Eglin Airmen return from deployment

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. Mike Meares
  • 96th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
Family members gathered here May 24 to welcome home more than 175 members of the 728th Air Control Squadron from a deployment to Southwest Asia in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

They arrived by plane on the runway here and were carried by bus to their anxiously awaiting families.

As the buses turned the corner and came into view, the crowd erupted in cheers. Red, white and blue banners, balloons and handcrafted signs waved in the Florida breeze. Giggling laughs, smiling faces and teary eyes greeted the convoy of Airmen ready to end their journey from another deployment in Iraq.

"I can't describe the feeling," said Lt. Col. Frederick DeFranza, the 728th ACS commander. "It's one of jubilation.

"After spending (such a long time) in combat conditions, coming home to a welcome back like this only amplifies the feelings," the commander said.

Tech. Sgt. Eric Yingling, the assistant noncommissioned officer in charge of network communications, was one of many who sat impatiently the entire trip home trying not to anticipate the reaction of seeing his family again.

"I tried not to think about it and relax a little," he said about his third return home from Iraq. "As soon as the plane hit the ground, I had a lump in my throat and butterflies in my stomach."

After fighting back tears while holding on to his three daughters in a group bear hug, he said to his children, "This is what it's all about. It's rough being away from you girls, but it's for a good cause."

"Being home is what reinforces why we do what we do," he said. "We serve so (the next) generation can grow up in a free country and have those freedoms guaranteed."

The Airmen spent the last five months in Iraq controlling and monitoring Iraqi airspace, assisting in providing close-air support for troops in conflict and reconnaissance and directing tanker traffic for refueling efforts.

For many of these Airmen this was their second homecoming in less than a year.

The 728th ACS deployed in support of OIF from May to October of 2006, only three months before returning to Iraq in January 2007. It is the unit's fourth tour of duty in Iraq since the start of OIF. They were deployed for seven months in 2003, four months in 2005 and five months in 2006.

For loved ones, the Airmen's return couldn't come soon enough.

"It's hard when I don't have him for even a week," said Jeni Zayas, about her husband Master Sgt. Roberto Zayas. "It's been really hard not being able to talk to him every day and being alone and at home with the kids. I don't share him much for the first couple of weeks."

(Courtesy Air Combat Command News Service)

Comment on this story (comments may be published on Air Force Link)

Click here to view the comments/letters page