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OIF jargon. Angels.

Subject: Beyond the Rivalry.. Angel Hand Off to the Marines

(Thanks to Dick Catone CAPT USN Ret)

24 May 2005

Flying Angels

Today started out like almost every other day for me since I have been in Iraq. I got up at 0400, took a cold shower, and used my headlamp to dress in the dark so as not to wake my roommates. I walked just over a mile to the squadron hangar to receive the day's flight brief. I did not have time to eat breakfast as the chow hall had not yet opened. I picked up a nutrition bar laying on my desk and a bottle of water so I could eat and drink something before I went flying as I did't know if I would be back before lunch or not. I grabbed my flight equipment, M-16, and my emergency assault pack and proceeded to my helicopter. We pre-flighted the aircraft, started up, and taxied for take off. I assumed that today flight would be like yesterdays, and similar to the day before. Moving people and supplies from one part of Iraq to the other. We call it 'Ground Hog' day, after the movie starring Bill Murray. Every day starts to seem the same here. However, today was not like the others. Today was different. Today was real.

Our mission today was to extract Army soldiers from the field. They had been conducting operations to quell insurgent activities in their area of operations. Our Operations department had briefed us that the soldiers had been out patrolling for over two weeks. I knew the soldiers would be tired, dirty, and more than likely a little ripe! I also knew the soldiers would be very appreciative on getting a helicopter ride back to their base camp as they could get a well deserved hot meal and a shower. As a Marine, I like to give the Army a hard time. The Army seems to enjoy giving it right back at me. This is just good-natured professional rivalry. Every service likes to think they are the toughest, smartest, and best-looking troops in the world. I was looking forward to making a few pointed remarks to my fellow warriors over the intercom system and listening to their replies. However, I never got the chance.

Our mission was changed while in route. The extract was cancelled. Instead, we were to land at their base camp and pick up five 'Angels.' An 'Angel' is the brevity code we use to describe the deceased. Instead of picking up hungry and tired soldiers, we now were going to be flying out the same soldiers who were just recently sharing a laugh with their friends. The five Angels were carefully loaded on our aircraft one at a time. The Commanding Officer of the unit we were supporting helped load the Angels himself. He walked past the cockpit, and reached out his hand, as the senior pilot gave the Commanding Officer his hand in return. A quick squeeze of the hand, between two strangers, and two different services, over individuals we Marines never had the pleasure to meet. However, in that quick instant, the Army and the Marines Corps were one in the same. Fellow warriors had died! The simple squeeze of the hand between the two Officers let the Army know we understood their sorrow.

After the Angels were loaded, we completed our Take Off Checklist and began our departure from the camp. The unit stood at attention, over fifty rigid soldiers, saluting their fallen comrades as we exited the landing zone. I would be lying if I told you I did not shed a tear as I transitioned to forward flight. The Army was paying its last respects to their friends and brothers-in-arms. I was honored to have been a witness to this magnificent display of devotion. It is this dedication, commitment, and brotherhood, which make me proud to serve in our Armed Forces. Though the five Angels on our aircraft will never know it, they were sent off with dignity and honor. However, something tells me they
do know!

LtCol Jacques "Jackal" Naviaux II
Commanding Officer
HMM-764
Al Asad, Iraq

"We sleep soundly in our beds because rough men [and women] stand ready
in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm." - George
Orwell

H/t: Rich B.

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11 Comments

Thank you for stories like these... Its important that those of us who haven't (and now due to age and/or other reasons will never) serve to know what our boys and girls are doing 'over there' and at what price.... I'm sure there is plenty of cold beer in the afterlife.. or the almighty would be out of a job. Larry "There are no cheap plots in Arlington."
 
John - Thank you for sharing this. More brave souls who served well and deserve our tribute and tears. God rest you all, Soldiers. Larry - You might recall SFC Jeff Due from the Seattle Recruiting office flap back in January. I met him last month at the protest of the recruiting office, and according to him we are not too old - we are just overqualified!
 
Heh.. I'm a few years past the cutoff age even for the Air Force Reserve... I guess I'll always wonder how my life would have turned out if I'd let the Marines recruit me...((I don't think I'd have made the cut.. but who knows)).. though I don't think I'd have cared to be a Carter era soldier...
 
Ah, c'mon, Larry. Jimmy signed my commission - I survived! Besides, being a Carter-era soldier made being a Reagan-era soldier fun! If you'd come in at the beginning of the Reagan era, you'd have felt shortchanged after Desert Storm and the drawdown... whereas for us, that was just a slight step back, waaaay perferable to what we started with!
 
Fifty. Holy shizzle. Let's hope it cost at least 51x72 virgin visitations for the wahabbis.
 
Ciggy - you got confused (prolly by the "rigid" comment). 5 dead. Fifty troops standing at attention as their dead were lifted away. At current exchange rates... 50 dead would have equaled about 600 jihadis on a quest for raisins.
 
Very humbling, as these testimonials almost always are. I sincerely hope they know how much they are loved.
 
The description of that hand clasp really got to me--the emotions that needed no words. I'd heard about "Angels" before, but thought it was of long standing. Are you saying it's a term born in OIF?
 
FbL - Up until recently, the term used was "Kilo," from the phonetic Kilo-India-Alpha--KIA. Angels just kinda fits better. Doesn't ease the sting, though...
 
I read this email the other day, and I've also heard the term "Angel" being used for these types of missions. Although preferable to Kilo, "Angel" brings to mind something else for me. When I was in labor with Kevin, we were walking the halls and ended up in a darkened hallway at the end of the ward, away from everybody else. There was one patient down there, with an Angel on the door. Crying and moaning could be heard from inside the room. We didn't know what was happening, but it couldn't be good. When the nurse came around to check on me, I asked her about the Angel room. Her face became sullen, and she told me they refer to babies who are knowingly being delivered stillborn as "Angels", and they tend to keep their delivery rooms away from those of us delivering live babies for privacy and mourning. Needless to say, I've never looked at another Angel picture quite the same, and I stayed away from that end of the ward for the rest of my stay.
 
Reading this account reminded me of a scene I observed at Kuwait Intenational. I was walking from the RAF flightline to the USAF flightline when I saw a panel truck pulled up behind an MC-130 (not normally used for cargo). The ramp was down and there was a line of airmen, standing at parade rest, on each side of the ramp up to the vehicle. All at once, an AF First Sergeant called the detail to attention and they proceeded to present arms (salute) as 4 flag-drapes caskets were carried by Soldiers (Army) off the aircraft. As soon as the caskets were secured, the "Shirt" gave order arms and dismissed the detail. The airmen (all aircraft maintainers) then stripped off their blouses they had donned for the imprompty ceremony and went back to fixing aircraft. We are all in this together...