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    A look back at the attack on the USS Cole

    A look back at the attack on the USS Cole

    Courtesy Photo | Injured USS Cole Sailors are carried aboard a C-9 Nightingale aircraft of the 86th...... read more read more

    FALLS CHURCH, VIRGINIA, UNITED STATES

    10.28.2022

    Courtesy Story

    Air Force Medical Service   

    On the morning of October 12, 2000, the USS Cole, a guided-missile destroyer, docked at the Port of Aden off the coast of Yemen for refueling. In a small boat, a suicide bomber approached the destroyer, detonated alongside, which left a 40 to 60-foot hold on the port side of the ship. The blast killed 17 and injured 39 Sailors.

    In response, French medics in Djibouti, along with a C-130 Aeromedical Evacuation crew from Prince Sultan Air Base, aided the critically injured Sailors. As worldwide reports of the USS Cole attack unfolded, across the world at Ramstein Air Base, two C-9A Nightingale missions, consisting of 28 Aeromedical Evacuation crew members and seven CCATT members launched to Aden and Djibouti.

    Over a 36 hour, 6,000 mile round-trip mission, the medical crew teams returned with the 39 injured Sailors. The National Aeronautic Association awarded the MacKay Trophy for “the most meritorious flight of the year” to both the air and medical crews.

    The trophy, on display at the National Air Space Museum in Washington, D.C., was the first for medical flyers since its inception in 1912. Among the MacKay Trophy recipients was Colonel Byron Hepburn, who would become Major General Hepburn, Deputy Surgeon General of the Air Force Medical Service.

    Editor's note: Information for this article was adapted from portions of "100 Years of Excellence: The History of the Air Force Medical Service."

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 10.28.2022
    Date Posted: 10.28.2022 08:00
    Story ID: 432136
    Location: FALLS CHURCH, VIRGINIA, US

    Web Views: 72
    Downloads: 1

    PUBLIC DOMAIN