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Groups mark anniversary of failed mission
AP ^ | 4/23/5 | BILL KACZOR

Posted on 04/23/2005 11:34:58 AM PDT by SmithL

A desperate mission to rescue 53 American hostages from Iran ended in failure and the deaths of eight servicemen, but it is being remembered 25 years later as a turning point for U.S. special forces that eventually led to successes in Afghanistan, Iraq, Kosovo and elsewhere.

Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force veterans of Operation Eagle Claw, families of those who lost their lives and a support group are gathering in Florida this weekend for an anniversary remembrance.

Mere failure turned into fiery disaster when a helicopter collided with a transport plane at Desert One, a desolate rendezvous spot in Iran, after mechanical and weather problems had already aborted the mission.

What happened on April 25, 1980, shocked the Pentagon and Congress into building up special forces for clandestine missions and small-scale warfare against terrorists and guerillas.

"The U.S. got better prepared to deal with terrorism quicker because of Desert One," retired Air Force Col. Roland Guidry said in recent interview.

He was a squadron commander at Desert One and later served as chief of air operations for the U.S. Special Operations Command, now headquartered at MacDill Air Force Base near Tampa, Fla.

Organizational, logistical and equipment flaws coupled with interservice rivalry contributed to Eagle Claw's failure, but the audacious rescue plan and training that went into it still are paying dividends.

"There's a lot of missions that are occurring in Iraq and Afghanistan we don't know anything about, but they're using some of the same tactics and procedures we developed," Guidry said.

Guidry, 65, now a real estate broker at Destin, Fla., will be the principle speaker at an Eagle Claw symposium Monday, the mission's anniversary date, at Hurlburt Field near Fort Walton Beach, Fla.

Hurlburt is headquarters for the Air Force Special Operations Command, and it was the home base of five airmen who died at Desert One. Three Marines also were killed.

On Sunday night, the Tampa-based Special Operations Warrior Foundation will hold a 25th anniversary dinner and remembrance in Fort Walton Beach. The foundation provides college scholarships for children of special operators killed or disabled in the line of duty.

Jody Powell, then-President Jimmy Carter's press secretary, will be master of ceremonies. Carter's inability to free the hostages was an issue in his 1980 re-election defeat.

The crisis began Nov. 4, 1979, when a mob seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran. One hostage was freed because of illness after the rescue attempt. The other 52 were released as President Ronald Reagan was being inaugurated in 1981.

Eagle Claw was aborted after mechanical problems disabled two of the eight Navy and Marine helicopters and a third turned back in the face of a dust storm. The five remaining helicopters were one short of the minimum needed to continue.

Six Air Force transports had flown in Army Delta Force troops and fuel for the helicopters, which were supposed to take the soldiers to a clandestine staging area near Tehran. The mission never got that far.

"I honestly don't feel we had much of a chance to complete the mission," said Wade Ishimoto, a Delta Force intelligence officer at Desert One and now a senior adviser for special operations at the Pentagon.

"So you look at me and say `Why did you go?' " Ishimoto said. "Well, because I was a soldier and the commander in chief, the president, said go."

After the abort order, one helicopter tried to leave Desert One in a cloud of dust but crashed into a parked C-130 cargo plane loaded with 44 Delta troops.

"We didn't hear anything. We just felt sort of a jar," said retired Air Force Staff Sgt. J.J. Beyers, a radio operator in the C-130's cockpit where five other airmen died. "We thought we might have been shelled or something. It never occurred to us what happened."

Beyers, 62, suffered severe burns and was forced to retire.

The transports had taken off from Misirah, an island off Oman. When they returned, British airfield workers sent over two cases of cold beer.

One case had a message scrawled on it. That piece of cardboard, displayed in a frame at Hurlburt, reads:

"To you all from us all for having the guts to try."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: carterslegacy
Carter's Legacy.
1 posted on 04/23/2005 11:35:00 AM PDT by SmithL
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To: SmithL

You da man, Jimmah


2 posted on 04/23/2005 11:38:25 AM PDT by digger48
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To: SmithL

Carter's Legacy.
======
Just ANOTHER disasterous liberal/socialist/pacifist Presidency. History repeats itself; Clinton proved that.


3 posted on 04/23/2005 11:40:58 AM PDT by EagleUSA (Q)
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To: SmithL

Carter should have been there---wearing his Nobel brownie button.


4 posted on 04/23/2005 11:41:00 AM PDT by cherokee1
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To: SmithL

5 posted on 04/23/2005 11:42:16 AM PDT by kingattax
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To: SmithL
Thank you Jimmah Carter ....

Oh yeah, I almost forgot ........

THANKS FOR THE MARIEL BOATLIFT you leftist, girly-man icehole!

6 posted on 04/23/2005 11:43:27 AM PDT by Tuba Guy (' I has spoken !! ')
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: Pookyhead
just another lefty peacnick loser.

Of the worst variety: the ones who will not go away.

8 posted on 04/23/2005 11:48:47 AM PDT by Paul Atreides (FACT: More atrocities have been perpetrated with a hot glue gun, than with a hand gun)
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To: SmithL

9 posted on 04/23/2005 11:53:17 AM PDT by West Coast Conservative
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To: Pookyhead
....... the Panama Canal

That one's gonna bite us in the rear end in about ten years.

10 posted on 04/23/2005 11:59:09 AM PDT by Tuba Guy (' I has spoken !! ')
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To: SmithL

Not entirely Carter's fault. The military planning was absolutely boneheaded, too, moreso than can be explained by any time pressure resulting from Carter's dawdling. The major planning factor seems to have been the desire of each service to grab as much of the action as possible.


11 posted on 04/23/2005 12:03:27 PM PDT by Grut
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: SmithL

Eagle Claw - a major low point in US Military history. It was a heartbreaking day.


13 posted on 04/23/2005 12:56:36 PM PDT by ASTM36
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To: ASTM36

Jimmy Carter, Commander in Chief


14 posted on 04/23/2005 1:58:09 PM PDT by TYVets (God so loved the world he didn't send a committee)
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To: Pookyhead

no sarcasm tag? the Shah died July 27th, 1980...


15 posted on 04/23/2005 4:34:56 PM PDT by nicko (CW3 (ret.) CPT, you need to just unass the AO; I know what I'm doing- that goes for you too, Major)
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Comment #16 Removed by Moderator

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