TWO CCT, AMBUSHED KILLED IN ACTION, CLICK HERE
Forrest B. Sibley and Matthew D. Roland




Matthew D. Roland

It is my sad duty to inform you of the death of Captain Matthew David Roland, age 27, who was killed in action in Afghanistan on August 26, 2015. He was killed at a vehicle checkpoint at a forward operating base when two individuals wearing Afgan National Defense and Security Forces opened fire on him as well as SSgt Forrest B. Sibley. NATO service members returned fire and killed the shooters at Camp Antonik – Helmand Province, Afghanistan.

He was a proud member of the 23rd Special Tactics Squadron at Hurlburt Field, FL. He was born  at Ellsworth AFB, SD on December 24, 1987. Being a member of a military family he lived at Dyess AFB,TX; Kirtland AFB, NM and Lexington, KY. He graduated at Lexington Catholic High School before entering the U.S. Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs, CO where he graduated in Class 2010. He graduated Combat Control School in Class 11-003, and Advanced Skills Training in Class 42.

Captain Roland is survived by his parents: Col. (Ret.) USAF Mark and Barbara Roland; sister: Erica Roland; niece: Willamina Roland; paternal grandparents: Dr. and Mrs. Earl Roland of Anderson, SC and maternal grandmother Rita Thomas of Louisville, KY. He was preceded in death by his maternal grandfather: Richard Baugh.

The family will receive visitors in his honor from 5-7pm on Tuesday September 8, 2015 at Lexington Catholic High School; followed by a Memorial Ceremony at 7pm. Another Memorial Service will be conducted on Monday, September 14 at 0900 in the Freedom Hangar at Hurlburt. Burial in the future will take place at Arlington National Cemetery with full military honors. In lieu of flowers, Memorial contributions can be made in Captain Roland's memory to the Combat Control Association.

May he Rest in Peace, CT


Forrest B. Sibley

It is with the deepest regret that I inform you the death of Staff Sergeant Forrest Brent Sibley, age 31, who was killed in action in Afghanistan on August 26, 2015. He was killed at a vehicle checkpoint at a forward operating base when two individuals wearing Afgan National Defense and Security Forces opened fire on him as well as Captain Matthew D. Roland. NATO service members returned fire and killed the shooters at Camp Antonik – Helmand Province, Afghanistan.

He was currently assigned to the 21st Special Tactics Squadron at Pope Army Airfield, NC. He was a four-time Bronze Star recipient, once with the Valor device, and had deployed four times to sensitive locations around the world in his nearly seven years of service. He is survived by his parents of Pensacola, FL.

A Memorial Service will be held on Monday, September 14 at 0900 at the Freedom Hangar at Hurlburt Field.

Visitation will be held on Tuesday, September 15, from 1400 to 1700 at the Naval Aviation Memorial Chapel located at 131 Moffett Rd, Bldg. 1982; Pensacola, FL 32508. Funeral service will be held on Wednesday, September 16 at 1100 at the same address. Interment will follow the service at the Barrancas National Cemetery at 1400. A military Honor Guard has been requested. It has not been decided by the family at this time what the desires are in lieu of flowers.

Forrest graduated from Niceville, FL high school. He graduated from the Combat Control School in Class 09-005, and Advanced Skills Training Class 35. He was CCA Life Member 1345.

May he Rest in Peace, CT



Airmen salute during Capt. Matthew D. Roland and Staff Sgt. Forrest B. Sibley’s memorial service, Sept. 14, 2015, at Hurlburt Field, Fla. The two Special Tactics Airmen, who had recently deployed to Afghanistan in support of Operation Freedom's Sentinel, were shot at a vehicle checkpoint at Camp Antonik, Afghanistan, Aug. 26, and died of wounds sustained in the attack, were honored in a private memorial. Both Special Tactics Airmen will be buried with full military honors. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Ryan Conroy/Released)

