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19 years ago today - Blackhawk Down

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  • 19 years ago today - Blackhawk Down



    1st SFOD-D

    MSG Gary Gordon Killed defending the crew of Super Six-Four Medal of Honor

    SFC Randy Shughart Killed defending the crew of Super Six-Four Medal of Honor

    SSG Daniel Busch Crashed on Super Six-One, died from wounds received defending the downed crew Silver Star

    SFC Earl Fillmore Killed moving to the first crash site Silver Star

    SFC Matt Rierson Killed on October 6, 1993 by a mortar which landed just outside the hangar Silver Star

    MSG Tim "Griz" Martin Died from wounds received on the Lost Convoy Silver Star and Purple Heart.



    3rd Ranger Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment

    CPL Jamie Smith Died of wounds with the pinned-down force around crash site one Bronze Star with Valor Device and Oak leaf cluster, Purple Heart

    SPC James Cavaco Killed on the Lost Convoy Bronze Star with Valor Device

    SGT Casey Joyce Killed on the Lost Convoy Bronze Star with Valor Device

    PFC Richard "Alphabet" Kowalewski Killed on the Lost Convoy Bronze Star with Valor Device

    SGT Dominick Pilla Killed on Struecker's convoy Bronze Star with Valor Device

    SGT Lorenzo Ruiz Killed on the Lost Convoy Bronze Star with Valor Device



    160th SOAR (Nightstalkers)

    SSG William Cleveland Crew chief on Super Six-Four-killed Silver Star, Bronze Star, Air Medal with Valor Device

    SSG Thomas Field Crew chief on Super Six-Four-killed Silver Star, Bronze Star, Air Medal with Valor Device

    CW4 Raymond Frank Copilot of Super Six-Four-killed Silver Star, Air Medal with Valor Device

    CW3 Clifton "Elvis" Wolcott Pilot of Super Six-One and died in crash Distinguished Flying Cross, Bronze Star, Air Medal with Valor Device

    CW2 Donovan "Bull" Briley Copilot of Super Six-One and died in crash Distinguished Flying Cross, Bronze Star, Air Medal with Valor Device



    2nd Battalion 14th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade 10th Mountain Division

    SGT Cornell Houston Killed on the rescue convoy Bronze Star with Valor Device, de Fleury Medal

    PFC James Martin Killed on the rescue convoy Purple Heart





    You should go get a copy of In the Company of Heroes by Mike Durant.



    Here's a story about the two MOH recipeints. Long, but worth the read...





    Gary Gordon and Randy Shughart

    "It was terribly risky, maybe even hopeless. But one or two properly-armed, well-trained soldiers could hold off an undisciplined mob indefinitely. Shughart and Gordon were experts at killing and staying alive. They were serious, career soldiers, trained to get hard, ugly things done. They saw opportunity where others could see only danger. Like the other operators, they prided themselves on staying cool and effective even in extreme danger. They lived and trained endlessly for moments like this. If there were a chance to succeed, these two believed they would."


    The situation was grim on the afternoon of October 3rd, 1993. Things had been fucked from the beginning – what was supposed to have been a routine, thirty-minute raid to bust in and snatch the brutal Somali warlord Mohammed Farah Aidid from the confines of his Mogadishu hideout quickly devolved into a clusterfuck of epic proportions. One Black Hawk helicopter had already been shot down – hit by a salvo of RPG fire, stranding teams of U.S. Army Rangers and Delta Force operatives on the ground deep inside enemy territory, surrounded by people actively trying to kill them. The entire city had completely exploded into a full-blown warzone in the span of a little less than an hour, as men from Aidid's militia rushed out from buildings across the city, armed to the teeth with assault rifles, pistols, rocket-propelled grenades, and whatever other nasty weaponry they could get their hands on. And now, just because things weren't fucked-up enough already, a second Black Hawk – one that had been sent in to provide assistance with this rapidly-degenerating situation – had also taken an RPG to the tail rotor and was now spewing black smoke as it crash-landed in a residential neighborhood dozens of blocks from the battle.

