President extends Thanksgiving wishes to Airman serving in Afghanistan

  • Published
  • By Capt. Darrick B. Lee
  • Provincial Reconstruction Team Kapisa Public Affairs
An Air Force medic here received a personal telephone call from President Barack Obama on Thanksgiving Day.

Senior Airman Ashley Jackson, a member of Provincial Reconstruction Team Kapisa, was chosen as one of 10 military members who spoke to the president while deployed abroad.

Airman Jackson, originally from Lakeville, Minn., provides combat medical support to members of the PRT that venture into local communities to help with development projects in Afghanistan.

In September, Airman Jackson was riding in a vehicle that was hit by an improvised explosive device in Afghanistan's Kapisa Province. Airman Jackson helped stabilize injured Soldiers and earned a Purple Heart for her actions after the blast. President Obama expressed his gratitude during the phone call.

Airman Jackson asked the commander-in-chief if she could put him on speakerphone, allowing her team members and the camera crews in the room to share the moment with her.

"I am so proud of all of you for the extraordinary service you are rendering the country," the president was heard saying over the speakerphone. "So, on Thanksgiving Day, we give thanks for you."

Airman Jackson was all smiles after the call. She talked with French military reporters about her experience in an on-camera interview.

"I was glad that the president got to say 'Happy Thanksgiving' to everybody in the room," Airman Jackson said. "Thanksgiving in Afghanistan would be hard if it weren't for the camaraderie we share within the PRT. It really is a family affair here. I'm here until the whole team goes home, and there's no place I'd rather be."