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God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Thank God you have got a Father that can be angry, but that loves you as much when He is angry as when He smiles upon you.
C.H. Spurgeon

Strong Christians refuse to make it about themselves and the engagement in petty battles. It’s not about personal vendettas, but winning the war for Jesus. Weak people get easily offended and use their energy to defend their wounded ego. Their will and their kingdom now becomes more important than God’s will and kingdom. And when Christians get there, they are in the flesh and being used by the devil. They are defeated.
Randy Smith

AN INSIDE LOOK AT THE CHINA RESCUE MISSION

AN INSIDE LOOK AT THE CHINA RESCUE MISSION

From the net…courtesy of CAPT Dave Anderson, USNR…

April 12, 2001

By Captain Guy Greider, Continental Airlines

Since the midair collision on April 1, 2001 between a U.S. Navy EP-3
surveillance aircraft and a Chinese jet fighter, I had watched the news with
mild interest. This was mostly due to the proximity of Guam to China. I never
dreamed that I would play a role in this intensely watched international
drama.

Somewhere in the negotiations between the United States and the Chinese
Governments, it was decided that a civilian aircraft should be sent to
retrieve the 24 crew members being detained on Hainan Island, China. A call
was made to Continental Airlines headquarters in Houston, Texas.

Continental was chosen because of its Guam base and its ability to launch this
kind of operation at a moment s notice. From there, the operation took shape
through the tireless efforts of many people working behind the scenes in a
coordinated effort between the airline, the military, and the State
Department.

On Saturday, April 7, 2001, I received a call at home from Captain Ralph
Freeman, Continental Micronesia Director of Flight Operations. Ralph told me
that the military wanted to charter one of our jets to conduct a rescue
mission and asked if I would be one of the crew members. I said yes without
hesitation. Later we were told that we would need to get passport pictures
taken in case the Chinese Government required visas. We got the required
photos and were under the impression that we would leave immediately…

However, the negotiations slowed over the demand from the Chinese that the
U.S. issue an apology that the U.S. was unwilling to give. Meanwhile, the
Continental crew remained on call 24 hours a day. Our Uniforms were laid out
and our bags were packed and waiting by the door. On Wednesday evening April
11, 2001, at about 630 PM Ralph called again to say that the two parties were
very close to an agreement to release the U.S. crew and to come to the
airport.

Upon arrival, we were given a briefing sheet listing the information that we
would need to conduct the flight. We would carry a Repatriation Team
consisting of Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force specialists, 14 people in all.
Doctors, Psychologists, and communications people with lots of gear showed up
on the ramp near the airplane, ready to board. They were all dressed in casual
civilian clothes. The 155 seat jet was fitted with 2 full stretcher kits
bolted in over rows of seats complete with Oxygen tanks and I.V. bottles. They
did not know the condition of the 24 detained crew members and they were not
going to take any chances. They were prepared. When our crew was fully
assembled, it consisted of 11 people – 2 pilots to fly the jet and an extra to
provide relief because of the extensive flight time involved. They were
Captain Tom Pinardo, Captain Pierre Frenay and I.

We also carried 5 very experienced Flight Attendants. They were Debbie
Percell, Susanne Hendricks, Jean Tang, Cynthia Iverson, and Beverly Haines.
Our 2 onboard mechanics were Peter Lum and Julius Aguilo. Our load planner was
Mike Torres.

At about 930 PM we received a call asking that we arrive in China no earlier
than 600 AM, just about sunrise. It was obvious that the entire exchange would
be photographed and they wanted daylight conditions. We estimated that a 215
AM departure from Guam would put us on the ground in Haikou precisely at 600
AM local China time (2 hours earlier than Guam). Some of us just stayed on the
plane, others accepted the company s invitation to come to the Continental
President s Club, a local VIP lounge at the airport to try to get some rest.
It was difficult to get any rest with our much anticipated mission so near.

By 100 AM the pilots were back in the briefing room going over the weather,
flight plan, fuel requirements and everything else that goes into a flight.
Again, we loaded up the airplane and finally departed Guam International at
precisely 215 AM. The stretcher kits and medical gear were not the only
special additions to the airplane. The company had loaded a special file into
the navigation database of the flight management computer (FMC). This allowed
us to gain access to navigation data needed to operatein this part of China,
which is not in our normal route structure.

