Pilot: "I was very fortunate to be flying this mission in an
A-10"
Air Force Maj. Jim Ewald had
just finished a close-air support mission over Baghdad when his
A-10 Thunderbolt II was hit by an Iraqi surface-to-air missile
April 8. It physically moved the plane "like the hand of God,"
Ewald said during a Pentagon interview July 16.
Ewald is a pilot with the 110th Fighter Wing out of Battle Creek
(MI).
Then An Iraqi Missile Ruined His Day
The surface-to-air missile came up from the southwest, and Ewald
said he never saw it. But he had no doubt a missile had hit him. "I
could see a reddish glow on my cockpit instruments from the fire
behind me," he said. His second thought was that he had not been
wounded.
It was then that the airplane departed from
controlled flight.
"That's just the way we say I was trying to fly the airplane one
way, but the airplane was off doing its own thing," the Michigan
Air Guardsman said.
Ewald was soon able to regain
control. "I was very fortunate to be flying this mission in an
A-10, because had I not, I would have bailed out right there," he
said. "My next thought was 'I don't want to bail out right over
Baghdad or I'm going to be in it deep.'"
He and his wingman headed out of Baghdad and sought American
lines. "It was physically hard (to fly the plane), Ewald said. "I
was manipulating everything with all the muscles in my body. I had
flight control problems, I had engine problems, I had fuel-flow
problems, I had hydraulic problems . not to mention that I had an
airplane that was disintegrating. I looked back once and I could
see little parts falling off the engine and I thought, 'I really
don't know what that is, but I think I need it.'"
As he continued south, he lost one of the engines completely and
he ejected. "The ejection seat was packed by one of my new best
friends out of Boise (ID) and it worked perfectly," Ewald said.
Rescue of "Pilot-Dude"
After he hit the
ground, he mistook the 30 mm rounds cooking off in the airplane for
incoming Iraqi fire. He ran to hide in a dried canal behind some
reeds. He heard engine noise, and hoped that the vehicle was
American. "I knew the 3rd Infantry Division had been in the area,
but I didn't know if it was still there," Ewald said.
There was Fedayeen Saddam paramilitary still running around, he
said, and he couldn't see very well. "I heard one yell in English,
but I thought maybe this guy went to language school," Ewald said.
"Then I heard another voice yell in English, 'Hey, pilot dude. Come
out. We're Americans.'"
There was no mistaking the accent, he said. "He sounded like
your typical 19-year-old American," the pilot-dude said. "I thought
that's something you don't learn in language school."
The soldiers were from the Army's 54th Engineer Battalion, and
they had seen Ewald eject. They arrived some 10 to 15 minutes after
he hit the ground, he said. Ewald went back to the 110th and was
back into the cockpit in 48 hours.