    As Warrant Officer Michael Durant's Black Hawk, code named Super Six-Four, smashed down in a cloud of dust and smoke, Master Sergeant Gary Gordon and Sergeant First Class Randy Shughart watched helplessly from the deck of their Black Hawk as it maneuvered over to the crash site. These elite Delta Force snipers had initially been assigned to provide precision air-to-ground fire support to the operation, but now with Super Six-Four sitting helplessly in the middle of enemy territory like a six-million-dollar sitting duck, its crew all either dead or critically wounded, the herculean task had suddenly fallen on them – and them alone – to provide covering fire and keep any surviving crew members alive until a ground team could arrive and secure the area.


    But the cavalry wasn't coming any time soon. Gordon and Shughart knew that as they looked out across the burning cityscape of Mogadishu. They knew that fewer than a hundred Rangers and Delta operatives were currently pinned down on the other side of the city, fighting for their lives, surrounded by thousands of well-armed Somali militia troops with explosives and heavy machine guns. The U.S. convoy that had been sent to rescue the stranded soldiers had been hammered by RPG fire from city windows, and they weren't making any progress through the maze of city streets that had been expertly blockaded by Aidid's men. Super Six-Four was completely cut off, and now a growing mob of AK47-toting militia was sprinting down the streets of Mogadishu, making a beeline towards the smashed helicopter and her severely battered crew.

    Looking down at the wreckage of the Black Hawk, watching helplessly as Warrant Officer Durant sitting there in the pilot's chair of the crippled machine desperately fighting for his life, trying to pick off swarms of marauding militia men with an MP5 submachine gun set on single-shot fire, Delta Force sniper team leader Gary Gordon made the toughest call any man could possibly make.

    He was going down there.




    "Without a doubt, I owe my life to these two men and their bravery.
    Those guys came in when they had to know it was a losing battle.
    There was nobody else left to back them up. If they had not come in, I wouldn't have survived."
    With the crowd rapidly closing in, and realizing that there was no chance for the downed pilot to survive the oncoming tidal wave of gunslinging humanity, Sergeant Gordon boldly requested to be placed on the ground so that he and Sergeant Shughart could set up a defensive perimeter and protect the downed helicopter and her crew. His request was denied. Twice. It was too dangerous, the commander argued, which is seriously fucking saying something considering that Sergeant Gordon's current job involved shooting a sniper rifle out of a moving helicopter while ground troops launched RPGs and shot AK-47s at him. But this was too much. He was volunteering for a suicide mission. Gandalf wasn't going to ride in on a white horse and save the day with a blinding flash of light. They were going to be going in alone.

    But Gary Gordon and Randy Shughart couldn't just sit there and do nothing while wounded Americans were down there fighting for their lives against impossible odds.

    On his third request, Gordon received permission to hit the ground and take the attack in.


    "I never saw where they came from, but they had to come from the rear, otherwise I would have seen them approach. It was a surreal feeling. I mean it was like this awful situation that you just realized your in is now suddenly over."
    Last edited by Strychnine; 10-03-2012, 10:21 AM.

  • #2
    Continued:

    The pilot of Gordon and Shughart's Black Hawk first attempted to land right next to the crash site of Super Six-Four, but the LZ was too hot – a flood of small arms fire, RPGs, and an excess of ground debris and fire made insertion impossible. So instead of putting down in the middle of the action, Gordon and Shughart jumped from the hovering helicopter 100 meters from the crash site, getting boots on the ground just seconds before an RPG smashed into the Black Hawk, blowing the door gunner's leg off and severely injuring many of the crew (in a related tale of impossible badassitude, the pilot of this Black Hawk ended up flying the bird home with a bullet in his shoulder and his co-pilot unconscious). The two Delta snipers moved quickly through the shanties of the neighborhood, fighting the enemy solely with their rifles and pistols. Before long, they'd fought through the streets to reach the clearing where the smoking hulk of Super Six-Four lay motionless.

    They arrived just in time. Warrant Officer Durant was still strapped in the cockpit, running low on ammunition, his leg broken in several places and a couple of his vertebrae crushed but continuing to fight like a wildman. Three of the other crew members were in even worse shape, barely alive and in no condition to fight.

