U.S. Air Force Gen. Roger A. Brady visits his old base in Enid
Commander oversees activities in Europe, other continents
Published: November 3, 2009
ENID — The man who has made a career in the air and by leading U.S. Air Force efforts at home and abroad stood on familiar ground Monday at Vance Air Force Base in Enid.
Gen. Roger A. Brady Commander U.S. Air Forces in Europe talks to the media on Monday, Nov. 2, 2009, at Vance Air Force Base in Enid, Okla. Brady, who grew up in Midwest City, is responsible for Air Force activities in a theater spanning three continents covering more than 20 million square mile, 92 countries and territories, and possessing one-fourth of the worlds population. Photo by Chris Landsberger, The Oklahoman
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Home to Oklahoma
In addition to visiting Vance Air Force Base, he spoke Monday evening to the Enid Air Force Association Chapter 214 Community Partners Dinner at the Cherokee Strip Conference Center in Enid.
Brady, whose current home is Ramstein Air Base, Germany, had returned home, not only to Enid, but Oklahoma as a whole. He graduated from Midwest City High School and earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Oklahoma in 1968. At OU he was part of the ROTC program, which led to him being commissioned as an Air Force officer in 1969. Then he returned to Enid for the undergraduate pilot training at Vance. But even the end of that stay, held certain memories.
Referred to as the Oct. 11, 1973, Enid flood, the rain actually began the previous evening and continued into the morning hours. It is still the most rainfall in one day in Oklahoma — 15.68 inches at Enid.
"It was just days or a couple of weeks or so before our graduation,” he said. "We had a couple of guys in the class that didn’t come to graduation because they didn’t have a uniform. In fact, I was one of two captains in the class, and the guy in the other section, the captain, was one of the guys that did not come to graduation because he did not have anything to wear.”
Duties in Europe
"Our primary mission in Europe, as U.S. Air Forces Europe, is to feed forces to Afghanistan and Iraq,” he said. "As part of global force management our units rotate into Afghanistan, Iraq and other places at the same rate that units in the continental U.S. do.
U.S. Air Forces in Europe consists of seven bases along with 70 geographically separate locations. More than 39,000 active-duty, Reserve, Air National Guard and civilian employees are assigned to U.S. Air Forces in Europe.
Brady also spoke about a respect he has seen shown in Europe to Americans that has historical ties.
"The blood of a lot of Americans is in the soil of Europe and the Europeans have not forgotten that,” he said. "So regardless of what the politics may or may not be from one nation to another people receive us very gladly.”


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