-Caveat Lector- from alt.conspiracy ----- As always, Caveat Lector. Om K ----- <A HREF="aol://5863:126/alt.conspiracy:498698">The Night Stalkers, long post </A> ----- Subject: The Night Stalkers, long post From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chris714) Date: Sat, Mar 6, 1999 9:42 PM Message-id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> I've been following the threads on the military training some people have been experiencing in urban areas. I ran across an Army Times article from July 1995 about the Night Stalkers that I thought people might find interesting, at least for background information. To confirm it for accuracy, if you have AOL you can visit Military City and search back issues of the Army Times. If you have access to Military City on the Web (that is, you have membership) you should be able to do the same thing. Failing that, visit a library... Army Times 07-10-95 Issue `NIGHT STALKERS DON'T QUIT' / RISK OF DEATH IS A CONSTANT COMPANION FOR 160TH SOAR By Sean D. Naylor FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. -- 1st Lt. Tom DiTomasso was stopped cold by the sight that greeted him as he turned into a Mogadishu alley during the fiercest battle U.S. troops had fought in decades. DiTomasso and his Ranger platoon had been fighting their way through the labyrinthine streets of the Somali capital to reach the site where a special operations Black Hawk helicopter had just been shot down. But as DiTomasso rounded the final corner, he found someone else had gotten there first. Sitting in the middle of the alley was a small Army ``Little Bird'' helicopter, its whirling rotor blades furiously skimming the roofs of the houses on either side as its two-man crew performed one of the more extraordinary medical evacuation missions of recent years. Amazed, DiTomasso watched as one of the pilots pushed two critically wounded crew members from the downed Black Hawk into the tiny space behind the Little Bird's seats. Meanwhile, as enemy rounds peppered the buildings around him, the other pilot was a study in self-control. Standing with his left foot in the cockpit, the pilot kept his left hand on the throttle, while his right foot was planted firmly in the dust of the street and his right hand gripped an MP5 submachine gun; he was mowing down the Somali militiamen who only minutes before had been swarming around the wrecked Black Hawk. As he stumbled over the corpses of Somalis, DiTomasso realized that although it was only 4:25 p.m. on a hot Somali afternoon, he was face to face with the Night Stalkers. `Everything a unit should be' The Night Stalkers are the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne), the Army helicopter unit whose pilots boast of their ability to reach their destination within 30 seconds of the planned time. To its members, the 160th represents everything an Army unit should be: Missionoriented and made up entirely of highly motivated troops who frequently deploy with their top-of-the-line weapons systems to exotic locales. Night Stalkers reject any suggestion their regiment is elitist, but more than one soldier at their headquarters here was heard to complain that few other Army units took their missions as seriously as the 160th. The unit was established in 1980 in the wake of the failed Operation Eagle Claw mission to rescue the hostages in the U.S. Embassy in the Iranian capital of Teheran. The 160th was tasked with providing helicopter support for Army special operations forces. For many years, it had maintained a fairly low profile, but the events of Oct. 34, 1993, changed all that. Exploits became known The actions of the 160th's 1st Battalion during the battle that raged that night in Mogadishu were soon known to millions of television viewers the world over, thanks largely to CW3 Michael Durant, a co-pilot of one of the two 160th Black Hawks shot down in the fight. Durant was captured by Somali gunmen, and for 11 days before his release, his bruised face stared at the American public from the covers of news magazines and television screens. Although the regiment lost two helicopters and -- far more importantly -- five soldiers in the Mogadishu battle, it emerged with an enhanced reputation for derringdo. CW3 Karl Maier and CW4 Keith Jones, the two Little Bird pilots encountered by DiTomasso, both earned the Silver Star for their gallantry that day, but theirs were by no means the only heroics, according to DiTomasso. Only minutes after DiTomasso's platoon arrived at the crash site, a combat search and rescue Black Hawk from the 160th, flown by CW3 Daniel Jollota, arrived on the scene. As the helicopter hovered at an altitude of 50 feet, its complement of Rangers scrambled down ropes as fast as they could to join their colleagues on the ground. Suddenly, with half the Rangers still on the ropes or in the aircraft, the helicopter rocked as it took a direct hit in its tail from a rocket-propelled grenade. Jollota's immediate reaction was to lurch the aircraft upward. But, realizing he still had Rangers on the ropes, he quickly settled the Black Hawk to hover in position and kept it there until all the troops had disembarked. ``I saw machine-gun fire -- tracers -- going up into the helicopter, and he just stayed there, because he knew [the Rangers] were on the ropes,'' DiTomasso said. Once the Rangers were on the ground, Jollota and his crew made it back to the airfield. ``That