| WASHINGTON, June 7, 2007 — began with a pinching sensation in his neck. Soon the fighter pilot, at the controls of an F-16 Fighting Falcon, lost most of his ability to move his arms and hands. Lt. Col. Peter Byrne managed to land the plane 90 minutes later.
His skill and composure that June day, one year ago, earned him the Koren Kolligian Jr. Trophy, one of the service’s top safety awards.
Air Force Vice Chief of Staff Gen. John D. W. Corley presented the trophy to Byrne during a ceremony, June 5, in the Pentagon’s Hall of Heroes. Assisting in the presentation was Koren Kolligian, nephew of the trophy’s namesake.
Byrne’s stroke happened while he was flying an F-16 Fighting Falcon out of Buckley Air Force Base, Colo. He kept his jet aloft for another 90 minutes before returning to Buckley.
“Living through a stroke with immediate care is tough enough,” Corley said of the Air National Guardsman. “To do it while flying an F-16 is superhuman.”
The Kolligian Trophy is awarded annually for “outstanding feats of airmanship by aircrew members who, by extraordinary skill, exceptional alertness, ingenuity or proficiency, averted accidents or minimized the seriousness of accidents in terms of injury, loss of life, aircraft damage or property damage.”
|