    But Gordon and Shughart were the best of the best. Green Berets. Delta Force. Veterans of countless firefights and career soldiers who always remained cool no matter how ridiculously the odds were stacked against them. The two men rushed to the cockpit, checked on the pilot, and pulled him from the wreckage without further aggravating the man's grievous injuries. They then moved him and the three wounded crew members back away from the wreckage, gave some ammunition to Durant and proceeded to set up the best perimeter they could muster, considering they were just two guys preparing to stand off against pretty much the entire fucking city of Mogadishu with nothing more than a pair of assault rifles and pistols.

    "Their actions were professional and deliberate to the point that they looked like they were planning a parking lot. They didn't seem alarmed the situation that we were in.
    It was just focused on the task, doing what they needed to do to improve our situation, and get through it, get us rescued. Whatever it is they needed to do."
    The mob arrived. Gordon and Shughart knew they were just going to have to go Horde Mode against an armed militia and hope that there might be any possible chance that they could hold the attack off long enough for rescue to show up. But that wasn't likely, and they knew it. These guys were the cavalry. The only thing standing between an angry throng of pissed-off Somalis and four critically wounded Americans.

    Militia troops swarmed in from every side, scrambling over the rubble, AK-47s spewing lead. Some of them just ran screaming out into the middle of the road, without any cover, desperately trying to reach the Americans and achieve glory in combat or die for the cause in the process (Gordon and Shughart helped them out with the latter). Ducking behind cover, popping and firing, the Delta snipers laid down a wall of death for anyone who came close, blasting away with burst-fire with their rifles and switching over to double-tap pistol fire when necessary, trying their damnedest to separate the armed militia targets from the innocent civilians on the street. Carrying only those two firearms, this pair of death-dealing Delta operatives fought tenaciously, refusing to give up ground, defending at all costs, and surgically mowing down their foes while assault rifle rounds pinged off nearby debris and enemy troops chucked hand grenades at their positions.

    "When you get in a situation like that, I think pretty much without exception, what I've heard described as a feeling of I'm not fighting for my country anymore, I'm not fighting for my paycheck, I'm not fighting for the flag, I'm fighting for the guy next to me. I'm fighting for my comrades. I'm gonna do whatever it takes so that we get out of this alive. And uh, I've heard that said before, and that, that's what it boils down to.

    I mean when I went back in there, I went back in there because I knew the Rangers on the ground needed our help. When Randy and Gary came into my crash site they knew the chances were pretty good they wouldn't make it out alive, but they did it because they knew that if they didn't take action, we were gonna die. And that's why they did it. "
    There's some debate over who was killed in action first. The official military documents say it was Shughart. Durant is pretty sure it was Gordon. I would argue that it doesn't really matter. These two men – Gary Gordon and Randy Shughart – are going to be inextricably linked together forever in the annals of American military history, and I'm completely confident that either of these men would have reacted the exact same way under fire.

    Whatever the case may be, one of the snipers was finally shot with a mortal wound. Durant recalls the operative's last words as simply, "Damn, I'm hit," said plainly in a matter-of-fact way that "sounded almost irritated". The lone surviving Delta operator circled back around the nose of the Black Hawk, back into Durant's field of vision, handed the wounded pilot an assault rifle, and asked if there was any extra ammo in the helicopter. Durant told him about the M-16s the crew chiefs kept between the seats, so the lone survivor rushed over, grabbed a handful of mags, and got on the radio to request a status report. He was told that reinforcements would be there "in a little while."

    He knew what that meant.

    The Delta operative showed no emotion as he walked back over to Durant, stopping only to say one thing – Good luck – before circling back around the front of the helicopter and taking the entire city on by himself. When this fearless soldier ran out of rifle ammunition, he took on the mob with only his pistol, but finally, after an heroic last stand worthy of the greatest warriors in history, the last member of this unbelievably-badass Delta Sniper Team was finally overwhelmed by a coordinated attack from the Somali National Alliance, and the position was overrun by a sea of militia troops and Somali citizens.

