Philadelphia Inquirer
Posted on Thu, Mar. 06, 2003
Air Unit Gets Orders To Deploy
The 111th Fighter Wing, stationed at Willow Grove, has seen action before with its A-10 "Warthog" jets.
By Chris Gray
Inquirer Staff Writer
HORSHAM - The buildup toward war in Iraq hit home again this week, as 200 members of the often-deployed 111th Fighter Wing of the Pennsylvania Air National Guard were ordered to report to Southwest Asia and other overseas locations.
"The folks are standing by to leave at a moment's notice," said Maj. Preston Smith, executive officer of the unit stationed at the Willow Grove Joint Reserve Base. The deployment could last a year, he said yesterday.
About 140 of the pilots, aircraft support crews and maintenance personnel in the 111th Fighter Wing are to go to Southwest Asia - a general geographical term used by the military to describe the Middle East, Smith said. The rest will go to various locations to assist other Air Force units.
The 111th Fighter Wing flies A-10 Thunderbolt II jets - heavily armed ground-attack aircraft also known as "Warthogs." Although the A-10s are not as fast or high-flying as the more glamorous F-16s, they can handle several functions, such as blasting tanks and other threats to ground troops or serving as an in-air traffic controller for fighter planes, Smith said.
The unit also specializes in running search- and-rescue missions for downed pilots. Typically, the powerful A-10s hold off the enemy long enough for helicopters to go in for the rescue, Smith said.
The Warthogs played a crucial role in the military's fight against al-Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan, and about 80 members of the 111th Fighter Wing were deployed there last December. While a few remain at Bagram Air Base, most returned in January, Smith said.
The unit is no stranger to Iraq, as members have patrolled the no-fly zone in the southern part of the country on previous deployments in 2001, 1999 and 1995.
At the base on Tuesday, guard members lined up to update emergency contact information, pick up their identification tags, and get financial and legal affairs in order. Then they returned to their homes to wait for aircraft that would take them overseas - and say their last good-byes to family members.
Michael, an aircraft maintenance officer from Gilbertsville, who asked that his full name not be printed for security reasons, said he didn't anticipate major problems with the current mission.
"I'm very confident that we're going to be fine and we'll do whatever is right," said the 40-year-old major. "I'm more concerned for the people I'm leaving behind here."
That includes coworkers at Sieman's, a software development company where Michael works as a group manager. The company has been very understanding about his deployment and will shift his duties while he is gone, he said.
E-mail will be the most effective way that he can stay in touch with his wife and 8-year-old daughter, who has been told that "we're going over there to do things that need to be done to make the world a safer place," the officer said.
"She understands that - as far as an 8-year-old could," he said.
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Good luck and Godspeed, bros.
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