An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

'Kil' Roy was here: A-10 pilot reaches 1,000 combat hours

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. David Dobrydney
  • 455th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs
Lt. Col. James "Kil" Roy III, 455th Expeditionary Operations Support Squadron director of operations, has spent a long time in the air.

A veteran of 250+ missions, Roy recently achieved 1,000 combat flying hours, all in the A-10 Thunderbolt II and all as a result of missions flown from here.

"In comparing this to a 40 hour a week job; essentially, I've worked six months in the air over Afghanistan," said Roy, deployed here from Moody Air Force Base, Ga.

Having grown up with a father and grandfather who were both career Army officers, Roy said the only things he wanted to do was be in the military and fly planes.

"I was accepted to West Point and ... the Air Force Academy, and the statistics were 70 percent of Academy graduates went to pilot training [versus] 30 percent of West Point graduates," Roy said. "So I went with the numbers."

Roy would graduate from the Air Force Academy, but ironically not pilot-qualified, being assigned instead as a weapons system officer for the B-1B Lancer. Determined to become a pilot, Roy sought out civilian air credentials.

"I earned my commercial pilot's license, instrument rating and certified flight instructor license... to make my resume look as good as possible," Roy recalled, "and then worked really hard at my job to be the best WSO I could be in the squadron so I could get an exception to policy [letter] for vision."

Roy was selected for cross-training to the A-10 in 2001. While he said he missed the community of the Lancer mission, he considers his current mission very significant.
"Close air support is very gratifying," Roy said. "You get to directly help somebody on the ground and you directly affect the battle."

Roy's leadership and co-workers share his enthusiasm.

"It is a very rare accomplishment to hit 1,000 hours in a career, period, let alone in one [Area of Responsibility] and on the same platform," said Lt. Col. Marty Garrett, 455th EOSS commander, who added that a pilot doesn't reach numbers like that by accident.

"It takes someone who wants to get into the fight and someone who seeks out every opportunity to support the guys on the ground."