pilot and that crew got out of that bird, went into a spare helicopter and then flew back to see if they could do anything else for us,'' DiTomasso said. Legends of bravery Such stories already have passed into the growing body of 160th lore, which is replete with tales of uncommon bravery and heartstopping brushes with death. Soldiers in the 160th are reluctant to discuss their own exploits, but are always willing to regale a listener with accounts of their colleagues' exploits. Asked to name a single incident in the regiment's history that exemplified its troops' abilities and uncompromising commitment to their mission, 160th commander Col. Dell Dailey thought for a moment before citing an incident that occurred on the night of Dec. 20, 1989, on the eve of the invasion of Panama. ``During Operation Just Cause, one of our AH-6s [Little Birds] got shot down and crashed inside the Comandancia [Panamanian Defense Force (PDF) Headquarters],'' he said. The two pilots, Capt. George Kunkel and CW3 Fred Horsley, rushed from the aircraft, but were effectively trapped in the nerve center of the Panamanian military establishment. Preparation helps The pilots had memorized the compound's layout. From pre-mission briefings, they knew which buildings would be targeted by the Air Force's AC-130 Spectre gunships. When the major fighting started later in the night, they darted between the ``safe'' buildings, evading capture for three hours as the gunships pumped round after round into the Comandancia. Along the way, they even captured a Panamanian soldier. Finally they made good their escape by conducting a passage of lines -- never an easy task at the best of times -- with the U.S. troops assaulting the Comandancia, bringing their prisoner with them. These tales are the stuff of legend, but 160th soldiers react coolly to any suggestion that they are larger-than-life characters. ``We're special operations aviation, but what does that mean?'' asked SSgt. Jean Thomas, an MH-60K instructor for the automated flight control system. ``We're not special people. We work on special missions with special equipment.'' Special or not, there are a lot more soldiers in the 160th now than when the unit began as an ad hoc task force training to conduct a second rescue attempt in Iran. The hostages were released before the mission could be launched, but the Holloway Commission that met to consider why the Eagle Claw failed recommended that Task Force 160, as it was then known, be retained to give the Army a dedicated special operations aviation capability. A regiment in 1990 Most of the unit's assets initially came from the helicopter-rich 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault). For that reason, the unit was headquartered at the 101st's home post here. The unit grew from a battalion in 1981 to a group in 1986 and achieved regimental status in 1990, with a current strength of about 1,600 troops. Its mission is to support the Army's other special operations forces, principally Special Forces teams, the 75th Ranger Regiment, and 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta (more commonly known as Delta Force). The regiment specializes in inserting and extracting commandos with its three principal aircraft types, all of which are basic Army airframes adapted for special operations purposes: the MH-6 Little Bird, the MH-60K Black Hawk and the MH-47E Chinook. The 160th can also provide close air support for special operations missions with an attack version of the Little Bird designated the AH-6. Some or all of these capabilities have been used in every major operation involving U.S. forces since the unit's inception. Helicopters from the 160th flew the first combat missions in the 1983 invasion of Grenada, and were active in Panama in 1989, the 1991 Gulf War, Somalia in 1993, and the peaceful invasion of Haiti in September 1994. In addition, the 160th has seen action in many smaller operations, such as Prime Chance, which involved protecting oil tankers in the Persian Gulf in the late 1980s. Best of the best Such demanding missions require highquality soldiers, tough, realistic training and top-of-the-line equipment. The 160th, according to its troops, has all three. A highly selective recruitment process ensures that, with the exception of a few junior enlisted soldiers, the 160th is filled entirely with experienced volunteers. The opportunity to work with such a high caliber of soldier is one of the principal attractions of the regiment. ``We always get good quality people here, and that's a plus,'' said SSgt. Kenneth B. Hickman, an MH-60 crew chief in 1st Battalion. ``It's not as though you have to take them out and teach them how to crew an aircraft. They already know.'' ``We're surrounded by dedicated professionals,'' agreed CW4 Michael Bell, flight operations officer with 2d Battalion. ``It's very rewarding to be surrounded by troops who want to do a first class job all the time.'' Shared challenges Another benefit is the camaraderie between the regiment's soldiers and those of the elite special operations units that it supports, Bell said. ``You share the challenges and the adversity together, and you share the joy of a mission well done.'' More than any other factor, however, it is the regiment's focus on its real-world mission that provides soldiers here with job satisfaction. ``This regiment is able to very clearly focus on their