The Repatriation Team carried sophisticated equipment to communicate with the
military and government officials that would monitor our progress throughout
the flight. The route of flight took us straight west from Guam toward the
Philippines along the G467 airway. About half way across we turned north
directly toward Hong Kong. This routing was designed to avoid flying through
Taiwanese airspace, something that the Chinese could consider offensive.

Approaching the Chinese coastline, we contacted Hong Kong radar control. After
establishing radar contact with us, the controller gave us a short cut to
expedite his traffic flow. This was bad because it cut off considerable
distance and would result in arriving too early. We compensated by slowing our
airspeed until the computer again estimated a 600 AM arrival.

The instant we turned across the short cut, the interphone rang from the back
of the plane. They wanted to know why we had deviated from the flight plan. We
told them it was due to Hong Kong traffic and that we had adjusted our
airspeed. We were still on schedule. Now we were approaching our destination,
Haikou airport on Hainan Island. Captain Pierre Frenay was at the controls.

The weather was 2000 ft overcast with 5 miles visibility and light winds out
of the east. Pierre made an ILS approach to and landed on runway 9. Haikou
airport is much the same as many other airports in the world that serve jet
transport aircraft. It has an 11,000 ft runway with standard lighting and
navigational facilities.

We touched down at 607 AM. The first early morning light was beginning to
illuminate the sky. The local air traffic controller instructed us to follow a
vehicle that was beside us on an adjacent taxiway. He led us to a remote part
of the airport, away from the main terminal buildings. Once we had parked and
shut down the engines, we saw many uniformed Chinese military personnel and
vehicles. They did not appear to have weapons.

Portable stairs were brought up to the airplane and we opened the main cabin
door. The Repatriation Team that we carried had been briefed to close down all
of their communications equipment prior to landing and put it away. They were
also briefed to remain in their seats in a non-threatening posture in case the
Chinese military came aboard. The first and only person to come aboard was an
Air China employee. He spoke English and was to act as the translator between
our group and the Chinese military. He instructed us to have everyone fill out
both arrival and departure documents. He collected all of our passports and
left the aircraft. Before he left, he said that only one person at a time
would be allowed to deplane. Peter Lum, one of our mechanics went down to
supervise the refueling and servicing of the airplane. When that was complete,
I went down to do the walk-around inspection. I did this rather slowly because
I wanted to have a chance to look around.

While I was out on the ramp, a skirmish developed between people who were
trying to climb a wall to photograph our aircraft and the Chinese police.
Somehow, CNN managed to carry our arrival and departure live. Once the
airplane was serviced and ready to go, we looked anxiously around for any sign
of the buses that carried our 24 detainees. Before that could happen however,
we had a problem to deal with. A U.S. military General who was on the scene to
assist in the transfer came storming up the stairs and demanded to speak with
the Captain. Tom Pinardo responded. The General said that the entire mission
was now in jeopardy. A document called the general declaration, which is
standard on all international flights had listed the destination as Haikou,
China R.O.C. The initials ROC stand for Republic of China which is .. Taiwan!
The Chinese were very upset over this. Tom quickly crossed out ROC and
replaced it with P.R.O.C. the Peoples Republic of China. This seemed to
satisfy them.

With the airplane ready to go and the paperwork complete, 2 buses pulled up
and the 24 U.S. service men and women saluted as they bolted up the stairs and
settled into the back of the plane. When the last one was aboard, our
passports were returned to us. The stairs were withdrawn, the cabin door
closed, and we started the engines and departed.

It was my turn at the controls. Once airborne heading straight south we broke
through the clouds into the bright sunshine. Pierre made a PA announcement
that we were over international waters and leaving Chinese airspace. A great
cheer rose from the back of the airplane. A short while later we received a
telephone patch over the HF radio from Mr. Joseph Prueher, U. S. Ambassador to
China. He wanted to speak with Lt. Shane Osborne the 26 year old EP-3 Aircraft
Commander. Lt. Osborne came to the cockpit and put on a headset. The
Ambassador told him that on behalf of the President of the United States and
the entire country he wanted to say welcome home. He went on to say how proud
he was of everything the crew had done from their airmanship in saving the
lives of the crew and aircraft, to their conduct on the ground once they had
been detained. They had truly done an excellent job.

