight crew; three of the crew were FAST personnel (Flyaway Security Team) with body armor and weapons, and they would disembark on landing to guard the aircraft. Was good to have them along. Finally the crew got to the pre-taxi checklist. I understood a few words on this one:
“Brakes.”
“Brakes clear.”
“Copy.”
Captain Sonne was wearing night vision goggles while Major Tice, copilot, was going without. Captain Sonne’s voice came over: “We’ve got a 135,000-pound airplane,” and then he looked back over his right shoulder at me, saying, “If you have any questions, go ahead and I’ll alert you if we are busy.” “Roger,” I say in the microphone.
And now they are talking to each other again, “We’ll try to get up to 265 tactical,” says Captain Sonne.
My pen was too slow, especially in the dark cockpit, but I got some snippets:
“Pre-flight checks complete,” says Major Tice.
“Pressurized.”
“Roger.”
They talk quickly, succinctly, all business, and rumble down the dark runaway and lift away, “Gear’s up.” “Gear’s up.” The flight computer has a female voice that commands attention, and she kept saying, “Altitude, altitude, altitude, altitude,” and then much later, the computer woman says, “Thousand to go.” This has to be about one of the coolest jobs in the military. As we roar into the sky, it occurs to me that a young person with brains and a sense of adventure would be crazy not to consider joining the Air Force. This is fun!

I ask through the headset if the HUDs are classified and if it’s permissible to make photos so people at home can see. Captain Sonne and Major Tice said there is nothing classified. Have at it.

We descend into Shindand by first coming over the base, and doing a hard corkscrew down, wings sometimes tipped at 45 degrees, to avoid ground fire. The cockpit is armored against SAFIRE, but there are people in the back and it’s never a good idea to get your airplane shot.

We come down to the skinny runway, apparently made for Russian figthers, some of which were sitting near the runway. The Taliban had gotten their hands on old aircraft years ago, and somehow got them flying. Today, Taliban Air Force consists of kites and carrier pigeons. I’ve photographed a kite in downtown Kandahar that was flying in the dark with a dim strobe. Was it a signal? The pilots intended to land at about 120 knots.

We landed and the pallets were removed by forklift, followed by the “pax” (passengers).

The crew had a couple of flags hanging in the back. The pilots said they fly flags on missions for people at home, and send each flag back with a little certificate.

More passengers were loaded up and we rumbled away at about 0730, and someone said from the back that a flock of birds was off to our right. After we were safely airborne, and the pilots finished their checklists, I asked about bird strikes. “How high do bird strikes happen in Afghanistan?” Major Tice had heard of a strike that occurred at over 20,000 feet. Everyone seems to have high regard for the C-130J. The pilots explain that older variants required six crew members, but the “J” only needs four. The Navigator and Engineer no longer are needed, and so this cuts one officer and one NCO, both of whom require much expensive training. A four-man crew beats a hundred-man convoy.

And that was it; we landed back at KAF, the first two sorties complete.

KAF doubles as a civilian airport with traffic including 747s. This is the civilian side of the terminal. We can’t do a lot of top secret stuff on the airfield because civilian planes land every day and everyone can take photos.
Captain Sonne and Major Tice parked the airplane, left the motors running without the props turning, and while loadmasters re-loaded the C-130J, I got coffee.

We loaded back up and taxied to the runway for the second part of the mission: take supplies and pax to Farah Province. On the taxiway, we waited for this 747 to take off. ATC (Air Traffic Control) said something about a 747 “heavy” taking off. I asked the pilots what “heavy” means, and they answered that any aircraft weighing more than 250,000 pounds is considered “heavy,” and there are special rules at KAF for heavy. For instance, after he takes off, a truck must drive the runway to clear debris that the giant engines often blow onto the runway. The debris will not damage the C-130 (after all, they land on gravel airstrips), but a rock sucked inside an F-16 engine is a bad thing, and we don’t want to see pilots ejecting off the end of the runway while one of our jets crashes in the desert. Another rule is that we have to wait for three minutes after a “heavy” takes off because the giant airplanes leave dangerous vortices that can cause us to crash.

While we rumbled toward the FOB in Farah, the pilots were curious about the ground war and I offered a few vignettes. There are thousands of wars going on here. Everyone’s war is a snowflake.

As we approached the airstrip, the pilots put the nose down and we dived into the soup of clouds. The biggest threat in Afghanistan for fixed-wing pilots is terrain. The mountains can be severe. The pilots showed me Falcon View map with a mountain in Tajikistan, where they sometimes fly, that was denoted at 28,250 feet on the map. Mount Everest is not much higher. It’s easy to eat a mountain over here.
“Flaps 50% please.”
“Roger.”

