Four airmen recieve DFC for Afghanistan evacuation

| April 6, 2022

Lt. Col. Dominic S. Calderon, 301st Airlift Squadron chief of training; 1st Lt. Kyle Anderson, 301st AS assistant operations officer; Master Sgt. Silva Foster, 301st AS loadmaster; Senior Airman Michael Geller, 517th Airlift Squadron loadmaster; and and Staff Sgt. Dennis Gonzalez-Furman, 437th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron flying crew chief, stand during a ceremony honoring four of them as recipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross at Travis Air Force Base, California, Apr. 1, 2022. (Staff Sgt. Ryan Green/U.S. Air Force).

Jeff LPH 3 sends in word that some Zoomies received attaboys for their efforts during Biden’s horrendously botched Afghanistan withdrawal.

From Task and Purpose;

Four members from a C-17A Globemaster III aircrew were awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for their performance during the chaotic and violent evacuation of Kabul last August.

During a ceremony at Travis Air Force Base in California on Friday, the medals were presented to Lt. Col. Dominic Calderon, 1st Lt. Kyle Anderson and Master Sgt. Silva Foster, from the 301st Airlift Squadron, and Senior Airman Michael Geller of the 517th Airlift Squadron. The ceremony also recognized Staff Sgt. Dennis Gonzales-Furman, of the 437th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron at Joint Base Charleston, S.C, who was the aircrew’s flying crew chief during their mission in Afghanistan.

The crew was initially tasked with flying in members of the 82nd Airborne Division, who were helping secure Hamid Karzai International Airport during the U.S. withdrawal from the country. On Aug. 15, as the Taliban seized control of Afghanistan’s capital and thousands of civilians started making their way to the airport in search of escape, the crew’s mission quickly changed to one of evacuation.

“The conditions that day were like none I had ever seen,” said Calderon a short time after his return from Afghanistan, according to an Air Force press release. “The airfield was breached and there were mass crowds entering the airfield. Still, the crew performed well under enormous pressure. I couldn’t be more proud of the way the entire crew operated.”

Despite the heightened risk at the airport and the minimal manning of the aircrew, they ultimately rescued 153 U.S. citizens, allied partners and Afghans.

For Calderon, Anderson and Foster, who are members of the Air Force Reserve, the Distinguished Flying Cross, which is awarded to service members who distinguish themselves in combat through heroism or extraordinary achievement in aviation, was especially significant.

“Within the Reserves, we only have 45 people right now who have received this award,” said Maj. Gen. Matthew J. Burger, the deputy commander of Air Force Reserve Command and former commander of the 349th Air Mobility Wing. “Only five of those were mobility airmen. The last time a mobility airman was awarded this award was in 2004. This is a unique and special, and an extraordinary achievement while conducting flight operations.”

“This award for my military career is the biggest honor I ever experienced,” added Foster. “You train for this throughout your entire career and you actually hope this moment never comes up.”

The Air Force noted in their presser on it that this was a “Total Force” crew. As mentioned above, the 301st Airlift Squadron members are part of the Air Force Reserve, the loadmaster from the 517th Airlift Squadron is active duty, and the flying crew chief is from the 437th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron (a unit of active duty and full-time AFR technicians).

Taking a closer look at the pictures, MSgt Foster already had a DFC and is a veteran of the first Gulf War! That was one good thing about the reserves. There was a lot of experienced men and women to work with.

Category: Afghanistan, Air Force, Bravo Zulu

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Planet Ord

Well done!

Sapper3307

Some members also received Posthumus’s promotions.

Old tanker

Great they are recognizing some who tried to hold the situation together that the dementia in chief screwed up.

KoB

Bt…but…but…Weren’t the headlines full of the all girl crews that were flying in and out of there last year? Where is their bling?

BZ Zoomies!

rgr1480

So what did Staff Sgt. Dennis Gonzales-Furman get? I could find a large-format image of the five men and G-F doesn’t have *any* gong hanging from his uniform… Did they just say “Thanks to Staff Sgt. Dennis Gonzales-Furman”??????

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Last edited 1 year ago by rgr1480
UpNorth

Staff Sgt. Dennis J. Gonzalez-Furman, the crew chief and also active duty, was present at the ceremony but will receive his medal at a ceremony of his own. He is stationed out of Joint Base Charleston, South Carolina”. Maybe the Air Force forgot his medal, so they just had him stand up there?

http://www.dailyrepublic.com/all-dr-news/solano-news/military/crew-awarded-distinguished-flying-crosses-for-bringing-order-to-chaos-in-afghanistan/comment-page-1/