Soldiers are required to obey an order to perform a duty that is likely to 
result in their death but they do have a choice.
This woman was defending America and not some shit hole in the middle east.
911 is a reminder that America will always be vulnerable to terrorists 
attacks.

On Sunday, September 4, 2016 at 8:15:21 AM UTC-5, Travis wrote:
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> *Subject:* *Lt. Lucky......... I never knew this.....*
>
> Pilots often claim that the two worst things that can happen to a pilot 
> are:
>
> (1) Walking out to the aircraft knowing this will be your last flight or
>
> (2) Walking out to the aircraft NOT knowing this will be your last flight.
>
> This pilot's story adds another possibility....
>
> The events of September 11, 2001, put two F-16 pilots into the sky with 
> orders to bring down United Flight 93.
>
> Late on that Tuesday morning of September 11th, Lt. Heather "Lucky" Penney 
> was on a runway at Andrews Air Force Base and ready to fly. She had her 
> hand on the throttle of an F-16 and she had her orders, "Bring down United 
> Airlines Flight 93."
>
> The day's fourth hijacked airliner seemed to be hurtling toward 
> Washington. Penney, one of the first two combat pilots in the air that 
> morning, was told to stop it.
>
> "I genuinely believed that was going to be the last time I took off," says 
> Maj. Heather "Lucky" Penney, remembering the September 11 attacks and the 
> initial U.S. reaction.
>
> The one thing she didn't have as she roared into the crystalline sky was 
> live ammunition…. or missiles…. or anything at all to throw at a hostile 
> aircraft…. except her own plane. So *that* was the plan.
>
> Because the surprise attacks were unfolding, in that innocent age, faster 
> than they could arm war planes, Penney and her commanding officer planned 
> to fly their jets straight into a Boeing757.
>
> "We wouldn't be shooting it down. We'd be ramming the aircraft," Penney 
> recalls of her charge that day. "I would essentially be a kamikaze pilot."
>
> For years, Penney, one of the first generation of female combat pilots in 
> the country, gave no interviews about her experiences on September 11 
> (which included, eventually, escorting Air Force One back into Washington's 
> suddenly highly restricted airspace).
>
> But 14 years later, she is reflecting on one of the lesser-told tales of 
> that endlessly examined morning: How the first counterpunch the U.S. 
> Military prepared to throw at the attackers was effectively a suicide 
> mission. "We had to protect the airspace any way we could," she said last 
> week in her office at Lockheed Martin, where she is a director in the F-35 
> program.
>
> Penney, now a major but is still a petite blonde with a Colgate grin, is 
> no longer a combat flier. She flew two tours in Iraq and she serves as a 
> part-time National Guard pilot, mostly hauling VIPs around in a military 
> Gulfstream. She takes the stick of her own vintage 1941 Taylor craft 
> tail-dragger whenever she can.
>
> But none of her thousands of hours in the air quite compare with the 
> urgent rush of launching on what was supposed to be a one-way flight to a 
> midair collision. First of her kind!
>
> She was a rookie in the autumn of 2001, the first female F-16 pilot they'd 
> ever had at the 121st Fighter Squadron of the D.C. Air National Guard. She 
> had grown up smelling jet fuel. Her father flew jets in Vietnam and still 
> races them. Penney got her pilot's license when she was a literature major 
> at Purdue. She planned to be a teacher. But during a graduate program in 
> American studies, Congress opened up combat aviation to women and Penney 
> was nearly first in line. "I signed up immediately," she says. "I wanted to 
> be a fighter pilot like my dad."
>
> On that Tuesday, they had just finished two weeks of air combat training 
> in Nevada. They were sitting around a briefing table when someone looked in 
> to say a plane had hit the World Trade Center in New York. When it happened 
> once, they assumed it was some yahoo in a Cessna. When it happened again, 
> they knew it was war.
>
> But the surprise was complete. In the monumental confusion of those first 
> hours, it was impossible to get clear orders. Nothing was ready. The jets 
> were still equipped with dummy bullets from the training mission. As 
> remarkable as it seems now, there were no armed aircraft standing by and no 
> system in place to scramble them over Washington. Before that morning, all 
> eyes were looking outward, still scanning the old Cold War threat paths for 
> planes and missiles coming over the polar ice cap.
>
> "There was no perceived threat at the time, especially one coming from the 
> homeland like that," says Col. George Degnon, vice commander of the 113th 
> Wing at Andrews. "It was a little bit of a helpless feeling, but we did 
> everything humanly possible to get the aircraft armed and in the air. It 
> was amazing to see people react."
>
> Things are different today, Degnon says. At least two "hot-cocked" planes 
> are ready at all times, their pilots never more than yards from the cockpit.
>
> A third plane hit the Pentagon, and almost at once came word that a fourth 
> plane could be on the way, maybe more. The jets would be armed within an 
> hour, but somebody had to fly now, weapons or no weapons.
>
> "Lucky, you're coming with me," barked Col. Marc Sasseville. They were 
> gearing up in the pre-flight life-support area when Sasseville, struggling 
> into his flight suit, met her eye. "I'm going to go for the cockpit," 
> Sasseville said. 
>
> She replied without hesitating, "I'll take the tail." It was a plan ….. 
> and a pact. 'Let's go!'
>
> Penney had never scrambled a jet before. Normally the pre-flight is a 
> half-hour or so of methodical checks. She automatically started going down 
> the list. "Lucky, what are you doing? Get your butt up there and let's go!" 
> Sasseville shouted.
>
> She climbed in, rushed to power up the engine, screamed for her ground 
> crew to pull the chocks. The crew chief still had his headphones plugged 
> into the fuselage as she nudged the throttle forward. He ran along pulling 
> safety pins from the jet as it moved forward. She muttered a fighter 
> pilot's prayer - "God, don't let me [expletive] up"- and followed 
> Sasseville into the sky.
>
> They screamed over the smoldering Pentagon, heading northwest at more than 
> 400 mph, flying low and scanning the clear horizon. Her commander had time 
> to think about the best place to hit the enemy. "We don't train to bring 
> down airliners," said Sasseville, now stationed at the Pentagon. "If you 
> just hit the engine, it could still glide and you could guide it to a 
> target. My thought was the cockpit or the wing."
>
> He also thought about his ejection seat. Would there be an instant just 
> before impact? "I was hoping to do both at the same time," he says. "It 
> probably wasn't going to work, but that's what I was hoping."
>
> Penney worried about missing the target if she tried to bail out. "If you 
> eject and your jet soars through without impact..." she trails off, the 
> thought of failing more dreadful than the thought of dying.
>
> But she didn't have to die. She didn't have to knock down an airliner full 
> of kids and salesmen and girlfriends. They did that themselves. It would be 
> hours before Penney and Sasseville learned that United 93 had already gone 
> down in Pennsylvania, an insurrection by hostages willing to do just what 
> the two Guard pilots had been willing to do: Anything, and everything.
>
> "The real heroes are the passengers on Flight 93 who were willing to 
> sacrifice themselves, "Penney says. "I was just an accidental witness to 
> history."
>
> She and Sasseville flew the rest of the day, clearing the airspace, 
> escorting the president, looking down onto a city that would soon be 
> sending them to war.
>
> She's a single mom of two girls now. She still loves to fly. And she still 
> thinks often of that extraordinary ride down the runway a decade ago.
>
> "I genuinely believed that was going to be the last time I took off," she 
> says.
>
>  
>
>
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