Ultimate Sacrifice

<p>Airmen killed in fighter jet crash</p>

<p>Capt. Thomas J. Gramith, 27, of Eagan, Minn., and Capt. Mark R. McDowell, 26, of Colorado Springs, Colo., died in the crash, military officials said. They had been flying for several hours, providing air support to ground troops in the Ghazni Province when their plane went down around 3:15 a.m. in Kabul, Afghanistan.</p>

<p>Both men were assigned to the 336th Fighter Squadron, which deployed in April for a four-month tour of duty.</p>

<p>“This is a very deep personal loss that we’ve taken. These are our neighbors, our friends, our coworkers,” said Col. Mark Kelly, 4th Fighter Wing commander, Seymour Johnson Air Force Base.</p>

<p>McDowell is a native of Charlotte and attended the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. He leaves behind his father in Adamsville, mother in Clemson, S.C., and grandparents in Sanford.</p>

<p>His wife is also in the Air Force, serving on a deployment to Iraq. The couple would have been married for two years this Thanksgiving.</p>

<p>Gilbert McDowell, a pastor in Sanford, said he was proud of his grandson, because everywhere he was stationed, he joined a church and taught Sunday school.</p>

<p>Kelly said thousands of N.C.-based soldiers were among the ground troops McDowell and Gramith were supporting.</p>

<p>“We have literally thousands of Marines from Camp Lejeune just down the road that are dispersed across the Helman province, down south. We have thousands and thousands of soldiers from Fort Bragg that are operating in the east, so this is a very deep North Carolina protection event,” Kelly said.</p>

<p>The cause of the crash hasn’t been released, but military officials have said it was from non-hostile action. F-15s fly in pairs, so another jet was alongside the plane during the crash.</p>

<p>A board of officers in Afghanistan is investigating the crash, military officials said. A safety investigation normally takes 30 to 45 days, but since this crash happened in a combat zone, the investigation is expected to take longer.</p>

<p>The U.S. military hasn’t released more information about the crash, but Afghan authorities told The Associated Press that the plane went down in the Nawur district of Ghazni province in central Afghanistan, a peaceful area populated by the ethnic Hazara minority.</p>

<p>Mohammed Qasim Naziri, the deputy district chief, said the crash site was between two villages in a desert surrounded by mountains about 20 miles south of the town of Nawur. Kelly described the terrain as unforgiving.</p>

<p>He said local people notified police of the crash, but by the time authorities reached the site, U.S. troops had surrounded the area and barred Afghan authorities from approaching the wreckage.</p>

<p>The last similar accident involving Seymour Johnson aircraft was on April 7, 2003.</p>

<p>The bodies of Gramith and McDowell were flown to Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Del., Sunday.</p>

<p>Their deaths brought to 50 the number of international service members killed in Afghanistan in July, already the deadliest month of the war for NATO forces.</p>

<p>Bullet retired out of SJAFB and the Rockets sister squadron almost a yr ago, when we found out about the crash Saturday a.m. we spoke to close friends who are still there, they all told us that both wives were not in Goldsboro, but the town was silent and already mourning the loss. Goldsboro is one of those bases that support the military in droves. About 30% of the public schools and developments are militray or retired military, so somehow, someway, they know somebody serving.</p>

<p>God speed to the families that their grief will be replaced with pride that their sons died for every American to live free, and giving a better life for Afghanis</p>

<p>We personally have known the CC and his wife for about 10 yrs. The Rockets are in great hands. Knowing the two of them, I am sure that the families will take solice in how much their sons were a member of our family too.</p>

<p>A toast…</p>