'Almost impossible mission': The 8,000-mile non-stop flight to save a US soldier's life - AVENGE

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'Almost impossible mission': The 8,000-mile non-stop flight to save a US soldier's life

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The Taliban have stepped up attacks across Afghanistan after President Trump scrapped high-level peace talks between Afghan and Taliban leaders at Camp David earlier this month.
This week alone, three major suicide attacks killed dozens of people, including 26 at a campaign rally for Afghan President Ashraf Ghani. The Taliban claimed responsibility for all the attacks.
In all, 17 U.S. troops have been killed and more than 100 wounded, some of them severely.  One of them -- a special operations soldier -- lost his right arm and leg last month after a grenade exploded during close-quarters combat.
Three military aircraft, 18 medical personnel, 24,000 gallons of fuel and 26 gallons of blood was spent to save the life of this critically wounded soldier, whom Fox News agreed not to identify at the request of the U.S. military.
Officials credit a recent decision to have assault forces carry blood on the battlefield, as well as and lifesaving surgery at Bagram Airbase.
More than 100 troops stood in line outside the base hospital to donate blood to help their wounded brother-in-arms. Then the Air Force sprang into action to bring him home.
A C-17 flight crew based at Dover Air Force Base flew from Germany to Afghanistan on short notice, then made the 8,000-mile non-stop journey to Texas.
"The crew members that were on board, we kind of know what was at stake should anything fall out of line," said Maj.  Dan Kudlacz, the aircraft commander for the mission dubbed REACH 797. "I know I didn't really get great sleep the night prior just because I knew what was at stake."
The mission required two night time mid-air refuelings, one over Europe and the other over Maine. For Kudlacz, it was the first time this type of mission had been attempted in his career.
"To do it with air medical evacuation patients on board was definitely something that I have never heard of," he said.
This article is already published on FOX NEWS

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