Two Special Tactics airmen killed in Afghanistan

By KELLY HUMPHREY
315-4443 | @Kellyhnwfdn
khumphrey@nwfdailynews.com

Posted Aug. 27, 2015 at 8:33 AM
Updated Oct 6, 2015 at 5:39 PM
HURLBURT FIELD — For the second time in a month, the Special Tactics community is mourning the loss of two of its airmen following an attack in Afghanistan on Aug. 25.
Capt. Matthew D. Roland, 27, and Staff Sgt. Forrest B. Sibley, 31, who were deployed in support of Operation Freedom’s Sentinel, were at a vehicle checkpoint near Camp Antonik when two individuals wearing Afghan National Defense and Security Forces uniforms opened fire on them. NATO service members returned fire and killed the shooters.
Roland and Sibley passed away from their wounds the following day.
“The losses of Matt and Forrest are a terrible blow to everyone who knew them,” said Col. Wolfe Davidson, 24th Special Operations Wing commander. “These two Combat Controllers were incredible warriors who not only volunteered to join our nation’s Special Operations Forces, but earned their way to the tip of the spear in defense of our nation.”
The deaths of Roland and Sibley occurred just a little more than three weeks after Tech. Sgt. Timothy Officer and Tech. Sgt. Marty Betteyloun, both members of the 24th Special Operations Wing, were killed in a free fall training accident at Eglin Air Force Base on Aug. 3.
Roland was a special tactics officer at the 23rd Special Tactics Squadron at Hurlburt. He graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 2010. Upon completing the STO training program in 2012, he was a team leader who supervised real-world combat preparedness training of a 35-member team.
He deployed three times in his five years of service to multiple locations globally. He is survived by his parents.
Phil Roberts of Lexington, Kentucky, knew Roland during his days as an Eagle Scout in high school.
“Matt was a true leader even in high school,” Roberts wrote in an email to the Daily News.
“He was a fun-loving, boisterous, happy kid, and there was never any doubt he would be a fine military officer. I think he probably wore camo diapers as an infant!”
Sibley was a Combat Controller at the 21st Special Tactics Squadron, Pope Army Airfield, N.C. He was a four-time Bronze Star medal recipient, once with the valor device, and he deployed four times to sensitive locations around the world in his nearly seven years of service. He is survived by his parents.
“I went to school with Forrest,” John Wayne McDonald of Alabama commented on the Daily News website. “He was a great guy. He was never mean to anyone.”
Due to their extensive special operations training, both were military-qualified static line jumpers, free fall jumpers, combat scuba divers and qualified in joint terminal attack control.
“The risks that these men and their teammates endured in combat and in training are all too well known to the Special Tactics community, but it does not make this great loss any easier to bear,” Davidson said. “We will honor Matt and Forrest for the legacy they left behind, embrace their families as our own, and thank them eternally for their ultimate sacrifice for American freedom.”


Lt. Col. Paul Brister, 23rd Special Tactics Squadron commander, speaks at the memorial service for Capt. Matthew D. Roland and Staff Sgt. Forrest B. Sibley on Hurlburt Field, Fla., Sept. 14, 2015. The two Special Tactics Airmen, who had recently deployed to Afghanistan in support of Operation Freedom's Sentinel, were shot at a vehicle checkpoint at Camp Antonik, Afghanistan, Aug. 26, and died of wounds sustained in the attack, were honored in a private memorial. Both Special Tactics Airmen will be buried with full military honors. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman Kai White/Released)

Lexington airman killed in 'insider' Afghanistan attack was in Special Operations

A former teacher and coach of Air Force Capt. Matthew D. Roland, one of two airmen killed Wednesday in Afghanistan, remember the Eagle Scout as "a born leader" who "certainly stuck out" for his motivation and dedication.

"He was such a young guy who had so much to give to the world," said Tim Wiesenhahn, cross-country coach at Lexington Catholic High School. "It's tragic."

Roland, 27, and Staff Sgt. Forrest B. Sibley, 31, of Pensacola, Fla., were shot and killed in their vehicle near Camp Antonlik in Helmand province, the Air Force release confirmed in a news release.

Roland was a 2006 graduate of Lexington Catholic and a 2010 graduate of the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Carrie Roberts, a teacher at Lexington Catholic, said Thursday that she taught advanced-placement physics to Roland and wrote a letter of recommendation in support of his effort to get into the Air Force Academy.

