Thank you for your service tooReady, Two!
And thank you for your service Sir.
Thank you for your service tooReady, Two!
And thank you for your service Sir.
And you as well dear.Thank you for your service too
Thank you, that is very kind but I never served I just shared my hubby with them for awhile and provided a few support services via a contractor. All in all it wasn't the wearing, all consuming, 24 hour a day commitment that you guys made with each enlistment and backed completely with your body and soul and for people like you I am very grateful.And you as well dear.
But I will wager yours was more traumatic than mine should I venture to guess.
But seriously, thank you.
I'm surprised the Politically Correct assholes aren't complaining about the use of a cross for a medal."Staff Sgt. Richard Hunter, a combat controller with the 23rd Special Tactics Squadron, will receive the Air Force Cross for his actions during a 2016 battle in Kunduz Province, Afghanistan, the commander of Air Force Special Operations Command said Tuesday.
During the battle, Hunter called in 31 danger-close air strikes in support of his 12-man Army Special Forces team, said Lt. Gen. Brad Webb. Some of those air strikes were as close as 13 meters from friendly forces, Webb added.
The team had been ambushed by insurgents in elevated positions along the northern village of Boz Kandahari. Hunter controlled AC-130 Gunships and AH-64 Apaches as the team moved through the village and was ultimately evacuated by helicopter under fire.
Over the course of the engagement, Hunter was “firing his own weapon, protecting others, providing first aid to others, and calling in air strikes,” Webb said. “It was an extremely heroic mission. I‘m very, very proud of him.”
http://www.airforcetimes.com/news/your-air-force/2017/09/19/combat-controller-to-receive-air-force-cross-for-actions-during-fierce-afghan-battle/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=emailutm_campaign=EBB 09.20.2017&utm_term=Editorial - Military - Early Bird Brief
Ah yes the B-52. Affectionally referred to by the maintenance crew as a BFU. <big fucking ugly>Yes a spitfire, a P-51, a F4-U, a C-47, a B-52 though that's quasi current LOL and a couple others. Oh and I drove by the Warthog on the way out there. I'll get some pics for you, she still has her cannon ha ha!
Yup, hubby trained on the BUF before moving to the C-141Ah yes the B-52. Affectionally referred to by the maintenance crew as a BFU. <big fucking ugly>
Correction, that is BUFFAh yes the B-52. Affectionally referred to by the maintenance crew as a BFU. <big fucking ugly>
A rule of physics in TnT is every thread devolves from the topic. It's a corollary of entropy.Ok, don't quite know what this thread devolved into, but i'm a vet. Army, 1984-2009. Iraq 2003-2004. I missed out on Desert Storm, I was part of the Opfor at the National Training Center for that dance, lol! I had a slice element from my team in the Bosnia deal, and had a forward team in Kuwait in 2002 in prep for the invasion. Started of a 13B, Cannon Crewmember, reclassified in 89 to a 63H, Track Vehicle repairer.
So the question becomes what was the nature of the 'explosion' heard by sending equipment reported earlier? Either the gas from the batteries blew up or the sub sank deep enough to get crushed.Have you been following the sad story of the Argentinian sub lost at sea?
"About 12:30 a.m. on Nov. 15, San Juan’s captain used a satellite phone to alert his Argentine Navy superiors the sub had taken on salt water through the snorkel – used to replenish air to the submerged sub. The water intrusion short-circuited the batteries in the submarine’s forward compartments, sparking either a fire or smoke, according to an Argentine Navy statement first reported by Argentina’s news station A24.
A CNN English translation of the message A24 broadcast is: “Seawater leaked in through the ventilation system into battery system No. 3, causing a short circuit and the early stages of a fire where the batteries were. The batteries on the external bow are out of service. We are currently submerging with a divided circuit. Nothing new to report regarding personnel. Will keep you informed.”
I mean come on now, this can hardly have been a T/S mission
https://news.usni.org/2017/11/29/water-entered-missing-argentine-sub-snorkel-detected-explosion?utm_source=USNI+News&utm_campaign=8e0e41a961-USNI_NEWS_DAILY&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_0dd4a1450b-8e0e41a961-231902369&ct=t(USNI_NEWS_DAILY)&mc_cid=8e0e41a961&mc_eid=be4105e310
IKR? Fire at sea is scary enough much less under it.I've ridden ships for 15 years of my younger life and you could not tie me up and put me on a sub - I've always been terrified of them & this just illustrates why.
Edit: And being more than a bit claustrophobic dosn't help here either.