Romance Roll Call: Military Romance Blog




December 19th, 2009 by ajbrower
A New Hero for Romance

I’m tired of cops, FBI agents and special ops heroes getting all the fun jobs in novels. I mean, how much effort does it take to make one of these career fields sexy, dangerous and appealing? None. Today I start on my campaign to make other military career fields prime for heroic action! Let’s start with public affairs.

I’ve been in public affairs for 25 years. I know special ops career fields tend to be a favorite of authors, but really, what do those guys do? Rescue a few people? Secret squirrel stuff we never hear about? But in PA, our affairs are all public. Seriously public, but in a funny way.

When I was a young 23-year-old Air Force second lieutenant, I got my first hint of what this career would be like. I had to write a fact sheet on a space mission that was to fly on the first polar shuttle launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. (This isn’t secret squirrel stuff. It never happened because Challenger blew up into a billion tiny pieces and NASA needed to focus on getting the shuttle back in the air.) I opened Aviation Week and Space Technology and read an article they’d written on the program, which was called Teal Ruby. With help from the program office, I crafted a brilliant, two-page fact sheet on this stationary system that would sit in the shuttle’s bay and monitor the aurora borealis, among other things. Then I got approval from the project office, and sent the information off for security review from our higher headquarters.

The fact sheet came back classified.

That’s when I learned many engineers call my magazine source for information Aviation Leak and Spy Technology. Oh, and that you shouldn’t believe everything in print. Give me a break! I was 23.

I write romantic suspense, and I admit, I like to leave a few bodies lying around in my novels. Not serial killer type, I can’t think like that. More, how the he** did that happen? This may have been influenced during a court-martial for the death penalty in Britain. A technical sergeant had stabbed a master sergeant several times over the senior ranking man’s flirtation with the other man’s wife. For those internationally savvy folks out there, the U.K. doesn’t have the death penalty, so the media were all over us. And as the ranking PA officer on base (by now I was a first lieutenant), it was my job to keep things orderly.

The court room sat 12 audience members, outside the legal teams, the judge and the jury. No room for reporters, so we’d take them into the courtroom before and after sessions and let them film it empty. I took a television crew in one day and the sound man picked up a photo off the prosecutor’s desk to do a camera lighting check. The white on the back of the photo was perfect for this task. But as he held up the photo, I saw what was on the other side: the bloody body of the master sergeant.

“Please don’t turn the photo over,” I tried to say as off-handedly as possible. “If you do, I’ll have to confiscate your film.” The sound man raised his eyebrows when he saw the photo and fortunately did not turn the picture over. I haven’t a clue how to confiscate film. But I imagine it would involve calling in armed security forces and really big headlines in the news.

Then there was the time I was offered black market goods in Moscow. Operation PROVIDE HOPE was public relations move to get European nations to help send food and medicine to agencies that lost their government support when the Soviet Union broke up. We PA folks were supposed to be taking media on flights with our humanitarian cargo. My AP reporter backed out on me while we were on a stop in Moscow, on our way to Ulan Ude, Siberia. In February. It was snowing in Moscow and as I turned around from the pay phone I’d just used, a man approached me, his hand holding his coat closed. He said in English as he opened his coat, “Would you like to buy a ham?”

Yes. In a large pocket inside his coat was the highly coveted canned ham of Moscow. I fought off laughing, even as I realized how desperate things must have been there at the time.

The life of public affairs officer is filled with unique experiences that many special ops men would question participating in. I fought off dozens of international media when the Yugoslavs got lucky and took out an F-117 stealth fighter jet during the Kosovo war. It was my job to keep the information out of the news while those search and rescue guys (yes, special ops) did their job of rescuing the pilot. For six hours we answered, “I have no information I can give you on that.” (That’s secret PA code for “I have information on that, but I can’t give it to you.” Not a lie, but also not what the media wants to hear.) More recently, it was reporters trying to find out information after CNN reported a C-17 cargo jet had crashed in Texas. It hadn’t, and it takes a while to find the whereabouts of nearly 200 planes to make sure we weren’t missing one.

There’s also the time the water in India attacked me. Believe me, when the flight surgeon says don’t drink the water, don’t even brush your teeth in it! I’d like to see anyone do their job horizontal on KC-10 flying over the Burma Hump. (Okay, so even PA can’t work with dysentery.) And then there was the community group we took to Berlin to see U.S. operations there. Five hours after we left, the Berlin Wall came down. We’re good. Real good.

I’d like to see those special ops guys do that. Or better: let’s make them talk to a reporter. You know, that secret squirrel stuff makes it hard for them to answer questions. Yes, that’s right. You would need a public affairs trained professional to do that.