    But Gary Gordon and Randy Shughart's sacrifice would not have been in vain. Thanks to their ferocious defense of the crash site, giving up their lives to aid their fellow soldiers, Michael Durant was spared by the mob, imprisoned briefly, and survived to return home to his wife and kids. If these two men had done nothing, Durant would certainly have been killed while still strapped into his pilot's chair.

    The Somalis would report at least 25 men dead at the crash site of Super Six-Four, with dozens more wounded and injured. Gary Gordon and Randy Shughart would be posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for their actions.

    Comment


    • #3
      I was a senior in HS when it happened. RIP

      Comment


      • #4
        Genuine badasses. Blackhawk Down is still the most insanely intense war movie I've ever seen. Hope Dave is doing alright today.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by talisman View Post
          Hope Dave is doing alright today.
          My thoughts are with him, I just didn't want to mention it. I'd imagine today is shitty.

          Comment


          • #6
            Every man involved is a hero. Davbrucas we appreciate your service that day, you are an example for all of us even though you are too humble to ever admit it.
            Originally posted by racrguy
            What's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?
            Originally posted by racrguy
            Voting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.

            Comment


            • #7




              Originally posted by Broncojohnny View Post
              Every man involved is a hero. Davbrucas we appreciate your service that day, you are an example for all of us even though you are too humble to ever admit it.
              Truth!
              Originally posted by Silverback
              Look all you want, she can't find anyone else who treats her as bad as I do, and I keep her self esteem so low, she wouldn't think twice about going anywhere else.

              Comment


              • #8
                Doc dave was there?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                  Doc dave was there?
                  Sorry newb, this story is old school classified...
                  Originally posted by Silverback
                  Look all you want, she can't find anyone else who treats her as bad as I do, and I keep her self esteem so low, she wouldn't think twice about going anywhere else.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    good reading if you have a bit of downtime

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Thank you to all those who served. Gordon and Shughart's story is one that should never be forgotten, they knew how little of a chance they had to survive and did it for fellow soldiers that they didn't know if were alive.

                      I would recommend Black Hawk Down and In the Company of Heroes (Mike Durant's book about the battle) to anyone.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Honor to everyone involved.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                          Doc dave was there?

                          Yes. He was a Ranger.
                          There's a similar thread on the old board if you want to search for it. If I remember right he was Task Force Ranger during Gothic Serpent.


                          Task Force Ranger

                          On 8 August, Aidid's militia detonated a remote controlled bomb against an American military vehicle, first killed four American soldiers and then, two weeks later, injured seven more.[1] In response, President Bill Clinton approved the proposal to deploy a special task force composed of 400 US Army Rangers and Delta-force Commandos.[2] This unit, named Task Force Ranger, consisted of 160 elite US troops. They flew to Mogadishu and began a manhunt for Aidid.

                          On 22 August, Task Force Ranger was deployed to Somalia under the command of Major General William F. Garrison, commander of JSOC at the time.

                          The force consisted of:

                          B Company, 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment
                          C Squadron, 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta (1st SFOD-D)
                          A deployment package of 16 helicopters and personnel from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (160th SOAR), which included MH-60 Black Hawks and AH/MH-6 Little Birds.
                          Navy SEALs from the Naval Special Warfare Development Group (DEVGRU)
                          Air Force Pararescuemen and Combat Controllers (CCT) from the 24th Special Tactics Squadron.[3]

                          On 21 September, Task Force Ranger captured Aidid's financial, Osman Ali Atto.


                          He can chime in if he feels... I certainly don't want to speak for him.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I made 7 trips hauling those guys into that shithole at the end of Aug 1993. First trip was Pope direct Mogadishu. Long god damned 16 hr flight with that many guys onboard. Rest of trips we flew into Djibouti, picked the troops up and then on to Somalia. They only had ramp space for two large jets at a time so we blasted off as soon as they deplaned. I couldn't imagine staying there, whole place smelled like an outhouse.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Once we pulled our guys out, that entire area should have been cut into a smoking ruin in honor of those men.
                              I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

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