"He was a really smart kid," Roberts said. "Very trustworthy, respectful, dedicated, motivated. He was a quiet kid, and sometimes those are the hard ones to remember. But he certainly stuck out."

Roberts, 42, has taught at Lexington Catholic for 15 years. She said the news of Roland's death "was numbing."

"We were in the teachers' lounge, and I just had to stand there a while as it sunk in," she said. "It's difficult to think that somebody who went to an academy, which you usually think of as safe, and one of your students, much younger than me, gave his life for his country. I believe he was a hero. Anybody who was willing to give up their life for my freedom deserves all of our thoughts and our prayers."

Wiesenhahn, 48, the cross-country coach at Lexington Catholic, said Roland was "a born leader."

"He really wanted to be successful," Wiesenhahn said. "I like to say he was driven to succeed. You just kinda knew he was going to be a leader. ... The best runners really work at it, and Matt wanted to be successful, and he put in the work."

Wiesenhahn said Roland "followed directions really well. I mean, I could give them stuff to do, him and Clint Roberts, who I think was the senior captain that year, and I could trust them to follow directions and lead the team."

Survivors include his parents, retired Air Force Col. Mark Roland and Barbara Roland. Roland's sister, Erica, is a public defender in Lexington.

Roland was a special tactics officer at the 23rd Special Tactics Squadron in Afghanistan. After completing the rigorous special tactics training program in 2012, he was a team leader who supervised real-world combat preparedness training for a 35-member team. He deployed three times in his five years of service to multiple locations globally.

"The losses of Matt and Forrest are a terrible blow to everyone who knew them," said Col. Wolfe Davidson, 24th Special Operations Wing commander. "These two Combat Controllers were incredible warriors who not only volunteered to join our nation's Special Operations Forces, but earned their way to the tip of the spear in defense of our nation."

A man wearing an Afghan security force uniform opened fire Wednesday inside a base in southern Afghanistan, killing the two U.S. airmen in what appeared to be the latest "insider attack" to target foreign troops or contractors in the country.

NATO said two men in Afghan uniforms were shot in return fire and were wounded, correcting an earlier NATO statement that had said two gunmen attacked the Americans before being shot dead.

NATO said the gunman opened fire on a vehicle carrying international troops inside the base in Helmand province. Afghan authorities suspect that the shooting occurred during an altercation.

NATO did not identify the base where the attack took place.

Taliban insurgents have been known to wear Afghan police or military uniforms to stage attacks on international troops. Others have opened fire apparently on their own accord, including an Afghan soldier who last year killed Maj. Gen. Harold J. Greene, the highest-ranked U.S. officer to be slain in combat since 1970 in the Vietnam War.

The shooting is the third insider attack on foreign forces this year. In January, three American civilian contractors were shot dead at Kabul airport by an Afghan soldier, who also was killed. In April, an American soldier was killed by an Afghan soldier inside the governor's compound in eastern Nangarhar province.


Lexington airman killed in 'insider' Afghanistan attack was in Special Operations
Roland was a 2006 graduate of Lexington Catholic High School, and a 2010 graduate of the U.S. Air Force Academy.

Teachers at Lexington Catholic say Roland was a member of the National Honor Society, and part of the cross country team.

"He gave his all all the time. He always gave best effort. He was respectful. He was diligent. All the things that make you successful Matt knew how to do. He was also very kind, which I don't think we talk about enough. Matt was a kind guy. Never had a mean word to say about anybody. He was just an outstanding young man, and it's really unbelievable what has happened," said former cross country coach Tim Wiesenhahn.

Two fallen Special Tactics Airmen honored, remembered

HURLBURT FIELD, Fla. -- More than 1,000 family members, friends and teammates from around the country gathered here Sept. 14 to honor and remember two Special Tactics Airmen who were killed in action last month in an insider attack.

As the procession of family members departed the memorial, nearly 2,000 Air Commandos lined the roads and saluted to honor Capt. Matthew D. Roland, 23rd Special Tactics Squadron, and Staff Sgt. Forrest B. Sibley, 21st Special Tactics Squadron. Both were killed Aug. 26 at a vehicle checkpoint near Camp Antonik, Afghanistan.

