From Vietnam to Iraq, pilot has a knack for close calls
By Jeff Schogol, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Saturday, April 15, 2006

Chief Warrant Officer 5 Gregory McManus, a test pilot
with the 135th Aviation Regiment in Iraq, has 39 years
of flying with the Army under his belt.
The Springfield, Mo., pilot flew helicopters in Vietnam
from 1969 to 1970, during which he was shot
down six times, he said.
http://stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=36498CAMP ANACONDA, Iraq — His navigation systems had failed. Visibility was limited. And he could be heading toward the Iranian border.
Chief Warrant Officer 5 Gregory McManus, a test pilot with the 135th Aviation Regiment, said he wondered if he was about to end his 39-year career flying with the Army as the first American pilot shot down in Iran.“For a few seconds, you kind of wondered, ‘I could have been retired,’ ” said McManus, 57.
McManus said he feels “blessed by God” to be able to keep flying at his age. “There’s not many pilots my age not in a state of decrepitude that can continue doing what I do,” he said. “I’m afraid if I stop, maybe I will become decrepit. My brain won’t work.”
But in Iraq, as in Vietnam, McManus will look out of his aircraft and see people dressed in black, wearing “strange hats” and working in the fields to support their families, who wave as he flies by, he said. “Then you couldn’t tell who the enemy was until somebody shot at you. Now, the same thing,” he said.