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thedrifter
05-28-03, 06:23 PM
POW returns, forever changed
By KATE WILTROUT, The Virginian-Pilot
© May 25, 2003
COPPERAS COVE, Texas -- In the living room of his new brick house overlooking the plains of central Texas, Dave Williams sticks his arm into an orange plastic biohazard bag and pulls out a pair of grimy yellow pajamas.
The sight and smell immediately send clouds across his face.

``I haven't seen these,'' he says quietly, looking down at the soiled button-front shirt and pull-on pants. ``And the feelings I have going through my mind right now . . .'' His voice trails off.

``It's so doggone crazy.''

Just eight weeks earlier, Williams and another Army Apache helicopter pilot, Ron Young, had been captured by Iraqi forces after their chopper went down near Karbala. Soon afterward, they were forced out of their khaki flight suits and into the striped cotton pajamas.

Young's were blue, Williams' yellow.

The outfits were among the few constants in three weeks filled with fear and uncertainty.

They wore them in seven different prisons, their captors moving them every few days to stay ahead of the approaching American forces.

They wore them during sleepless nights as allied bombs buckled the prison walls that held them.

And they wore them onto the U.S. helicopter that finally spirited them away from their nightmare on April 13, when Marines liberated Williams, Young and five other POWs from a house near the city of Tikrit.

Since then, it's been a whirlwind six weeks for Williams, who grew up in Chesapeake and whose mother and sister still live there: Counseling. Repatriation. Teary reunions. Easter with the president. A vacation cruise. David Letterman and ``60 Minutes.''

Now, the first wave of the frenzy has died down, and the 30-year-old chief warrant officer and former special operations soldier is back home with his family. He's a stranger to the house, in a way -- they moved into it a few days before he went to war. Boxes from Korea, his last post, wait in the garage to be unpacked. Newspapers with his picture pile up in the study.

Williams is kind of a stranger in his own life, as well.

Since his boyhood days in Hampton Roads, when he was nearly obsessed with flying, he has always known what he wanted to do, has always mapped out the next step. Now, for the first time, after what he has endured, he's not so sure what the future holds.

Warding off tears, Williams -- still 20 pounds lighter than when he was captured -- puts the pajamas aside.

He is a long way, though, from being able to put aside the three weeks of terror that even his mother says will leave him forever changed.

Leader of the pack It began in darkness on March 23, when about 30 Apache attack helicopters left Kuwait and streaked toward Karbala, about 60 miles southwest of Baghdad.

Williams, trained as an Apache instructor, was the primary pilot, sitting in the rear of the two-person cockpit. Young, a co-pilot and gunner four years Williams' junior, sat up front.

They flew for two hours, stopped to refuel, and were in the air for another 20 minutes when anti-aircraft fire started lighting up the sky. Soon, Williams says, they were flying through a ``wall of lead.'' He could see two men on the ground, taking turns firing a 23 mm anti-aircraft gun at them, then diving for cover.

``It's the most advanced attack helicopter in the world,'' Williams says. ``But it's still susceptible to small-arms fire.''

At one point, a donkey scurried through the scene -- an absurdity he still laughs about.

Williams and Young waited for orders to move out, knowing that with each extra second they hovered, they were in more danger.

``I didn't want to be flying in that stuff,'' Williams says. ``But I stayed there. I sucked it up. I didn't go south.'' A round came through the floor and tore through the sole of his left boot, nicking a toe and leaving powder burns on his foot.

Another took out one of the helicopter's two engines.

The chopper's internal alarm system -- a recording of a woman's voice -- recited a list of warnings into his headset.

``She was vomiting all this information,'' Williams says. ``Ron joked later that she was stuttering.''

The worst message for the chief pilot: ``Rotor RPM low.''

If the blades don't spin fast enough, a helicopter can't stay airborne. Williams concentrated on keeping the helicopter level, and they landed in a field.

About 90 minutes later, after swimming a few hundred yards in a canal, the two were taken prisoner. They were interviewed and videotaped, their frightened faces broadcast around the world.

About five days later, in a Baghdad prison, they discovered they weren't alone. Five soldiers from Fort Bliss, Texas, were being held alongside them.

The revelation gave Williams even more to worry about. Because he was the senior ranking officer, the welfare of the other soldiers -- ranging in age from 21 to 31 -- became his responsibility.

His training helped him recognize signs of trouble in his fellow captives.

He pleaded with their guards to move them to safer quarters when American bombs started hitting nearby. They didn't. He asked an English-speaking doctor who examined them to bring him a copy of the Geneva Convention, which establishes the rules for treating prisoners of war. The doctor never returned.

He tried to answer the scared soldiers' questions and give them hope.

Are we going to make it out of here?

Are the Americans going to bomb us?

