Posted on Aug 8, 2014
SFC Mark Merino
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Oh 58d 850x 01
In tribute to our Kiowa aviators, who flew more combat hours than any other airframe in theatre, please share your experiences with them.
Posted in these groups: Multinational force iraq emblem  mnf i   1 5 IraqUntitled2 Close Air Support (CAS)
Edited 11 y ago
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CPT Senior Instructor
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Edited 11 y ago
Oif 1 %2812%29
I just found this by accident.
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SFC Mark Merino
SFC Mark Merino
11 y
Great example LT. Convoys were that much safer with 58D's overhead.
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SGT Steve Vincent
SGT Steve Vincent
11 y
Sorry, we had Apaches bail us out a few times, but no Kiowas...
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SFC Intelligence Analyst   Atl
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I do recall an OH-58 team having one bird go down south of Baghdad in 2007 and the other bird set down and gave a spur ride to their wingmen. It happened right after one of our Apache crews did the same thing.

Aviators get a lot of sh*t, but they are pretty awesome and courageous when it comes down to it.
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SFC Mark Merino
SFC Mark Merino
11 y
121115 a xxxx 001c
Thank you for sharing that. Here is a picture of what an extraction looks like.
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CPT Senior Instructor
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We had a LRS team in contact in 2003 in Mosul. I was on the QRF on the way to back them up. It was a 6 man team up against a truck load of guys. They were pretty much pinned down. While on the way there I here a voice on the net say "You guys better hurry up. I'm going to do what I can." (The 101st was in charge of the AO and always had birds in the air for gun fights. They would just go from fight to fight in the city.) We weren't too far away and we heard them coming. It was too dark to see them but you would the chop of the blades and the guns blazing. It was pretty bad ass. By the time we got there the bad guys ran away. Just having them in the air would scare the b-geezus out of them.
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CPT Senior Instructor
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11 y
Oif 1 %2814%29
1LT Scott Doyle I went there a few times. I was with the Corps LRS. We started out at a drilling compound, business, just north of the airfield. It was deemed undefendable. Basically, it was open game on us. We moved to D-Main by the C-MOC. I think that is what it was called. It was just down the hill from the palace. We kicked out teams all up North.

We also did a brief stint with 502nd on some compound right on the river. Did you ever go to the pool when you were in mosul?
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CPT Senior Instructor
CPT (Join to see)
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A olympic pool complex
It was the olympic pool in mosul. We used it for a minute until they tried to use it to attack some americans. 1LT Scott Doyle
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Who had their butt saved by a OH-58D when they were in Afghanistan or Iraq?
SSG Gerhard S.
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Edited 11 y ago
I Did!. We were clearing the road from Abu Ghraib to BIAP in April 2004 which had been shut down by a concentration of insurgents for a number of days. That stretch of road was littered with burned out tractor trailers, craters that a truck could fit into, and other choke points. At least one helicopter had been shot down in the previous days, killing a LTC. Our supply convoy took heavy fire on the way to BIAP, and we responded with 14 heavily armed vehicles to escort them back..... we traveled TO BIAP at 25 MPH hoping to draw fire and fix the enemy.... we took no fire at that speed though. Once we linked up with the convoy we traveled at 50 mph and took all kinds of fire. Fortunately we had some Kiowa support who did a GREAT job of suppressing the fires coming from 2 canal lines off the road (inaccessible from the highway.) while we engaged the line of sight threats. There were a number of choke points on the road, including a large crater with car sized pieces of asphalt littering the roadway, and a burning fuel tanker requiring us to slow down and pass it halfway into the ditch. There were heavy concentrations of fire in these areas and at least one bad guy with an RPG. The Kiowa's were a God-send. Intel advised there were an inordinate number of funerals in the surrounding area the following day. The following day we cleared the road more thoroughly with both mounted, dismounted, and K9 teams. The road stayed clear and open after that day.
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SSG Gerhard S.
SSG Gerhard S.
11 y
VERY sad to see them go. On a brighter note, I'm happy to hear that some of the A-10's will remain in service, and I understand there'll be a wing at Selfridge Air National Guard Base here in Michigan.
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SFC Mark Merino
SFC Mark Merino
11 y
They fly over Davis Monthan every day. My wife said "what is that sound?" I said, "That's freedom, baby."
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SFC Mark Merino
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I was on Davis Monthan AFB yesterday and say it for my own eyes. A line of Kiowas (almost a full squadron) fully shrink-wrapped among the F-16's and other retired badasses. Very sad.
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SFC Mark Merino
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The final OH-58D (R) has just been delivered to the United States Army. Respect!

https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v= [login to see] 52805&set=vb [login to see] 37031&type=2&theater
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1SG Steven Stankovich
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Our KWs were out with us on every mission when we were in Afghanistan in 04-05. The crews from C and B TRPs 3/4 CAV always took care of us A TRP Ground Scouts. It was like having angels on our shoulders. Here is one of out Scout Weapons Teams providing some cover while we were on a short halt...
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SFC Mark Merino
SFC Mark Merino
11 y
Great picture!
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SGM Erik Marquez
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Conducting route recon/ security in Iraq, 2006 in the Triangle of Death Mahmudiya District near Yusufiyah and Mahmoudiyah, we had stopped to check a suspicious garbage pile on the side of a road... a pair of OH58's came sliding by at low attitude.. turned and came back. Hovered ... out the right hand glass came something heavy attached to a chem light.

Lead truck TC jumped out and retrieved the "thing" It was a water bottle, with a chem light inside, and a note attached.. Ambush---around --Corner.

We dismounted and routed the fine fellows that had been waiting for us just a few hundred meters ahead.

Had the OH team not been there we would have driven into the ambush.
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SFC Mark Merino
SFC Mark Merino
11 y
Thank God for combat improvising and alert air crews.
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SFC Mark Merino
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PO1 Master-at-Arms
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I wish I had a story on it, SFC. Sounds like you do. Care to share with us?
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