15 comments to “A New Hero for Romance”

  1. Donnell
    Comment
    1
    · December 19th, 2009 at 12:25 pm · Link

    Hi AJ, wonderful post, and I love a great military hero. To prove my point I just finished The Disciple by Stephen Coonts. Want to read about some fantastic military heroes, pick up his thriller. As for cops, FBI agents etc. I believe we can share the ink. Still think these are sexy reads. :smile:



    • AJ
      Comment
      1.1
      · December 19th, 2009 at 12:38 pm · Link

      Donnell – Who doesn’t like a military hero (especially if the uniform fits in all the right places)? Though I suspect a PAO, is we call ourselves, would be more inclined toward a romantic comedy… :lol:



  2. Lyn
    Comment
    2
    · December 19th, 2009 at 12:33 pm · Link

    Thanks for the great post. Brings back old times. Old times. Viet Nam era times. Back then, (USN, enlisted) I worked in PIO (Public Information Office) which included both the base newspaper and the security types. What fun! Using a huge map and grease pencils to track the location of submarines (ours, and as many of theirs as we could find) then go write a story about the O wives rummage sale!

    Still, DH designs weapons systems, and yes, stuff gets out there–but not from him.

    Very interesting site, BTW. Good work.



    • AJ
      Comment
      2.1
      · December 19th, 2009 at 12:41 pm · Link

      Wow, Lyn! Didn’t know they’d cross the fields that far apart! They are trying to put PAs in information ops, read PsyOps or misinformation. The PA’s job is to put out the real stuff, someone else puts out the “misinformation.” We hate to lie, but we can be told lies and pass it as the truth. Not nice!



  3. Donnell
    Comment
    3
    · December 19th, 2009 at 12:47 pm · Link

    Love it, AJ, and that’s why it’s so hard to write military heroes if you’re not among this elite. Haven’t a clue what PAO is. The cops let me take the Citizens’ Academy. Suspect there isn’t such a thing for us non-need to know civilians. :cry:



    • AJ
      Comment
      3.1
      · December 19th, 2009 at 2:13 pm · Link

      PAO = public affairs officer. All the services use a similar title as we all go to the same school, Defense Information School, Ft. Meade, MD.
      That’s an academy I’d like to take. But could I just sit on the sidelines and take pics?



  4. Robin G
    Comment
    4
    · December 19th, 2009 at 1:47 pm · Link

    PA? ha, try Personnel. PA was a cakewalk compared to Personnel. You couldn’t ahve a murder mysterywith a PAO because there would be too many suspects–everyone hates PA!



    • AJ
      Comment
      4.1
      · December 20th, 2009 at 4:04 pm · Link

      And personnel is loved by everyone, right? ;-)



      • Robin G
        Comment
        4.1.1
        · December 20th, 2009 at 4:24 pm · Link

        Almost as many people as love PAOs!

        I will most likely be replaced by a rated person because, well, you know, the universal management badge.

        But no one goes out of their way to do in a personnelist… UNLESS! Of course! We stumble across the REAL personnel record showing someone was…ack, someone is trying to break in! I know too much!



  5. Jeannie Lin
    Comment
    5
    · December 20th, 2009 at 8:21 am · Link

    Absolutely fascinating! These are experiences definitely worth telling.

    But am I spoiled to ask for both a special ops hero and a public affairs heroine? Or vice versa? Because it sounds like a match made in heaven. :)



    • AJ
      Comment
      5.1
      · December 20th, 2009 at 4:03 pm · Link

      Sure! I imagine the conflict would be prime. The guy who can’t-or doesn’t say anything-and the girl who has to have an answer for everything.
      If you need someone to pose with a SpecOps guy, I’ll be happy to stand in as the PA!



  6. Kate
    Comment
    6
    · December 20th, 2009 at 12:27 pm · Link

    Great post, AJ. Very interesting for us non-miltary, PR types :o I like Jeannie’s ideas for H/h too.



  7. Melba Moon
    Comment
    7
    · December 20th, 2009 at 2:13 pm · Link

    Followed a link from Mystery/Suspense Writers KOD loop CNN over here! Great website site and will be a wonderful source! I’ll be sure to add to my list of favorites.

    Melba Moon
    President-Elect KOD



  8. Lisa Pietsch, Former U.S.A.F. Security Forces
    Comment
    8
    · December 21st, 2009 at 11:52 pm · Link

    LOVED IT!

    Thanks for the giggle!



  9. Sandy Williams
    Comment
    9
    · December 23rd, 2009 at 8:26 am · Link

    Great post. I’d totally read a book about a PA type hero.



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