Sunday, August 26, 2012

APACHE HELICOPTER PILOT'S STORY

FROM:  U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

Army Chief Warrant Officer 2 Laura Tanski and her Apache helicopter Aug. 16, 2012 at Marshall Army Airfield, Fort Riley, Kan. U.S. Army photo
Face of Defense: Apache Pilot Fulfills Lifelong Dream

By Mollie Miller
1st Infantry Division


FORT RILEY, Kan., Aug. 22, 2012 - Although Chief Warrant Officer 2 Laura Tanski first "slipped the surly bonds of Earth" as an Army aviator two years ago, she has been living in the clouds for most of her life.

"For as long as I can remember, my room was filled with airplanes and helicopters," Tanski, an Apache helicopter pilot with the 1st Infantry Division's 1st Combat Aviation Brigade, said recently. "I have always loved aviation, and I knew since I was a kid that I was going to fly."

Tanski's route to the skies began in her hometown of Dearborn Heights, Mich., long before she was even old enough to ride a bike, much less fly a helicopter.

"We were always attending air shows or visiting the air museum," said Patricia Tanski, the Apache pilot's mother. "Her passion for flying just grew and grew."

While in high school, Tanski got her first taste of flight during flying lessons at a local airport. That quick taste, which included a rather harrowing solo flight in a snowstorm, left the young pilot hooked.

"I am fascinated by the fact that a huge machine like a plane or a helicopter can actually fly," she said. "I wanted to be a part of that."

After a short tour with the Air Force and a deployment to Iraq with the 25th Infantry Division as an Army air traffic controller, Tanski decided that it was time that she stopped managing aircraft from the ground. She put in her paperwork to attend flight school and was selected in early 2008.

"The day I got selected for flight school was the best day of my life," she said. "I just kept looking at that selection list on the computer – I had to double and triple check it to make sure I was seeing things right."

Tanski spent two years learning how to fly at Fort Rucker, Ala. The young aviator said the flying part came easy in the early days of flight school – she was, in fact, one of the first students in her class to fly solo. When the time came to select her advanced aircraft, she said, she had her heart set on one, and only one, airframe: the AH-64 Apache, one of the Army's most lethal pieces of equipment.

"My intent has always been to get as close into the battle as possible, and I knew that the Apache was always right there in every mission."

Her mother was not surprised that Tanski selected the Apache; she said she would have been more surprised if her daughter hadn't selected the high-tech aircraft.

"Laura has always welcomed a challenge, so it was no surprise that she would choose the most challenging and complex helicopter," she said.

When she began the Apache helicopter block of instruction, Tanski was the only woman in her class. Today, she is one of just four Apache pilots in her battalion, and one of fewer than 20 female helicopter pilots who call the 1st Combat Aviation Brigade home.

Being a member of such a small group has never made much of a difference to her, Tanski said. There is no difference between the soldiers to her left and right and the big brother who tore up and down the roads of Dearborn playing street hockey with his little sister, she explained.

"Having an older brother really prepared me for life in this unit and in the Army," she said. "All the soldiers here are just like brothers to me. We play jokes on each other and have a good time, but we work hard, too. Our company is very close. It really is like a family down here."

Now edging toward 300 total flight hours, including 80 combat hours, Tanski said she is looking forward to her future in Army aviation.

"I want to become an instructor pilot I had some fantastic instructors while I was at Fort Rucker, and I want to be able to teach others just like those great IPs taught me."

She also has a few things to teach women who are blazing their own Army paths in fields typically dominated by men.

"Never give up, no matter who says you can't do it," she said. "If you want it, if this is your dream, go for it."

Her daughter's dedication to excellence and never ending pursuit of her dream has made the pilot's mother quite proud of a little girl who used to save her allowance so she could buy rocket kits and host launch parties in the backyard.

"I feel my daughter is not only a role model for her family, especially her nieces, but for every woman who has a goal that she is working to accomplish," she said. "Even I continue to be inspired by my daughter every day."

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