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Veteran Salute: Fueling overseas during the Gulf War

Veteran Salute: Fueling overseas during the Gulf War

Yahoo13-03-2025

TOPEKA (KSNT) – Born in Garden City, growing up in Glasco and finishing Junior College in Concordia Janell McMillan realized she wanted something different from life. That mindset put her on the pathway of joining the few and the proud through the Marines.
'I had graduated from cloud county community college with an associate of arts degree, and just wanted to get out of the small town of Concordia Kansas,' McMillan said. 'Told my Mom, I'm joining the Marine Corp.'
Stationed in Bogue Field as a Lance Corporal, McMillan quickly found an affinity for her work as an aircraft refueler.
'I loved working with the planes,' McMillan said. 'We were a fixed wing unit. We did C130's, we did AV-8B's, we did other types of jets, F16's. I got to test fuel, I got to refuel aircraft, I got to do a little bit of everything. I even got to do clerical, and I received a meritorious mast for the clerical, because it was above my pay grade.'
The Corporal would put that wide array of skills to the test overseas, as the Gulf War conflict escalated.
'We started doing inspections, getting our gear ready, getting our pumps ready, getting our fuel bags ready,' She said. 'We ended up going to Saudi Arabia where we set up a flight line. We switched from a fixed wing unit to a rotary wing unit, and did mostly helo's as refueling.'
After her time in the Marine Corp. came to a close, McMillan would continue giving back through public service working as a public servant in a courthouse, state prison, the Kansas Department of Health and Environment and at the Topeka VA.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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I served my country. Trump's military parade is horrifying for a specific reason.
I served my country. Trump's military parade is horrifying for a specific reason.

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I served my country. Trump's military parade is horrifying for a specific reason.

When I was in seventh grade, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, Iraq's tiny, oil-rich neighbor. In response, the U.S. assembled a coalition of 42 countries to eject his army with military force. Looking back, the success of Operation Desert Storm may have seemed inevitable. But at the time, to most Americans, the Gulf War was anything but a foregone conclusion. In fact, early 1991 was a white-knuckle period for a country still traumatized and reeling from the Vietnam War. That perception was only heightened living with a mother whose cousin had been killed at Long Khanh in 1969. I had a front row seat to all the buildup, as my family lived in Shreveport, Louisiana, just across the Red River from Barksdale Air Force Base and the 2nd Bomb Wing. Every week, if not every day, I watched B-52s on the horizon as pilots practiced touch-and-go landings. I know I wasn't the only person in Shreveport that winter suddenly filled with a mixture of pride and apprehensiveness. At the time, the U.S. hadn't used its military like this since the evacuation of Saigon. Not only had it been largely untested for nearly 20 years, but the all-volunteer force had never been mobilized on this scale. There was this fear — almost a complex — that any major war we attempted would end up the same. Of course, the fears were unfounded. Saddam's military fled Kuwait in a matter of weeks and President George W. Bush wisely chose not to press the effort by toppling the Iraqi government. Instead, tens of thousands of U.S. troops returned home that spring and summer to cheering crowds. There was a national sigh of relief. In Shreveport, my entire middle school flooded outside the morning the bombers returned. We'd been told they would fly directly over the city. And sure enough, they did. Low and slow, B-52 after B-52 cruised over the center of town. Thunderous cheers and applause rose as each aircraft passed by. That parade in the sky was cathartic for many people. 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