Are our captors going to kill us?

Do the Americans know where we're at?

``I told them, `They're looking for us. Never forget that.' '' They could read the fear in his eyes when he got nervous, Williams says. In his mind, he constantly replayed his last flight, wondering what he could have done differently, how he could have avoided being hit.

``All night long, I would think, `What if?' '' he says. ``I played `What if?' a million times.''

Everyone from his psychologist to his mother tells him he did everything right.

``It's hard for someone like me to accept that,'' he admits.

He's still in close touch with the former prisoners from the 507th Maintenance Company: Shoshana Johnson, Edgar Hernandez, Joseph Hudson, Patrick Miller and James Riley.

He still feels very protective of them, referring to them all as kids.

``Maybe it was meant to happen, for those kids' sakes,'' Williams says of his own capture.

And maybe his own upbringing, as well as the military training that came afterward, prepared him to be the man his fellow soldiers could depend on, the one who would find a way to land the crippled helicopter safely and survive everything that followed.

Chesapeake childhood Williams moved to Hampton Roads from Florida in 1981 with his parents and his younger sister, Farrah. His dad, David C. Williams, worked in retail; his mom, Pam, later got a job with the Chesapeake Police Department. Both expected Dave and his sister to behave.

Treat others the way you want to be treated, they were taught. No lying, cheating or stealing.

He has good memories of Great Bridge, which he says was a smaller, more tightly knit community 20 years ago than it is now.

``I think Chesapeake was a good place to grow up,'' he says.

continued

thedrifter
05-28-03, 06:26 PM
Though David and Pam Williams divorced when their children were 11 and 15, the family stayed close.

Brother and sister spent summers in Orlando with their paternal grandparents, Seventh-day Adventists who took them along to church and fed young David's fascination with flying.

Farrah Craddock remembers that on flights to and from Florida, her brother would bug flight attendants to take him into the cockpit. He memorized airline routes and learned to identify jets from the ground by sight and sound.

His mother obliged him with trips to the Norfolk airport, where they'd park near the end of the runway and spend hours watching takeoffs and landings.

It took a professional pilot pulling her aside when Dave was about 12 for his mother, whose remarried name is Pam Thacker, to realize that her son's dreams of flying weren't far-fetched.

The meeting occurred at a Barbados hotel where the family was vacationing; it happened to be the same hotel where their airline crew was staying. Dave Williams had befriended the crew and followed them around.

One of the pilots told her that her son had something special.

``I thought he was just a little boy,'' Thacker recalled. Until then, ``I really didn't believe him.''

Williams' life didn't revolve solely around planes. He played Pop Warner football, his father says, but was usually one of the smallest on the team.

As a teenager, he hung out at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront, got into skateboarding, and horsed around with friends from Great Bridge High School. He still has a small scar on his elbow from a fight between buddies he tried to break up in the middle of a Chesapeake cul-de-sac.

His dad remembers him painting his face like the singers in KISS. Still, his sister recalls, ``as his friends were building skate ramps, he was building cockpits.'' He was an average student with a vivid imagination and an artistic streak.

One summer before he was old enough to drive, his sister says, Williams walked around to construction sites near their house by the Greenbrier Mall, asking for scrap wood. He used it to build a cockpit in the garage, painting gauges onto the wood. Then he'd imitate engine noises, talk to the tower and fly off into fantasy.

In 1991 -- his senior year in high school -- the Persian Gulf War captivated him. Williams remembers his mother coming home late at night, after her police shifts ended, to find him wide awake, glued to CNN images of bombs hitting Baghdad.

Twelve years later, Williams' wife was the one glued to the TV, desperate for information.

``The hardest time was when I had the kids in bed and was crawling into bed myself,'' says Michelle Williams, also an Army helicopter pilot. ``I fell asleep to the news every night.''

Once he had his high school diploma, Williams moved to Orlando, enrolled at Valencia Community College and joined the Army as a full-time reservist. After two years as crew chief on a med-evac Huey helicopter, he looked for a bigger challenge.

His ultimate goal was flight school, but first he wanted to work as a ``quiet professional'' -- a special operations soldier. For five years, he served with the Army's 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment, based at Fort Campbell, Ky.

``We were all over the world, doing a lot of cool stuff -- dangerous stuff,'' he says.

Williams can't go into the details but says he trained for urban combat on night missions in every major U.S. city and worked in Africa and Europe.

As part of his training, he spent three weeks at Fort Bragg, N.C., going through SERE school, which stands for Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape.

It exists to prepare soldiers for evading capture and enduring captivity.

There, he learned how to resist interrogators and develop a fellowship with fellow captives.

``It didn't prepare you for the mental portion,'' Williams says. ``Nothing can prepare you for that at all. I don't care how long you spend in some simulated POW camp.''

