Local veteran reflects on service as helicopter pilot

January 31, 2018
John Edgemon took Air Conditioning Technology at South Georgia Technical College.
John Edgemon took Air Conditioning Technology at South Georgia Technical College.

The following article was written by Beth Alston, Editor of the Americus Times Recorder and published on January 29th, 2018. Here is the link to the article: http://www.americustimesrecorder.com/2018/01/29/local-veteran-reflects-on-service-as-helicopter-pilot/. The subject of the article, John Edgemon, was an Air Conditioning Technology student with Yobo体育 Instructor Glynn Cobb on the Americus campus from the Spring of 2016 through Spring 2017. South Georgia Tech salutes its veterans!

By Beth Alston

Edgemon chosen for revenge mission

AMERICUS 鈥 John Edgemon of Americus is an American hero. Modestly, he says he was just doing his job, but there鈥檚 a lot more to it than that. There is a story behind the story.
鈥淭he Final Mission of Extortion 17 鈥 Special ops, helicopter support, SEAL Team Six, and the deadliest day of the U.S. War in Afghanistan鈥, by Ed Darack, was published in fall 2017, by Smithsonian Books.
The well-researched book relates the story of the final flight of Extortion 17 on Aug. 6, 2011, near Kabul in Afghanistan, when the enemy shot down a U.S. Army CH-47D Chinook helicopter, killing all on board. Extortion鈥檚 mission was to reinforce a unit of Army Rangers in Wardak province.
Darack鈥檚 background on the soldiers and their families lends even more humanity to a heartbreaking story of loss and bad fortune.
Americus鈥 own John Edgemon, who, as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army, flew helicopters during the conflict, recalls vividly the mission that gave full payback to those who shot down Extortion 17, killing all 38 humans on board: 25 special operations personnel, five U.S. Army National Guard and Army Reserve crewmen, seven Afghan National Army Commandos, one Afghan interpreter, and one U.S military working dog. Edgemon was part of Operation Ginosa, which can be described as a revenge mission.
鈥淭he reason the bad guy got killed is he shot down the Americans and then he bragged about it,鈥 Edgemon said as he sat in the conference room of the Americus Times-Recorder鈥檚 offices recently.
Edgemon served in the U.S. Army for 8.5 years, signing up exclusively to fly helicopters. It was in his contract that he would attend helicopter school, which he did, at Fort Rucker, Ala. He had learned to a fly a small airplane, a Cessna 172, at Souther Field near Americus. He liked aviation so much he wanted to fly helicopters for the Army.
鈥淭hey鈥檒l train you for free,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 wanted to learn to fly the closest air support helicopter and be the hero to save the day when soldiers call for help. That was my fantasy. That was my goal and then I got out, two years after the incident.鈥
During his years of military service, Edgemon was deployed for a year in Korea, a year in Iraq and a year in Afghanistan where the Ginosa mission occurred.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 why a lot of people get out [of the military], because if I hadn鈥檛 gotten out, in two weeks I was going back to Afghahistan for eight months.鈥
Edgemon, now 40, said that many of those service men and women who are deployed to the Middle East 鈥済et out because they get tired of living in the Middle East half of their life. You live in a tent and have someone using the toilet right beside you. It gets old after a while. Having your own bathroom is a luxury. People forget about that. But at least we had bathrooms.鈥
There was absolutely no alcohol in Afghanistan for military forces.
The policy is not so much awareness of Muslim culture, but we all carried around loaded guns 24 hours a day,鈥 Edgemon said. 鈥淢ixing guns and alcohol and a bunch of young men is asking for trouble鈥 That鈥檚 my theory. They never posted that but there was no alcohol at all.鈥
It was mostly work during deployment, he said.
鈥淓very soldier got two weeks off during their one-year deployment and could pick out any airport they can land at, but 90 percent flew home,鈥 Edgemon said. 鈥淏ut you could tell them you want to go to Paris and get 15 days off throughout the year.鈥
Edgemon said the first thing he wanted to do when he came home was to stop by a convenience store and drink a beer.
鈥淎t the time you haven鈥檛 had a beer in 10 months. So, you just want to drink a beer, eat some junk food and take a shower in your own bathroom 鈥 simple pleasures,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd sleep at night and not worry about getting attacked or bombed. We always had rockets coming in and blowing up. We were in these bases, F.O.B., about 3,000 people and it鈥檚 pretty secure. There are guards and walls, barbed wire but the enemy would launch rockets into the base. A lot of times twice a day and with a lucky shot they鈥檒l hit and you鈥檒l think, 鈥榳ow, it didn鈥檛 hit me.鈥欌 He said he had them hit as close as 30 yards away. 鈥淭wo of them hit that close one time,鈥 he said. 鈥淕lorified bottle rockets that the Taliban fired into the base.鈥
Edgemon explained that an RPG (rocket propelled grenade) was used to down Extortion 17, not a guided missile.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e [RPGs] cheap,鈥 he said, 鈥1950s and 鈥60s technology, readily available. Very good at shooting tanks; that鈥檚 what they were designed for. But they have many uses.鈥
