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Staff Sgt. Zachary J. Rhyner

Staff Sgt. Zachary Rhyner deployed to Afghanistan in 2008. Sergeant Rhyner, a combat controller with the 21st Special Tactics Squadron, will be awarded the Air Force Cross Mar. 10, 2009 for his actions in Shok Valley, Afghanistan April 6, 2008. (U.S. Air Force photo)

Staff Sgt. Zachary Rhyner deployed to Afghanistan in 2008. Sergeant Rhyner, a com­bat con­troller with the 21st Spe­cial Tac­tics Squadron, will be awarded the Air Force Cross Mar. 10, 2009 for his actions in Shok Val­ley, Afghanistan April 6, 2008. (U.S. Air Force photo)

Secretary of the Air Force Michael B. Donley presents Staff Sgt. Zachary Rhyner the Air Force Cross March 10 at Pope Air Force Base, N.C. Sergeant Rhyner of the 21st Special Tactics Squadron received the medal for uncommon valor during Operation Enduring Freedom for his actions during an intense 6.5-hour battle in Shok Valley, Afghanistan, April 6, 2008. (U.S. Air Force photo)

Sec­re­tary of the Air Force Michael B. Don­ley presents Staff Sgt. Zachary Rhyner the Air Force Cross March 10 at Pope Air Force Base, N.C. Sergeant Rhyner of the 21st Spe­cial Tac­tics Squadron received the medal for uncom­mon valor dur­ing Oper­a­tion Endur­ing Free­dom for his actions dur­ing an intense 6.5-hour bat­tle in Shok Val­ley, Afghanistan, April 6, 2008. (U.S. Air Force photo)

Air Force Cross, Pur­ple Heart

An Air Force Spe­cial Oper­a­tions Com­mand Air Com­mando saved lives in Afghanistan April 6 dur­ing a lengthy bat­tle by call­ing in air strikes to pro­tect his team.

Staff Sgt. Zachary J. Rhyner, a spe­cial tac­tics com­bat con­troller assigned to the 21st Spe­cial Tac­tics Squadron at Pope Air Force Base, N.C., was deployed to Oper­a­tion Endur­ing Free­dom as the pri­mary joint ter­mi­nal attack con­troller while attached to a spe­cial forces team.

Then a Senior Air­man, Sergeant Rhyner was part of a 100+-man com­bined assault force whose mis­sion was to enter Shok Val­ley and cap­ture a high-value tar­get who was fund­ing the insur­gency. Sergeant Rhyner is cred­ited with sav­ing the 100-man team from being over­run twice in a six-and-a-half-hour battle.

Air Force Capt. Stew­art Parker, spe­cial forces com­man­der at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan, was the command-and-control link to the JTACs on the ground as they went into Shok Valley.

"This was the first time U.S. spe­cial oper­a­tions forces entered the ter­ri­tory," said Cap­tain Parker. "These were extra­or­di­nary con­di­tions and the sit­u­a­tion was dynamic."

Shok Val­ley is located below 60-foot cliffs. The mis­sion objec­tive was at the top of the moun­tains sur­round­ing the valley.

"Ini­tial infil­tra­tion began that day with snow on the ground, jagged rocks, a fast-moving river and a cliff," said Sergeant Rhyner. "There was a 5-foot wall you had to pull your­self up. The ridge­line trail was out of control."

The expec­ta­tion was to encounter fire from about 70 insur­gents. One Air Force JTAC-qualified com­bat con­troller was attached to each team to call in air strikes, if needed.

"We were caught off guard as 200 enemy fight­ers approached," said Air Force Staff Sgt. Rob Gutier­rez, a com­bat con­troller with the sec­ond team in the fight. "Within 10 min­utes, we were ambushed with heavy fire from 50 meters. The teams were split by a river 100 to 200 meters apart, north to south."

Sergeant Rhyner was in charge of coor­di­nat­ing the air assets.

"I have never seen a sit­u­a­tion this bad," said Cap­tain Parker, who was mon­i­tor­ing the sit­u­a­tion back at the base. "The intel said the enemy was 40 feet away from Zach and his team at one point. It was dangerous."