The Iraqi prisons were nothing like American ones. Cells had brick walls and steel doors but no bunks or toilets. He was interrogated repeatedly, usually blindfolded. One session revolved around DVDs he'd stored in his helicopter. His captors told him some of the movies, including ``101 Dalmatians'' and ``The Mexican,'' were pornographic and insulting to Islam.

Williams won't talk about many parts of his captivity and rescue, but he alludes to abuse. Walking through a 1st Cavalry Division museum at Fort Hood, Texas, Williams gestures to a Russian-made, wooden AK-47 rifle in the Vietnam exhibit.

``Those hurt,'' he says.

He says his captors didn't follow the Geneva Convention. One of its provisions: moving prisoners out of the combat zone.

Williams thinks his captors did the opposite, deliberately positioning them where they thought American bombs would land. One bombing raid peeled back part of the roof and sent sections of the wall caving in on them.

Some of the most tense moments came when they were being moved, Williams says. At one point, the captives were handcuffed, blindfolded and crammed into an ambulance that drove through a street battle. When they stopped, he prayed no one would discover them. He pictured the bodies of American soldiers being dragged through the streets of Mogadishu, Somalia, 10 years ago.

Between morning and evening meals -- a roll in the morning, rice at night, and a little bit of chicken every other day -- he kept his mind occupied memorizing the uniforms, boots and tattoos of their captors. He planned escape scenarios. Mentally, he built an addition to his house.

Williams is the second American prisoner of war to have graduated from SERE school, which was developed after the Vietnam War. The first is one of his heroes: Michael Durant, a Blackhawk helicopter pilot held for 10 days after being shot down in Mogadishu in October 1993.

The two have served together and endured similar experiences, but Williams doesn't think of himself in the same category as Durant. He insists he was just doing his job and doesn't deserve stardom.

``I don't consider myself a celebrity by any means,'' he says. ``I agree that I have been through an extraordinary experience.''

A hometown hero In Copperas Cove, he's most definitely a celebrity.

It's May 17, Armed Forces Day, and Williams is grand marshal of the Copperas Cove Festival of Five Hills Parade. The town of 30,000 people sits on the western border of Fort Hood, home of the Army's 1st Cavalry and 4th Infantry divisions.

Williams and his wife are both members of the 1st Cavalry Division. Michelle Williams, also a chief warrant officer, flies Blackhawk helicopters. They went through pilot training together, then served in Korea for three years.

She has stayed home today to be with their children and cut the grass -- an attempt at normalcy after months of chaos -- so Williams sits alone atop a Mitsubishi Eclipse convertible.

After a week in New York City doing a string of network television interviews, he has traded his wool dress uniform, laden with hardware, for a simple flight suit and desert camouflage hat.

He seems more comfortable among townspeople than he was on camera in New York, where on a single day he did eight television interviews. The rigid schedule, constant questions and makeup drained him.

``I felt like I was back in captivity,'' he says.

It's better under the wide Texas sky, in a town filled with people connected to the Army he loves.

Copperas Cove -- named for the metallic taste of water in a nearby stream -- is an old cattle and farming town, now a cross between small town and sprawling suburb. It's got a Main Street with glass storefronts and a classic old movie theater showing ``The Matrix Reloaded.'' The parade route passes by churches, banks, a library and modest older homes with small, tidy lawns. Strip malls and new subdivisions, like the one Williams lives in, fill in the outskirts of the city.

Farther back in the parade rides a tough-looking group of Christian bikers called Chariots of Light. There's a more benign bunch of adults wearing bunny ears in honor of the town's now-defunct rabbit festival. Shriners in fez hats tool around in go-karts.

Williams takes the scene in stride. Before the parade steps off, he poses for snapshots with high school cheerleaders and Cub Scouts. Men and women he's never met hug him.

He addresses everyone as ``sir'' or ``ma'am''; girls are ``young lady.''

All along the two-mile parade route, he talks to onlookers.

``How you all doing?''

``Very nice sign.''

Old men with white hair salute him as he passes.

``You know, this means a lot to me, to see every one of you guys,'' Williams says.

When one woman shouts, ``Thank you!'' he replies, ``That's what we do, ma'am.''

Another yells, ``God bless you!'' to which Williams responds: ``God bless you for coming out here. It means a lot to me.''

A few youngsters run up for autographs, which Williams diligently signs. After parade organizers tell his driver to keep moving, Williams apologizes to one disappointed child.

``Sorry,'' he says to the boy. ``You all have a good day. Don't worry, I'll get you. We'll meet up somewhere, I promise.''

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http://home.hamptonroads.com/stories/story.cfm?story=54612&ran=223174


Sempers,

Roger