Combat
Controllers receive Silver Star, Bronze Stars, Purple Hearts, Air Force
Combat Action Medals
12/20/2007
- MCCHORD AIR FORCE BASE, Wa. -- Twenty five medals were presented to
15 Combat Controllers and special tactics officers during a ceremony
Dec. 18 at McChord Air Force Base, Wa., presided over by the Air Force
Special Operations Command commander.

One
Silver Star, seven Bronze Stars with Valor, three Bronze Stars, two
Purple Hearts and 15 Air Force Combat Action Medals were presented to
the 22nd Special Tactics Squadron Airmen for their actions during the
unit's recent deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan.
"These Airmen represent what each of us hopes still resides in
America," said Lt. Gen. Donny Wurster, AFSOC commander. "We are
fortunate to find young American heroes in waiting who are willing to
answer the call when we need them."
The ceremony recognized these "mighty men," as the general called them,
who "fight beyond their size" alongside Army and Navy special
operations forces.
"Much of what Combat Controllers do go unrecognized," said Lt. Col
Jeffrey Staha, 22nd STS Commander. "But not today."
Combat Controllers and special tactics officers, the officer corps
equivalent, are highly-trained special operations forces and certified
FAA air traffic controllers who deploy undetected into combat and
hostile environments to establish assault zones or airfields and then
provide air traffic control and fire support.
During the unit's last six-month deployment in support of Operations
Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom, 22nd STS Airmen performed more than
1,000 combat missions, coordinated the drop of more then 260,000 pounds
of ordnance and removed more than 1,500 enemy forces from action, said
Colonel Staha.
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The
Silver Star, the nation's third highest decoration for valor, was
presented first to Tech. Sgt. Scott Innis for his actions during a
firefight with enemy forces in Afghanistan during spring 2006.
Sergeant
Innis was deployed with an Army Special Forces unit to a forward
operating base in a heavily contested region of Afghanistan. One day, a
team on patrol outside the wire came under enemy fire. Sergeant Innis
was able to call in close air support for the team and help them return
to the base.
Shortly thereafter,
their base came under heavy
enemy fire from rocket-propelled grenades, mortar fire, and small-arms
and machine gun fire. Risking his own life, Sergeant Innis climbed up a
small, wooden observation tower in the middle of the compound, openly
exposing himself to the enemy.
Once on the tower,
Sergeant
Innis lay on his back while the enemy fired small arms and RPGs trying
to take him out. For 24 hours, he repeatedly exposed himself to hostile
fire as he periodically sat up to observe the enemy's location and pass
their coordinates to coalition attack aircraft.
After the
aircraft dropped their munitions, Sergeant Innis sat up to observe
their impact and relayed the information back to the aircraft, again
marking himself as a target. At one point, Sergeant Innis was able to
direct fire onto and destroy an area being used by the enemy to store a
large weapons cache. |
In the
middle of the intense firefight, Sergeant Innis also coordinated
medical evacuation for several seriously injured American and coalition
troops. His actions lead to the destruction of more than 100 enemy
forces.
However,
the Combat Controller would not consider himself a hero. He
credits his actions to the training he and other Combat Controllers
receive.
"You could have
replaced me with any of the other
Airmen on the stage with me today," he said. "They would have done the
same thing."
Sergeant Innis also
received a Bronze Star with valor and an Air Force Combat Action Medal
during the ceremony. |

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Another
reluctant hero honored during the ceremony was Tech. Sgt. Jason Dryer,
who received a Bronze Star with Valor and a Purple Heart for two
separate incidents during a deployment to Afghanistan earlier this
year.
Sergeant Dryer received the Purple Heart for wounds he received when
the Humvee he and his Army Special Forces team were riding in triggered
an improvised explosive device. The group was on their way to educate
local Afghani civilians on the Taliban threat in the area and to warn
them of the presence of IEDs throughout the countryside when the
vehicle was hit.
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The blast from the
IED blew Sergeant Dryer more than 30 feet from the
vehicle, knocking him unconscious, breaking several bones, and severely
injuring his shoulder and a knee. About two hours later Sergeant Dryer
regained consciousness in the arms of one of his Army teammates to the
sound F-15s providing protection from above.
When he came to, Sergeant Innis' first thoughts were those typical of a
Combat Controller.
"My
first thought was, 'I've only been here six weeks, I'm not ready to go
home yet,'" he said. "I even remember dreaming about it while I was
unconscious."
Sergeant Dryer was evacuated to Kandahar Air Base where he was treated
in the hospital.
Thanks
to the immediate first aid he received in the field and the follow-on
care at
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the
hospital, Sergeant Dryer's dreams came true and he rejoined
his team at their forward operating base only a few days later.
He was able to serve the remainder of his deployment, and even earned a
Bronze Star with Valor for actions during a firefight with Taliban
forces a few months after his injuries. During that engagement,
Sergeant Dryer as able to accurately direct 40 mm fire from an AC-130
gunship on an enemy target no more than 70 meters from his team's
position.
Despite being seriously injured during his last deployment, Sergeant
Dryer's focus now is on fully recovering and preparing his body for his
next turn in the fight.
"This is the job I've trained a quarter of my life to do," said
Sergeant Dryer, who also received an Air Force Combat Action Medal
during the ceremony. "I love it. I'm looking forward to deploying and
doing it all again."
Their motto "First There" reaffirms his and all Combat Controllers'
commitment to undertaking the most dangerous missions behind enemy
lines by leading the way for other forces to follow. For Sergeant
Innis, there's no better job than this.
"It's the best special operations job you've never heard of," said
Sergeant Innis. "If you like to jump from airplanes and scuba dive and
be in the middle of the action, this is where you want to be."