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THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE ACCOUNTABILITY OF AMERICAN BASES (CAAB) |
MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan — Eleven F-16 pilots from the 35th Fighter
Wing’s 14th Fighter Squadron have earned more than 20 decorations for their
recent exploits over Iraq. Deployed in Southwest Asia, the squadron’s “Wild Weasels” initially
supported Operation Southern Watch over Iraq’s southern U.N.-mandated no-fly
zones below the 33rd parallel. That commitment ended March 21 when operations shifted to Operation Iraqi
Freedom, the offensive effort throughout Iraq. Capts. Jason Plourde and Melissa May each received the Air Medal and Aerial
Achievement medal during a commander’s call ceremony here July 18, according
to the base’s Northern Light newspaper. Plourde earned a fifth oak leaf cluster to his Air Medal and a second
cluster to his Aerial Achievement Medal while also receiving the Air Force
Commendation Medal, according to the report. May also picked up the Air Force Achievement Medal. They were cited for sustained aerial achievement in combat during the five
months the 14th Fighting Samurai squadron was deployed. On several missions, Plourde told the Northern Light that ground-based
troops directed him to targets. “I received immediate feedback from him when the bombs hit their intended
target,” he said in the paper. “Just by hearing his voice, I knew I made a
difference.” May flew more than 50 sorties during her deployment, according to the
report, including missions on the first night of Iraqi Freedom attacks. She lauded the squadron’s leadership and training for their success. “Our excellent training, our adherence to high standards, and our
squadron leadership contributed,” she told the Northern Light. “Out there,
we could focus on our primary duty — flying. We didn’t have to worry about
all the ‘other’ office duties like we do back home.” While the 14th Squadron detachment featured just 17 pilots during the
deployment, the paper quoted Air Force officials as saying it was a seasoned
cast. “When hostilities started, our squadron had already flown almost four
months over Iraq,” Plourde told the paper. “We all had become experts on
the Iraqi geography, the surface and air threats, their tactics and the flying
conditions.” The Samurai flew nearly 750 sorties totaling about 3,700 hours before
returning to Japan on April 24, Air Force officials said earlier. The Northern Light also cited other pilots as receiving decorations: Maj.
John Oh, Aerial Achievement Medal with first cluster; Capt. Paul Steinport,
Air Medal, Aerial Achievement Medal and Air Force Commendation Medal; Capt.
Benjamin Price, Aerial Achievement Medal, Air Medal with first cluster; and
Capt. Eric Puels, Air Medal with first cluster and Aerial Achievement Medal. Capt. Brian Storck earned the Air Medal with second cluster and Aerial
Achievement Medal; Capt. Michael Edwards, Air Medal with first cluster and
Aerial Achievement Medal, Capt. James Maxwell, Air Medal with first cluster,
Capt. Kris Padilla, Air Medal and first cluster, and 1st Lt. Charles Carter,
the Air Force Commendation Medal.