After his conversation with the Ambassador, Lt. Osborne stayed in the cockpit
for quite a while and told us his story pilot to pilot of what had happened
during and immediately after the midair collision with the F-8 Chinese
fighter. The fighter came up under their left wing. This pilot made 2 very
close passes previously that day. He apparently misjudged the intercept and
his vertical stabilizer struck the outboard left propeller on the EP-3. The
U.S. plane was in straight and level flight on autopilot at the time. The
fighter broke into two pieces and plunged into the sea. The U.S. plane rolled
to the left almost inverted, the pilot lost control and they began to lose
altitude.

The Chinese fighter had raked back across the fuselage and knocked off the
nose cone causing the aircraft to buffet wildly. When the nose cone departed
the aircraft it collided with and damaged the number 4 propeller on the right
wing. The collision punctured the pressure vessel and the EP-3 depressurized.
The collision also knocked off the pitot tubes eliminating airspeed and
altitude indications in the cockpit. It also knocked off the forward bracket
for the HF radio antenna. The antenna then flew back and wrapped around the
tail. We were almost upside down and totally out of control Osborne told us.
The dive continued and some crew members donned parachutes. At about 8,000
feet, Osborne regained straight and level flight. They considered ditching the
aircraft in the South China Sea but dismissed that option because it was
certain to result in loss of life.

They headed for the nearest land, Hainan Island. The U.S. crew now faced the
most difficult landing of their lives. They made numerous mayday, mayday,
mayday radio calls on internationally recognized emergency frequencies. The
Chinese did not respond. Somehow, they managed to get the airplane on the
ground. Their next immediate task was to destroy the sensitive electronic
surveillance equipment aboard the EP-3. Meanwhile the Chinese military had
approached the aircraft in vehicles and were yelling at them through
loudspeakers to deplane. The next 11 days would be a very uncertain time for
them.

When we met them, they told us that they had not been abused or mistreated.
Their food was adequate and plentiful. Sort of like eating in a Chinese
restaurant every day one of them said. On the forth day, they got some coffee.
On the fifth day, some cokes were provided. The crew did not know what kind of
transport would be provided for their return home. They were pleased and
surprised to see a chartered airliner from the United States.

The rest of the flight from Haikou to Anderson AFB on Guam was uneventful.
During the 5 hour flight the crew was treated to the movie Men of Honor and
enjoyed a first class meal. We did not know it at the time but our landing at
Anderson AFB was carried live on national television. We taxied to the parking
ramp at Anderson where many people had turned out to welcome all of us home.
Individuals and families with kids, both military and civilian waved American
flags and cheered, showing support for the returning U.S. spy plane crew.

Once the 24 U.S. crewmembers and the military Repatriation Team had deplaned
at Anderson, they immediately boarded waiting buses and were whisked away. The
Continental crew then became the object of intense media attention. CNN,
MSNBC, ABC, NBC, Reuters and various print media interviewed us. A dizzying
swirl of attention after a very long day. We were happy, tired, and pleased
that the mission was so successful as Tom flew the last segment, a 10-minute
flight back to Guam International Airport. This time our passengers included
Bill Meehan, President of Continental Micronesia, Guam Governor Carl
Gutierrez, Lieutenant Governor Bordallo and others. We thought the day was
just about over but we had one more surprise in store.

After landing, we were given a hero s welcome of our own. The airport fire
department was in place to give us the traditional water cannon salute, a
rainbow arch of water for us to taxi under. A reception was held at the gate
with food, balloons, commemorative plaques, and more media interviews with the
local television station. This was very heady stuff. As I look back on this
one of a kind operation. It could not have happened without the tremendous
effort and skills of many people working behind the scenes. Bill Meehan, Mitch
Dubner at the SOCC in Houston, Tom Rinow at the CMI SOCC, Captain Ralph
Freeman, CMI Director of Flight Operations, and many others had major rolls in
coordinating this flight. It was accomplished through teamwork. The fact that
it came off without a hitch is testimony to how well all these people did
their jobs. The exposure that Continental Airlines received over this is a
marketing manager’s dream comes true.

We will be remembered by millions of people as the company who conducted the
China Rescue Mission. This was a proud day for Continental Airlines and for
America.