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too long after that meeting, Carney flew from Charleston, S.C., to Athens,
Greece, where he met up with his CIA transportation. In a small aircraft,
Carney and two CIA pilots flew to Rome and then to Oman.
On April Fools
Day, Carney clad in black Levis, a black shirt and black cap
was secretly slipped into Iran to survey the Desert One landing site.
The site would be a pivotal forward staging area for the rescue mission.
Despite the stakes
and the circumstances, Carney said, I was damn glad to get out of that
airplane when we landed.
Their plane was
a decent size for three people, but not when theyre sharing it with
a fuel bladder and a fold-up motorcycle. The motorcycle was his ground
transportation.
Later Carney would
lead a six-man controller team into Desert One and witness the accident that
claimed eight American servicemens lives. But before any of that
transpired, Carney had to approve the site as a landing strip for the
operation.
Carneys mission
was to install runway lights, take core samples and perform several other
tasks on the ground. His escorts were two CIA operatives who did this type
of thing for a living.
Hed have
one hour on the ground before the airplane left.
It was the
shortest hour of my life, said the now-retired colonel. I had
so much to do and so little time to do it, I didnt really think about
anything but getting the job done.
The landing site
was next to a road. Carney would use the road to set up the landing strip.
He would march off a box-and-one landing strip. The corners of
the box, where he would bury the lights, were 90 feet wide by 300 feet. Then
the one light would be centered on the box and placed 3,000 feet
in front. The concept: land in the box and stop before the
one.
As a football
coach, marching off yards was easy, he said. What was hard was the
ground. I had to use a K-bar [knife] to chip away the ground to bury
the lights.
After setting up
the airfield, Carney went back to check his work. He discovered his escorts
landed in a different spot than they had discussed. Hence, the road, his
only orientation point, wasnt where it was supposed to be.
One hour. After
that his escorts were out of there.
There
wasnt time to go back, and I wasnt missing that plane out,
Carney said.
If he missed the
plane, he had two options to get home. One was to walk. The other was to
use the Fulton recovery system. The system was an ingenious, albeit dangerous,
recovery device. The person needing rescuing puts on a harness attached
to a wire, attached to a balloon. The balloon goes up and then a specially
equipped MC-130 swoops in, snags the wire, and whisks the person away.
Carney didnt
fear being in Iran in the middle of the night, but he was afraid of the Fulton
thing.
I was getting
on that plane, he reiterated.
In his hour on
the ground, four vehicles drove past.
It was
surprising, Carney said of the vehicles. All I could do was hit
the dirt. Theres not a whole lot of places to hide in a
desert.
Carney had people
counting on him for his special mission.
I was praying
that all would go well for John that he would return safely with a
good report on Desert One, wrote retired Col. James Kyle in his book,
The Guts to Try. Kyle was one of the lead planners and the on-scene
commander at Desert One. One thing I was sure of if anybody
could do it, John could.
Out And Back
Carney made it out of Desert One, only to return 23 days later with the rescue
force.
When he left Iran
the first time, he was worried about the landing lights. But, after jetting
back to America on the Concorde, Carney said, When I saw the satellite
imagery, it was a perfect diamond-and-one.
Not quite the plan,
but it worked.
I was happy
to see those lights come on, said retired Col. Bob Brenci, who flew
the lead C-130 into Desert One. He was relying on Carneys lights to
help him land in the Iranian Desert. They worked. He landed.
He is a true
American hero, Brenci said about Carney. Crazy, but a
hero.
Crazy, maybe, but
Carney said hes no hero.
I was just
doing what needed to be done, Carney said.
Today, Carney is
the president of the Special Operations Warrior Foundation in Tampa, Fla.,
a nonprofit organization that helps children who have lost a parent in a
special operations mission or training accident.
At 61, his hair
is a little gray, but he still looks like he could jump out of planes and
take down airfields. The former controller has a presence about him.
Hes
a natural leader with tremendous charisma, said Chief Master Sgt. Rex
Wollmann, the superintendent of the 22nd Special Tactics Squadron at McChord
Air Force Base, Wash. Wollmann has known Carney for more than 21 years. Their
first mission together was Desert One. Hes the kind of guy
youd follow anywhere, Wollmann said of his former boss.
Men like
Carney are worth a hundred planes or ships, Kyle said.
Coach went on to
participate in operations in Panama, Grenada, the Persian Gulf War and others
he cant talk about. But, hell always remember his
volunteer reconnaissance mission to Iran.
It was the
shortest hour of my life, he said.
Warrior Foundation Takes Care Of Family
Members
In the wake of the Desert One tragedy, where eight American servicemen died,
17 children were left fatherless.
To ease these families pains and worries, two organizations were formed
to provide for these kids educational future. The Bull Simmons Fund
was founded to support the Air Force children and FLAG -- the Family Liaison
Action Group -- was founded to support the families of the hostages.
Over the course of several years these two organizations came together to
form the Special Operations Warrior Foundation.
For the past 21 years, this foundation, headquartered in Tampa, Fla., raised
money and awareness to educate children of special operators killed in the
line of duty, according to retired Col. John Carney, the foundations
president and chief executive.
"The warrior foundation enhances the sense of family within the special
operations community," said Brig. Gen. Richard Comer, Air Force Special
Operations Command vice commander. "Community is constructed in deeds and
not words. This foundation is a doer."
To date the foundation has helped 12 children earn college degrees. Another
37 students are enrolled in college with the foundations financial
support. And, another 362 children fall under the foundations umbrella.
"I dont think most Americans realize that every special operator is
a volunteer," Carney said. "Six out of every 10 special operators are deployed
at any given time. Its important that they know if something happens
to them that their children will be educated."
Thats one of the main roles of the foundation. An insurance policy
for Americas silent warriors. An insurance policy born out of the tragedy
of Desert One.
For more information on the foundation, visit its site at
www.specialops.org.
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