“There are no words, lessons [or] themes that could properly memorialize Matt and Forrest,” said Lt. Col. Paul Brister, 23rd STS commander, at the memorial service. “They both lived lives bigger than that. The best way we can memorialize them is to live life with as much zeal, humor and love as they demonstrated in theirs.”

Roland, 27, a special tactics officer and team leader, was a qualified special operations battlefield commander who had deployed three times in his five years of service. Roland graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 2010 and completed the rigorous special operations training pipeline in 2012. He was a native of Lexington, Ky., and is survived by his parents and sibling.

“Matt was anything but typical,” Brister said. “On the battlefield he was a lion — lethal, precise, humble and compassionate. He was always flawless. I’m convinced I learned more from him than he could ever learn from me.”

Roland lived to protect his teammates, said Master Sgt. Jared Hodges, 23rd STS.

“He was our leader, mentor and brother,” Hodges said. “His biggest fear was letting [us] down.”

Sibley, 31, a Combat Controller stationed at Pope Army Airfield, N.C., had deployed four times to numerous sensitive locations in his seven years of service. For his commitment in the face of consistent danger, he received four Bronze Star medals, one with the Valor device for bravery against an enemy of the U.S. in combat. He was a native of Pensacola, Fla., and is survived by his parents and siblings.

Capt. Michael Bain, 21st STS director of operations, said Sibley was a selfless man.

“Men like Forrest run toward the sound of chaos,” Bain said. “He cared more about others than himself.”

Staff Sgt. Bob Sears said Sibley was an incredible warrior, friend and teammate.

“We are hurting for Forrest and Matt, but they will never be forgotten,” Sears said. “We will never stop talking about them.”

As tradition dictates, during the memorial service, there was a final roll call to account for Special Tactics Airmen. When Roland’s and Sibley’s names were called three times with no response, Airmen responded they were no longer present to report for duty, as they were killed in action.

After the conclusion of the ceremony, service members lined to salute the two battlefield crosses representing both Airmen, which were a pair of boots, a rifle, their special operations berets and dog tags. Special Tactics Airmen also tacked their flashes, or special operations insignia normally found on their berets or uniforms, next to the battlefield cross, to honor their fallen comrades.

Following the memorial, hundreds of Special Tactics Airmen saluted Sibley’s coffin, draped in an American flag, as a FA-20 aircraft completed the dignified arrival before his interment at a local cemetery.

Both Airmen will be interred at military cemeteries with full military honors at a later date.


Airmen salute during Capt. Matthew D. Roland and Staff Sgt. Forrest B. Sibley’s memorial service, Sept. 14, 2015, at Hurlburt Field, Fla. More than 1,000 friends and family members from across the country gathered together to mourn the loss of Roland, a special tactics officer from 23rd Special Tactics Squadron, and Sibley, a Combat Controller from the 21st Special Tactics Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Ryan Conroy/Released

Beshear to direct flags at half-staff for Lexington airman killed in Afghanistan  

LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) - Governor Steve Beshear announced Thursday that he will direct flags to be lowered to half-staff the day family bury a Lexington airman killed in Afghanistan. Funeral arrangements for Capt. Matthew D. Roland are pending.

The Department of Defense confirms that Roland was one of two airmen who died supporting Operation Freedom's Sentinel. The department says Roland died of wounds suffered Aug. 26 when the vehicle he was traveling in was attacked near Camp Antonik, Afghanistan.

Roland, 27, was assigned to the 23rd Special Tactics Squadron, Hurlburt Field, Florida.

Staff Sgt. Forrest B. Sibley, of Pensacola, Florida also died in the attack.