Within the first 15 min­utes of fire, Sergeant Rhyner was wounded along with three team members.

"I was pulling secu­rity when I got shot in the leg," he said. "The rounds hit my left thigh and went through my leg and hit another guy in the foot."

He imme­di­ately felt pain and adrenalin.

"There was nowhere to go. I grabbed the wounded guys, but we were trapped by the enemy," he said. "I was call­ing in air strikes and fir­ing, while mov­ing the wounded down [the cliff]."

Sergeant Gutier­rez could see insur­gent fire com­ing from the build­ings on the hill­tops above them and was try­ing to get across the river to meet up with Sergeant Rhyner.

"Zach and I were in con­stant radio con­tact," he said. "I could hear the ammu­ni­tion, sniper fire and rocket-propelled grenades with mul­ti­ple blasts. We tried to push to the north to col­lo­cate with Zach's team, but every time we pushed up river, it put us in an open line of fire."

"My team ran across the freez­ing river. The water came off the moun­tains and we were 100 to 200 feet beneath the enemy, like fish in a bar­rel," said Sergeant Gutierrez.

As the enemy sur­rounded them, Sergeant Rhyner, who was being treated for his injuries by Capt. Kyle Wal­ton, the spe­cial forces team leader, directed mul­ti­ple rock­ets and gun runs from AH-64 heli­copters against enemy positions.

"Zach was coor­di­nat­ing tremen­dous amounts of fire on both vil­lages simul­ta­ne­ously," said Sergeant Gutier­rez. "Zach was in charge of the air strikes, since he was clos­est to the fight and could see even what the F-15 pilots could not."

Forty-five min­utes to an hour had gone by since the fight began.

"We were pinned down and I could see the enemy all over the hills run­ning around," said Sergeant Gutier­rez. There were no sta­ble tar­gets. I kept the Apaches and the Hell­fire mis­siles pressed to the north."

Accu­rate sniper, machine gun and rocket-propelled grenade fire poured down on the assault force in a com­plex ambush ini­ti­ated simul­ta­ne­ously from all direc­tions as the team ascented the near-vertical ter­rain. He called in more than 50 close air strikes and straf­ing runs.

Staff Sgt. Zachary Rhyner deployed to Afghanistan in 2008. Sergeant Rhyner, a combat controller with the 21st Special Tactics Squadron, will be awarded the Air Force Cross Mar. 10, 2009 for his actions in Shok Valley, Afghanistan April 6, 2008. (U.S. Air Force photo)

Staff Sgt. Zachary Rhyner deployed to Afghanistan in 2008. Sergeant Rhyner, a com­bat con­troller with the 21st Spe­cial Tac­tics Squadron, will be awarded the Air Force Cross Mar. 10, 2009 for his actions in Shok Val­ley, Afghanistan April 6, 2008. (U.S. Air Force photo)

Three hours into the fight, Sergeant Gutier­rez reached Sergeant Rhyner's position.

"Sergeant Gutier­rez and I met on the cliff dur­ing the bat­tle briefly. We shared a laugh, but it was a busy, bleak sit­u­a­tion," Sergeant Rhyner said.

Sergeant Rhyner had been call­ing in air strikes for three hours while he was injured, how­ever he still felt respon­si­ble for the oth­ers who had been hurt. With dis­re­gard for his own life, he tried to get the injured to safety, still in the open line of fire.

"I left injured per­son­nel in a house and I had to get over there," he said. "I was frus­trated being wounded. I tried to get the bombs there fast and talk to the pilots who didn't see what I saw on the ground."

Five or six hours into the fight, as it was get­ting dark, intel­li­gence informed the JTACs that enemy rein­force­ments were 10 kilo­me­ters away car­ry­ing enemy rock­ets and missiles.

"We con­tin­ued to fight our way up the hill and the [heli­copters] came," said Sergeant Gutier­rez. "Zach was talk­ing to the helos and gave the coor­di­nates to lay the bombs on the vil­lage, while I kept the A-10s and the Apaches out of the way."

