TEN THOUSAND FEET ABOVE an area near the city of Ghazni in southeastern Afghanistan, Lt. Col. John Marks—call sign “Karl”—adjusted the zoom for the infrared sensor in the Litening pod on his right wing. Peering at the infrared image on the right-hand multi-function display in his instrument panel, he noticed something different about the groups of people the sensor had picked up.
“Mutant-42,” a Joint Terminal Attack Controller, was on the radio with Marks and his wingman, Capt. Jerrod “Marshall” Dillon. Sgt. Houston Thomas, the controller, had called for air support from Marks’ flight to aid an Army unit that had been ambushed by Taliban fighters near a village. Taking fire, the unit retreated to a ditch near the six MRAP (Mine Resistant Ambush Protected) trucks they’d gone out on patrol in. They needed the firepower “Hawg-63”—Marks’ flight—could bring to the fight but there was a complication.
Marks, now on his fourth deployment to Afghanistan with the 303rd Fighter Squadron, recognized that some of the people the Army soldiers wanted his flight to strafe might not actually be Taliban fighters.
MARKS RECOGNIZED THAT SOME OF THE PEOPLE THE ARMY SOLDIERS WANTED HIS FLIGHT TO STRAFE MIGHT NOT ACTUALLY BE TALIBAN FIGHTERS.
“I picked up the groups they were describing with my sensor pod,” Marks recalls. “And I noticed that they’re moving differently from Taliban, moving like western or western-trained troops. It’s very distinct. I told them, ‘I see a group here and another group here. They do not appear to be moving