Captain Matthew David, USAF, December 24, 1987 to August 26, 2015. Matthew's death was a result of injuries sustained in combat in Afghanistan. Matthew lived his life to the fullest. At the time of his death, he was doing what he loved, honoring and defending his country. He was a proud member of the 23rd Special Tactics Squadron at Hurlburt Field, Florida. Captain Roland was born at Ellsworth Air Force Base, Rapid City, South Dakota. Being a member of a military family he lived at Dyess Air Force Base, Abilene, Texas, Kirtland Air Force Base, Albuquerque, New Mexico and Lexington, Kentucky. He attended Lexington Catholic High School before entering the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado, graduating with the class of 2010. Captain Roland is survived by his parents, Col. (Ret.) USAF Mark and Barbara Roland; sister, Erica Roland; niece, Willamina Roland; paternal grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Earl Roland, Anderson, South Carolina and maternal grandmother, Rita Thomas, Louisville, Kentucky.
He was preceded in death by his maternal grandfather, Richard Baugh. The family will receive visitors in his honor from 5 - 7pm Tuesday, September 8, 2015 at Lexington Catholic High School, followed by a Memorial Ceremony at 7pm. Burial will take place at Arlington National Cemetery with full military honors. Memorial contributions can be made in Captain Roland's memory to the Combat Control Association


812 Mile U.S. Air Force Special Tactics Memorial March

From San Antonio’s Lackland Air Force Base to Hurlburt Field in Florida, 812 miles, 20 Special Tactics Airmen started their trek Oct. 4 in honor of their fallen comrades.

This is the fourth U.S. Special Tactics Memorial March in remembrance of the two Special Tactics Airmen who were killed Aug. 26 in an attack in Helmand Province, Afghanistan.

The Special Tactics Airmen made their way through the Humble, Atascocita and Huffman area communities Tuesday, Oct. 6.

“Less than a month later after losing two airmen, here we are ‘rucking’ 812 miles from San Antonio to Hurlburt Field in Florida which represents the training program they go through,” Lt. Katrina Cheesman, chief of public affairs for U.S. Air Force Special Tactics, said. “The training is like a two-year pipeline which is very rigorous and strenuous and tests them.

“They start their training in San Antonio at the Air Force Base then halfway through they go to Air Traffic Controller School at Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, Mississippi, and at the very end, go to Hurlburt Field in Florida where we have the Special Tactics Training Squadron. All these training sessions are like puzzle pieces that when placed together, make these airmen into an operational warrior to can handle most situations.”


Special tactics Airmen carry 20 batons during a memorial march to Hurlburt Field, Fla., Oct. 13, 2015. The team of 20 special tactics Airmen started marching at 2 a.m. Oct. 4, 2015, from Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas, and marched 812 miles through five states to meet with Gold Star families and end the memorial march with a ceremony on Hurlburt Field. (U.S. Air Force photo/Airman Kai White)

“Rucking” is a slang term used by the airmen since they carry water and nourishment in ruck sacks during their walk.

The march began in 2009 in memory of Staff Sgt. Tim Davis, a Combat Controller killed by an Improvised Explosive Device, Feb. 20, 2009, during Operation Enduring Freedom. The Memorial March is only held when a Special Tactics operator is killed in action that year.

Additionally, the memorial march honors all 19 Special Tactics pararescuemen and Combat Controllers who have been killed in action since 2001.

“We do this arduous march to commemorate and honor fallen members of Air Force Special Tactics and their families. These warriors gave their lives in defense of freedom and our nation’s security, and so every step of every mile is in memory of that sacrifice,” Event organizer, retired Chief Master Sgt. Steven Haggett said in a press release about the march.

During the walk, the 20 airmen will relay through five states, averaging 12.5 miles per leg. Each two-man team will walk approximately 90 miles during the 10-day trek, carrying a 50-pound ruck sack and a commemorative baton engraved with a fallen Special Tactics Airman’s name.

A grandmother of one of the fallen special tactics Airmen carries a photo in honor of her loved one to a baton ceremony on Hurlburt Field, Fla., Oct. 13, 2015. The team of 20 special tactics Airmen started at 2 a.m. on Oct. 4, 2015, from Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas, and marched 812 miles through five states to meet with Gold Star families and end the memorial march with a ceremony on Hurlburt Field. (U.S. Air Force photo/Airman Kai White)

“With the baton, it’s like we are carrying them home. This U.S. Special Tactics Memorial March is important because we will always remember our fallen airmen and to showcase support to our Gold Star families because they are truly the ones who bear the cross of their child’s sacrifice,” Cheesman said. “We also host this march to educate others about what U.S. Special Tactics is all about.