Edgemon started in flight school flying a Bell 206 Jet Ranger, a typical four-door helicopter used by medi-vac, news crews, law enforcement. Then he advanced to the AH-64 Apache helicopter, an attack helicopter.
鈥淗ueys carry people around,鈥 Edgemon explained. 鈥淎paches are just two pilots and have guns and missiles hanging out on the wings. Cannons, rockets and missiles. We鈥檙e like the Huey Cobra was in the 鈥60s. So, we鈥檙e the attack helicopters. We don鈥檛 haul people around; we don鈥檛 haul cargo. We鈥檙e the security guards in the sky,鈥 he said. 鈥淐hinooks carry personnel and equipment, in use since Viet Nam and it鈥檚 still the best to do it.鈥
Edgemon said it takes about three times longer to learn how to fly a helicopter as an airplane.
鈥淚 say someone of average intelligence can fly an airplane or a helicopter. You鈥檝e just got to be dedicated 鈥 and it鈥檚 going to take you a month or so to figure it out, the basics,鈥 he said.
Of the downing of Extortion 17, Edgemon said he had worked with them, but didn鈥檛 know any of them personally.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know their names because they had call signs code names because it was secret,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 worked with them. I went to briefings with them but I didn鈥檛 hang out with them. Same with the pilots, too. I just hung out with them. The SEAL Team Six, I dealt with the Gold Team. It was the Red Team that got bin Laden three months before. These guys and the pilots, we all flew out every night. I worked with them every night for a month before they were shot down. They鈥檇 land at houses in the middle of the night, raid them, capture or kill 鈥 They鈥檙e top secret. That鈥檚 the same thing they did with bin Laden. The public makes a big deal out of bin Laden mission but it was the same type house raid the Navy SEALs did most nights in Afghanistan. They knew how to do it whether it was bin Laden鈥檚 house or anyone else鈥檚 house. It was just another night for them, too.鈥
Edgemon was on duty the night of the take down of Extortion 17.
鈥淢y guys in my platoon were actually guarding Extortion,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 used to guard it every night but that night I had gone on to another mission. My guys were guarding Extortion and they called for help. I was one of the guys who reacted and flew to the crash site.鈥
Edgemon said he arrived about 45 minutes later and saw the burning wreckage.
鈥淎t the time 鈥 you never claim that anyone鈥檚 dead yet; that鈥檚 not our call,鈥 he explained. 鈥淲e say 鈥榥o movement on the ground, looking for survivors.鈥 We didn鈥檛 know if there were enemy huddling next to a tree that could get us. I鈥檓 looking for bad guys and looking for the Americans at the crash site. Plus, we鈥檙e a little nervous, they shot down one helicopter, they might shoot me down next.鈥
Edgemon said he hovered within 1,000 feet of the crash site. 鈥淔lew right overhead at 1,000 feet to get good looks. 鈥 It was at 3 a.m.鈥 He said it was a big fire and they never saw anyone moving.
鈥淲e saw all this in night vision which requires training. One goes on the head and magnifies the starlight and whatever other light sources exist 1,000 times,鈥 he said, adding that they also employed infra-red that picks up heat.
The shooting down of Extortion 17 received a lot of media attention.
鈥淩ight after the crash, the army sent in every available person, about 1,000,鈥 Edgemon recalled. 鈥淔or three days we provided 24 hours overwatch.鈥
It was during that time that the brass came up with Ginosa, a retribution mission, to locate the enemy RPG shooter and take care of business.
鈥淭wo and half days later, the night I show up for work on shift we鈥檙e told that the CIA has been tracking the guy (who shot down Extortion),鈥 Edgemon said, and 鈥測a鈥檒l are going to go out tonight and kill him.鈥
They had about an hour鈥檚 notice before taking off.
Edgemon was asked about his adrenaline levels when he learned of this mission, and his involvement.
鈥淲e were excited,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檇 been in a lot of shoot-outs. Going out and shooting people is a way of life for us but that night it was more personal for us, more dramatic. We knew it would make the national news. But the main thing was 鈥業 hope we get him upon first engagement because you don鈥檛 want the target to survive and get away which makes him more paranoid in hiding and more difficult for the CIA to reacquire.鈥 You don鈥檛 know what you鈥檙e up against. There鈥檚 a lot of pressure. You know, too, that there are drones overhead that are watching and they send a video feedback to the headquarters (at Bagram Airfield) so you鈥檙e being watched as you鈥檙e shooting this guy. That鈥檚 nerve-racking. During a similar capture/kill mission two months before Operation Ginosa, I had some of the worst shooting of my career as the high ranking military personnel in the situation room were watching. I shot at a guy and missed,鈥 he said. 鈥淥ver the next 20 minutes, headquarters anxiously watched my Apache and my helicopter wingman continue to shoot and miss the target individual with cannons until I launched a missile that destroyed him. We didn鈥檛 realize at the time but this experience helped prepare and train us for Operation Ginosa which would occur two months later.鈥