Now over Farah and approaching the strip, we kept going down, down, down and the clouds were looking brown. Occasionally the clouds winked and we could spot the earth momentarily, until the instruments said we were a thousand feet up. The pilots could not see the ground. The ATC said visibility was less than two miles, and Captain Sonne said he could not see a half-mile ahead. A loadmaster called up saying he could barely see the ground at 1,000 feet. I just kept saying to myself, “They know what they are doing. They know what they are doing. They know what they are doing.” Captain Sonne reported we were getting some rain, and finally, at four miles out, he said “Abort,” and I drew a breath of relief and we climbed away. As we climbed out, Captain Sonne said, “A little bit of rain, I’m going to switch back to weather.”
We continued to climb away, when on another channel a pilot was talking to the ATC behind us. ATC crackled to the pilot, “Runway unsafe to land. Report your intentions.” Captain Sonne explained that the ATC can advise the pilot about unsafe conditions, but the decision to land rests with the pilot. The other pilot aborted. ATC called saying it could be 2-3 days before the sloppy runway was dry enough for safe landing.
The computer issued an alert about a fuel imbalance. Captain Sonne explained that in older C-130 variants, the flight engineer would have been aboard to monitor this, and then he explained some details about fuel balancing and why it’s important to stay within constraints to maintain stability. He reached around to his left and pulled out a book, explaining the different sections. Some alarms were critical and could mean life and death, but this was just an alert to take care of some housekeeping. He read the procedure, which he probably already had memorized, and dialed four overhead knobs to redistribute the fuel, explaining each step.
We landed back at KAF and prepared for the sortie to Camp Bastion, but got a report that an aircraft had a problem on the runway, and so the Bastion runway was shut down and there was a delay. Meanwhile, a rocket attack occurred and so we ended up on the ground, and there was a nearby boom (maybe a few hundred meters or more). We wasted time in the bunker (somebody’s rule up top) and the senior officer took inventory of his people, and finally the all-clear was sounded. We learned that the runway at Bastion was still closed. That was it. Mission was over. Not every mission goes perfectly, but then you can’t control the weather, or acts of God. And in any case, this was seven doing the job of a hundred.
Michael Yon funds his free-lance war correspondence mainly on the basis of reader contributions. Please visit Michael’s site and help keep him in the field, which will keep us informed on the progress of the war from an independent point of view — and don’t forget to read Michael’s site on a regular basis to read those reports.