“Plus, this is a challenge. We want to welcome others into the Special Tactics community if they feel inspired and challenged by what we do. But first and foremost, this walk is to honor our fallen comrades.”

For the final 4.6 miles together, and the walk for the final mile from Hurlburt Field’s front gate, the 20 airmen will meet with surviving family members of the 19 fallen Special Tactics Airmen and members of the community and march together until they reach the Squadron.

“These fallen comrades will never be forgotten, we will always be telling their stories,” Cheesman said.


Special tactics Airmen greet Gold Star families after finishing an 812-mile memorial march from Texas to Florida. The memorial march is only completed when a special tactics Airmen is killed in action. This march was held in honor of Capt. Matthew Roland and Staff Sgt. Forrest Sibley, who were killed in action Aug. 26, 2015. (U.S. Air Force photo/Airman Kai White)

For many of the Gold Star families and special tactics Airmen, it was a reunion. The Airmen had carried memorial batons engraved with the names of the fallen halfway across the country to walk alongside the families who lost their loved ones. This was not the first time they had done this; most of the families had attended all four of the memorial marches, the first of which took place in 2009.

“Who’s got Argel?” one family member shouted into the chaotic crowd of hugging people, searching for the person holding their son’s baton. Eventually, each Airman delivered his baton to the appropriate family, and the group walked the final mile together.

At the end of the march, the Airmen took part in a small ceremony. The batons were solemnly saluted and returned, one by one, to a waiting special tactics Airman as the names of the 19 teammates were called.

The batons were returned to their display case and will only be removed for another memorial march if a special tactics Airman is killed in action.

Finally, in keeping with a special tactics tradition, the Airmen formed up to complete memorial pushups.

“The fallen’s legacy will never die, because we will continue to honor their sacrifices and perpetuate their excellence,” Col. Wolfe Davidson (pictured below), the 24th Special Operations Wing commander, said of the 19 special tactics Airmen killed in action since 9/11. “We aren’t ever going to quit talking about them. We will walk across this country to say, ‘We will never forget you.’”



2015 CCA Reunion Memorial Ceremony



"The losses of Matt and Forrest are a terrible blow to everyone who knew them," Col. Wolfe Davidson, 24th Special Operations Wing commander, said in a statement.   "These two combat controllers were incredible warriors who not only volunteered to join our nation's Special Operations Forces, but earned their way to the tip of the spear in defense of our nation,"

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ROLAND Captain Matthew David, USAF, December 24, 1987 to August 26, 2015. Matthew's death was a result of injuries sustained in combat in Afghanistan. Matthew lived his life to the fullest. At the time of his death, he was doing what he loved, honoring and defending his country. He was a proud member of the 23rd Special Tactics Squadron at Hurlburt Field, Florida. Captain Roland was born at Ellsworth Air Force Base, Rapid City, South Dakota. Being a member of a military family he lived at Dyess Air Force Base, Abilene, Texas, Kirtland Air Force Base, Albuquerque, New Mexico and Lexington, Kentucky. He attended Lexington Catholic High School before entering the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado, graduating with the class of 2010. Captain Roland is survived by his parents, Col. (Ret.) USAF Mark and Barbara Roland; sister, Erica Roland; niece, Willamina Roland; paternal grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Earl Roland, Anderson, South Carolina and maternal grandmother, Rita Thomas, Louisville, Kentucky. He was preceded in death by his maternal grandfather, Richard Baugh. The family will receive visitors in his honor from 5 - 7pm Tuesday, September 8, 2015 at Lexington Catholic High School, followed by a Memorial Ceremony at 7pm. Burial will take place at Arlington National Cemetery with full military honors. Memorial contributions can be made in Captain Roland's memory to the Combat Control Association - See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/kentucky/obituary.aspx?pid=175730203#sthash.oIWq3Hht.dpuf