mission,'' Bell said. ``A lot of other units outside special operations have a lot of distractions.'' A powerful motivator is knowing the reg iment could be called on to support an operation at a moment's notice. ``You're always training for a purpose, and chances are that purpose is just around the corner,'' said SSgt. Mark Kolesar, a 1st Battalion MH-6 crew chief. Indeed, even when most of the regiment is deployed on training or a real world mission, ``there's always an alert package ready to respond to a national crisis,'' Dailey said. Ahead of the class For the career-minded, a successful period of service in the 160th definitely puts a soldier ahead of his peers. Commissioned and warrant officers do ``very well'' in the competition for promotions and school selections, said Maj. Sam Torrey. He said this was partly explained by the regiment's demanding recruitment and assessment process, which weeds out soldiers who are promotion risks. Career prospects for the 160th's enlisted soldiers are buoyed by the number of specialist schools they get to attend, including Airborne School at Fort Benning, Ga., and the Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape course for high-risk personnel at Fort Bragg, N.C. ``In other units, you've got to fight to get these schools, you've got to beg and plead,'' said Spec. Andrew Washington, a lightwheeled vehicle mechanic in the regiment's Headquarters and Headquarters Company. ``Here, you've got it.'' Optempo is high The schools help troops cope with the regiment's rigorous optempo rates. For, once in the unit, soldiers find themselves immersed in one of the Army's most arduous training programs. ``We fly more than anybody,'' said SSgt. Kenneth Mitchell, an aircraft weapons preparer in 1st Battalion. ``We're out there at least twice, if not three times, as much as any other aviation unit.'' Dailey said the heavy training schedule, funded out of the unit's $40 million annual budget, is required by the nature of its work. As their nickname suggests, the Night Stalkers specialize in flying at low levels wearing night-vision goggles. ``Aviation skills are very perishable in general. Night-vision goggles skills are even more perishable,'' Dailey said. Therefore, 50 percent of the regiment's training takes place during the hours of darkness. In addition, the regiment tries to devote half its flying time to supporting groundpounding special operations troops, he said. But a pilot must be qualified within the unit before he flies such missions. ``Only qualified pilots will fly our most cherished and revered possession, and that's the soldier,'' he said. Most of the training takes place away from ``the reservation'' at Fort Campbell, troops said. Some of the more unorthodox training sites used by the 160th include offshore oil rigs and Navy ships. The high optempo coupled with the bonds the troops form in the regiment's extraordinarily close-knit community mean few soldiers leave of their own accord. Tours for commissioned officers last four years, but many return to the unit as soon as they are able. Tours for enlisted soldiers are also for four year, but many choose to extend beyond that. Warrants' tours are indefinite, and it is not unusual to find warrants who have spent more than a decade in the regiment. ``Most people, once they've spent time in this unit, can't see themselves going back to the regular Army,'' said CW4 Dan Laguna, flight lead instructor pilot on the AH-6 in 1st Battalion. But the long hours -- often up to 12 or 14-hour work days, plus weekends -- and frequent deployments also place heavy demands on the soldiers' families. Regiment officials say their TDY rates are no higher than those of many conventional units. But the fact that some missions are so secret that the outside world never hears of them, and the long days the soldiers have to work at Campbell, place a premium on the regiment's family-support programs. These programs, say soldiers here, are the Army's best. ``The family program we have here is like nothing you'll ever see anywhere else,'' said SSgt. Thomas, noting that the regiment had not only its own chaplain, but also its own psychologist. But on missions as dangerous as those flown by the 160th, the risk of death remains a constant companion. Some of their colleagues are still too emotionally shaken to discuss the highly publicized deaths of five of the regiment's men in the battle of Mogadishu in October 1993. ``Everybody left that place with an everlasting memory,'' said Hickman. But the deaths appear to have caused no long-term damage to the regiment's morale. ``You don't get used to it,'' said Thomas, ``you just have to accept it. It's something you live with.'' Or, as Bell said: ``We do stand behind our motto, which is `Night Stalkers don't quit.''' Copyright 1995, Army Times Publishing Company. All rights reserved. Transmitted: 11/21/95 11:22 AM (A00002JD) "Here at last, my friend, you have the little book long since expected and promised, a little book on that vast matter, namely on my own ignorance and that of many others." -Francesso Petrarca c. 1368 ----- Aloha, He'Ping, Om, Shalom, Salaam. Em Hotep, Peace Be, Omnia Bona Bonis, All My Relations. Adieu, Adios, Aloha. Amen. Roads End Kris DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright frauds is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply. 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