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Comments
Not to take this topic totally off track, but whatever happened with that “arrest” of Michael Yon a couple months ago when he was going thru Customs?
Knucklehead on February 9, 2010 at 12:58 PM
And here I thought HUDs were only in video games.
lorien1973 on February 9, 2010 at 12:59 PM
Great job guys. Keep it up.
ted c on February 9, 2010 at 1:02 PM
Michael Yon – you are a national treasure. I true professional patriot of the highest order. Thank you for you posts from the field, and please always thanks the men and women who serve. Your posts raise the pride inside this American each and every time I read them. You’re a great man.
jake-the-goose on February 9, 2010 at 1:04 PM
YoHon isn’t a real journalist
/chuck Todd
blatantblue on February 9, 2010 at 1:08 PM
That HUD makes me leg tingle.
Took the words right out of my mouth.
BadgerHawk on February 9, 2010 at 1:12 PM
HF and best of luck to Mr. Yon.
Midas on February 9, 2010 at 1:13 PM
My heart goes out to them…they’re not even making attack runs, just delivering goods from Point A to Point B. Except they risk getting shot at. Just doing the “pick it up, move it, set it down” bit, like the guys at my local U-Haul.
Dark-Star on February 9, 2010 at 1:14 PM
Michael – thank you for this and ALL you do. You are a Patriot of the higest order! Keep up the good work and please let all the troops you come in contact w/ over there know how proud this citizen is of them. They, and you (!!), are part of what make this country so great!
Cheers,
Tom
Tom66 on February 9, 2010 at 1:15 PM
Awesome!
nolapol on February 9, 2010 at 1:17 PM
As the mother of an Airman, I find that insulting. These Airmen risk their lives everyday and you dare to compare them to box-loaders?
You’re a pathetic troll.
ladyingray on February 9, 2010 at 1:19 PM
Much thanks to Michael Yon. Great pictures.
ladyingray on February 9, 2010 at 1:20 PM
he really does great stuff
blatantblue on February 9, 2010 at 1:23 PM
i often find myself very jealous of his skills
blatantblue on February 9, 2010 at 1:23 PM
Who lit your underwear on fire?
The armed forces need box-movers just as badly as they need pilots, and they may have to endure flying bullets without having fired a shot in anger.
Dark-Star on February 9, 2010 at 1:26 PM
He is just being consistent. Support the troops, not the mission.
daesleeper on February 9, 2010 at 1:33 PM
Pretty decent article, and he even managed to get through it without breaking opsec this time.
Jim708 on February 9, 2010 at 1:34 PM
Yes. Thank you.
The troops are just do what they’re told to – it’s their duty and their job. But their on-the-job risks include dismemberment and death on a daily basis. Not too many of us can say that.
Dark-Star on February 9, 2010 at 1:39 PM
No one takes the time to think about the massive support mechanism we have and the dedicated men and women providing a somewhat thankless service. Hats off to them!
faol on February 9, 2010 at 1:44 PM
My comment was for all the Airmen involved in the transports, not just the pilots.
My son is in the Security Forces, but one of his best friends is an Air Force “box-loader” (as you put it) and there is no freaking way you can compare his job to the job the box-loaders at your local Uhaul do.
You don’t support the troops if you don’t support the mission.
ladyingray on February 9, 2010 at 1:47 PM
Nice article. Highest mountain in Tajikistan is not close to 28K feet though. It is Ismoil Somoni Peak which is only 24,590 feet (#50 on the list).
gh on February 9, 2010 at 1:50 PM
Yon is the best. Go to his site and check out the “Pedro” [Pararescue] update.
toliver on February 9, 2010 at 1:51 PM
Great report … thanks for keeping us up on what is going on.
tarpon on February 9, 2010 at 1:52 PM
Oh, chill. You son’s a rent-a-cop for airstrips, his friend is a box-jockey, I’m a geek, and we’re all doing our part to bring this war to a successful conclusion. But I don’t harbor any illusions that my job is super-heroic.
Then again, chicks dig shooters. The rest of us just have our mothers.
Sgt Steve on February 9, 2010 at 2:01 PM
FIFY
BDU-33 on February 9, 2010 at 2:12 PM
This terrific piece is just a snippet of what is on his website – do check it out. A wonderful writer/journalist that allows us to see what is going on in the war, not the crap the MSM spits out.
SWChance on February 9, 2010 at 2:22 PM
Hit the tip jar, Yon’s entire livelihood depends on it.
daesleeper on February 9, 2010 at 2:28 PM
Hah…great to hear! Thanks to all you! Really, I can’t type my appreciation. It’s beyond words.
SouthernGent on February 9, 2010 at 2:34 PM
My son is heading home after several months of providing CAS for ground forces. I guess somewhere in the back of my mind I knew they were firing back at him. Still . . .
Read the rest of the article with lump in throat.
NavyMom on February 9, 2010 at 2:38 PM
All those box loaders, and airstrip guards are every bit as important as the shooters in a war. Most of them know their job is fairly routine most of the time unless they’re in a hotspot.
Our running line in the Navy was “It’s not an adventure, it’s just another job”. And it was true then as it is now. I swept and buffed decks, performed preventive maintenance on doors and hatches. But when needed, I kept the IFF working on the planes.
Go find out how many of those loggies are needed to keep each soldier in the field, and you’ll realize that the shipping clerk (loadmaster in this case) and the short order cook are needed as well.
No supplies = dead soldiers. Bottom line.
NavyspyII on February 9, 2010 at 2:58 PM
My ex was in the Navy and I think his favorite sailors were the cooks.
ladyingray on February 9, 2010 at 3:32 PM
Kuddos to the Zoomies.
Yakko77 on February 9, 2010 at 3:34 PM
Oh my…..
lovingmyUSA on February 9, 2010 at 3:45 PM
Mr. Yon is a mensch, a patriot, and an honest man. His writing skills are superb, and his photography is unmatched; and the resulting reports, often created under the worst of circumstances and “on the fly”, are simply amazing.
In this era of slanted, politicized reporting from the traditional news outlets, Yon’s work is ever more important. I don’t often suggest to you good folks how you should use your expendable income (if you have anything left over during these trying times), but this is truly a worthy endeavor and Michael Yon’s work is absolutely critical in the pursuit of an informed electorate.
Send a couple of sawbucks, or more, if you are able.
Thank you, Michael Yon, for your work, your dedication, and your sacrifices. They are not taken for granted here in the hillbilly household.
hillbillyjim on February 9, 2010 at 4:07 PM
Michael is the Ernie Pyle of this generation.
El Coqui on February 9, 2010 at 6:54 PM
Michael Yon’s insight from the inside is always a great read whether his dispatches come from the heart of pitched battles, or from the fuselage of a cargo/passenger plane.
SilverStar830 on February 9, 2010 at 7:41 PM
As a retired (25 yrs) CMsgt USAF and spending six years in special airlift operations I can tell you Mr. Yon’s account is accurate.
Many forget, there was a lot going on between the end of Vietnam and today. I remember a year on several occasions, I spent flying missions into and out of the airfields you see today. But, when I operated from those airstrips there was more dessert than concrete.
“Damn the libs full speed ahead”. One day these missions will be a well known as the “Berlin Airlift”.
Keep up the great work and come home safe.
MSGTAS on February 10, 2010 at 9:53 AM