Ginosa was a five-hour mission, Edgemon said.
鈥淎fterward you replay in your head what you could have done differently,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ecause it鈥檚 so intense, and so fast at the time. You replay the scenario and try to figure out what you did wrong, did I look stupid? You play that over and over.鈥
The technology of war today is beyond sophistication.
鈥淚t鈥檚 so complicated that sometimes people don鈥檛 even know what鈥檚 going on,鈥 Edgemon said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 even know what all鈥檚 flying over my head. On a typical mission and this one included, you鈥檒l have the bad guy here, and we鈥檙e here, and you鈥檒l have other planes here and surveillance planes and they say stay between 2,000 and 3,000 feet because there鈥檚 someone at 3,000 to 4,000 feet. It鈥檚 like this beehive flying above the ground. That鈥檚 the modern army and how they do it. And also, you鈥檝e got Army, the Air Force, and the Navy and you鈥檝e got people from international countries. It鈥檚 all integrated; you don鈥檛 know who鈥檚 working for who.鈥 But it works.
Of Ginosa, Edgemon said, 鈥淎t last we got some revenge. We killed the guy before the funerals [of the Extortion 17 victims] were held.鈥
Edgemon said Aug. 6, 2011, was possibly the single deadliest day due to enemy fire for American military since 1968, during the Tet Offensive in Vietnam. 鈥淣on-combat, training missions and terrorist attacks have killed more but not due to enemy fire,鈥 he said.
During the Ginosa mission, how could Edgemon and the other Apache tell which was actually the one who had fired the RPG that brought down Extortion?
鈥淭hey can tell from the cameras; I couldn鈥檛 see it but there鈥檚 enough surveillance in there that they can see individuals,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e relaying coordinates and we鈥檙e saying it too and I could see it through heat vision 鈥 In the actual shooting, we watched the car with several guys in it for about 45 minutes; we couldn鈥檛 shoot. 鈥 Someone else owns the target and I鈥檓 just their attack person who goes after someone when they tell me to. I鈥檓 working for him. After about 45 minutes, they said 鈥榣et鈥檚 start shooting now鈥 (two Apaches). There was an Air Force jet with bombs on it and a plane with guns on it (AC-130 gunship, like in the book).鈥
Edgemon went to explain how it happened. 鈥淭he wooded area was bombed first,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd then the AC-130 plane with big guns keeps shooting at it and then they were told to stop shooting. The Apaches then came in as scavengers to look for anybody still moving around, because we can fly close and low. If you see a hot body out there you can reengage the target, and sort of fly around and see what you can see; that was our job. We were the last ones to go in and pick it, and we shot at it, too, from a distance, before going in close to pick at it. It鈥檚 not perfect; there鈥檚 a lot going on. There are six people moving in different directions, trees everywhere.鈥
Edgemon said the enemy uses guerilla warfare. 鈥淭he enemy sneak up and attack our ground soldiers. Our military is like cops riding around with the big American flag and the enemy just pop out at them,鈥 he said. 鈥淢ost of the time our infantry can easily counterattack, but when they need reinforcements or are outgunned, Apache helicopters are frequently called in for airstrikes and birds-eye surveillance. Apaches arrive more quickly compared to armored vehicles on rugged roads; we will also fly up the mountainside to shoot hidden snipers that are hard to reach by climbing. When Apache gunships arrive, the Afghan enemy always shifts from offense to defense. They also had the same experience from the Russian Hind attack helicopters in the 1980s.鈥
Edgemon flew about 1,000 missions during his deployments.
鈥淥n average one a day but some days two or three,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut a mission means a tasking. Engagement is only about 1 percent of the time. It鈥檚 sort of like deer hunting, 99 percent looking and 1 percent shooting. A lot of missions you are just looking and you don鈥檛 see anything. Sometimes you feel like a bored security guard in an empty Walmart parking lot. You鈥檙e just looking over nothing and then some days it鈥檚 exciting. The most exciting is when you see something bad happen and then you get to shoot and that鈥檚 kind of exciting, too. It鈥檚 a lot of work every time. We have procedures. The helicopter has video cameras just like police body cams.鈥
Ginosa was also a secret mission, Edgemon said, 鈥渟o secret that the people involved in the mission only had one hour notice. It was our guys (on Extortion 17鈥檚 final mission), so it was revenge. All the guys we work with every night were dead and we were sitting there with no mission.鈥
Edgemon was asked why he didn鈥檛 go with a military career.
鈥淚 never wanted to make a career out of it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 got tired of it because they control your life and what you do. It was a great experience though.鈥
Edgemon鈥檚 take-away from military service?
鈥淚 think discipline is important for people,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd being prepared and thinking of all the contingencies and possible scenarios of what could go wrong and how to prepare for it.鈥