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Sergeant will never forget the day his son was born

  • Published
  • By Maj. David Kurle
  • 455th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs
Staff Sgt. Mike Myers experienced one of the most frightening events of his life in Afghanistan, while the birth of his child was taking place more than 7,000 miles away.

Sergeant Myers, a security forces member of one of the provincial reconstruction teams here, was in a Humvee hit by a rocket-propelled grenade Sept. 6.

He received news, later that day, about the birth of his second child in the United States -- a son, born at almost the same moment he was under attack.

"His name is Jackson William Shane Myers," he wrote later that day. "(He) looks just like me and has red hair like his mom. I am very glad he is able to have a dad."

Sergeant Myers, deployed here from Goodfellow Air Force Base, Texas, knew his wife was going to have an induced labor the night of Sept. 5. What he didn't know was how the labor was progressing as he donned his body armor, helmet and rifle, then strapped himself in the driver's seat of a Humvee for the PRT's mission on the morning of Sept. 6. 

"You never know what's going to happen (in labor)," he said. "I was hoping my wife and son were OK, and nothing was wrong with either of them."

The PRT's mission that day was to conduct assessments on projects the team was supervising -- a bridge under construction, a new road and newly dug water well in a nearby province.

The convoy also stopped at two Afghan national police stations so Sergeant Myers could do his job of mentoring.

"Basically, I assess their security capabilities and determine how well they do their job," he said.

The job of the six Air Force-led PRTs in Afghanistan is to promote good governance in the country's provinces and facilitate the rebuilding of infrastructure and education systems.

While traveling in a convoy of armored Humvees after taking a look at the well-digging project, the team rounded a spur in the mountains on a gravel road when Sergeant Myers heard gunfire.

"My gunner said, 'Contact left -- go, go, go,'" he said. "As (the gunner) was shooting, he yelled 'RPG, RPG.'"

A rocket-propelled grenade had been shot at the convoy, but missed. After regrouping in a village, the PRT vehicles set out again.

"Luckily, there were no casualties," Sergeant Myers said. "We then pulled out of the village where another ambush was set up for us.

"As soon as our vehicle cleared a building on the right -- BAM!"

The sergeant's Humvee, with four other passengers, was hit by an RPG that turned the windshield's bullet-proof glass into a lattice-work of cracks and jammed the dashboard against the steering wheel.

"I spit glass out of my mouth ... then just gunned it," Sergeant Myers said. "As I was driving away, I thought my new son and daughter wouldn't have a father, and my wife would be a widow."

Sergeant Myers said he drove the crippled Humvee another 15 kilometers before the team stopped to regroup, the whole time peering through a 3-inch area of clear glass in the windshield to see where he was going.

He didn't know until they were stopped that the Humvee also had a flat tire.

The staff sergeant credits the vehicle's armor, his training, as well as his personal safety and protective gear for keeping him from even getting a scratch.

"The Kevlar helmet saved my head and neck; my ballistic glasses saved my eyes and my vest had glass shards all over it," he said. "I honestly, truly believe the training we've had, no doubt, got us through this."

Not one person was injured.

After the mission, Sergeant Myers called his wife to get news about the birth.

"I was thinking about how I was going to tell her about the day Jackson was born because I knew she was going to ask," he said. Opting for honesty, he told her everything.

"I believe the PRT mission is worth the risk," Sergeant Myers said. "We're here to rebuild, re-organize and regroup the government of Afghanistan.

"I'm hoping everything I tell my son about Afghanistan makes him more proud to be an American and he will stand up and defend his country when the time comes," he said.