Sergeant Rhyner called in a total of 4,570 rounds of can­non fire, nine Hell­fire mis­siles, 162 rock­ets, 12 500-pound bombs and one 2,000-pound bomb, con­stantly engag­ing the enemy with his M-4 rifle to deter their advance.

"Zach acted fast and shut down the fight­ing," said Sergeant Gutier­rez. "The wounded were taken out on medevac."

Back at com­mand and con­trol, Cap­tain Parker heard that the heli­copters were on the ground with the wounded but he could not move the heli­copters due to ter­rain and weather conditions.

"Radio trans­mis­sions would block the sig­nal due to ter­rain and ver­ti­cal cliffs," he said. "Heli­copters were vul­ner­a­ble and there was pres­sure to do every­thing we could to get the teams out quickly."

Fog started rolling into the valley.

"The heli­copter couldn't fly [due to alti­tude] and the sit­u­a­tion called for 'aggres­sive patience,'" said Cap­tain Parker. "More than 50 per­cent of the U.S. forces were wounded and it was pretty grave."

Toward the end of the fight­ing 40 insur­gents were killed and 100 wounded.

Sergeant Rhyner was directly cred­ited with the entire team's sur­vival due to his skill and poise under intense fire.

"Sergeant Rhyner is out of train­ing less than a year and is in one of the most dif­fi­cult sit­u­a­tions" said Cap­tain Parker. "It is an absolute tes­ta­ment to his char­ac­ter and the train­ing these guys take. It tells me we are doing some­thing right."

"If it wasn't for Zach, I wouldn't be here," said Sergeant Gutierrez.

Sergeant Rhyner received the Jew­ish Insti­tute for National Secu­rity Affairs Grate­ful Nation Award and is await­ing pre­sen­ta­tion of the Pur­ple Heart for the injuries he suf­fered dur­ing the battle.

Air Force
by Capt. Laura Ropelis
Air Force Spe­cial Oper­a­tions Com­mand Pub­lic Affairs


A com­bat con­troller is set to receive the Air Force Cross, the service’s sec­ond high­est medal for valor, Chief of Staff Gen. Nor­ton Schwartz announced Thurs­day at the Air Force Association’s win­ter conference.

Schwartz called Staff Sgt. Zachary Rhyner to stand at the begin­ning of his speech and detailed how the spe­cial oper­a­tions air­man called in air strike after air strike despite being wounded dur­ing a seven-hour bat­tle in Afghanistan.

Air Force Times
By Bruce Rolfsen


Staff Sgt. Zachary J. Rhyner will receive the Air Force Cross for his actions on April 6 in the Shok Val­ley in Afghanistan. Although shot in the left leg, he called in airstrikes, fired his M-4 rifle at the enemy and helped move other wounded peo­ple down a cliff.

Rhyner is assigned to the Air Force Spe­cial Oper­a­tions Command’s 21st Spe­cial Tac­tics Squadron at Pope. At the time of the inci­dent, Rhyner was a senior air­man who had com­pleted train­ing less than a year earlier.

Com­bat con­trollers train for two years at Pope and else­where to do mostly covert mis­sions in hos­tile ter­ri­tory. The “bat­tle­field air­men” can para­chute or infil­trate into enemy ter­ri­tory to set up drop zones, do air-traffic con­trol or call in air­craft to shoot or drop bombs on the enemy. They often work on an Army Spe­cial Forces or Navy SEAL team and fight along­side sol­diers and sailors while sum­mon­ing Air Force fire­power from over­head. The air­craft often are fir­ing near “friend­ly” forces on the ground.

Rhyner is cred­ited with sav­ing his team from being over­run twice in a 6-hour bat­tle in the Shok Val­ley. Mem­bers of A-Team 3336 from Fort Bragg’s 3rd Spe­cial Forces Group received 10 Sil­ver Stars, the Army’s third high­est award for com­bat valor, for their actions in that engagement.

Fayet­teville Observer
By Henry Cuningham

More on the bat­tle here

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