Best of Silver Anvils 2016: Helping a Hero: Air Force Public Affairs Response to Heroic Airman Train Incident

PRSA

Airman 1st Class is greeted with a hero’s welcome during the Sacramento Hometown Heroes Parade and festivities at the State Capital building in downtown Sacramento, Calif., Sept. 11, 2015. Hundreds of people lined the streets of downtown Sacramento to welcome home and honor Stone, and . The trio of friends are responsible for thwarting a terrorist attack aboard a train headed toward Aug. 21. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Charles Rivezzo)

On Aug. 21, 2015, U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Spencer Stone, Alek Skarlatos of the Oregon National Guard and Anthony Sadler, a senior at State University, Sacramento, left and were on a train bound for Paris when a lone gunman began firing shots.

Led by Stone, the trio overtook the gunman and stopped the attack, with Stone providing life-saving first aid to a wounded passenger, while suffering multiple stab wounds in his neck and extensive hand injuries from a box cutter.

The U.S. Air Force Public Affairs Directorate mobilized a crisis communication strategy immediately following the incident. The story generated worldwide attention, as the three men received the French Legion of Honor and met President Obama. Air Force Public Affairs sought to provide the public with accurate information about what happened, secure print and television interviews and various media appearances, as well as to communicate a positive image of the Air Force and its airmen, all while ensuring that Airman Stone made a full recovery. As a result of its efforts, PRSA presented Air Force Public Affairs with this year’s Best of Silver Anvil.

The Strategist spoke with Brig. Gen. Kathleen A. Cook, director, Air Force Public Affairs; Wendy Varhegyi, chief, Air Force Engagements Division; and Lt. Col. Glen Roberts, director, Air Force Entertainment Liaison Office, at the 2016 Silver Anvil Awards Ceremony on June 9 at the AXA Equitable Building in Manhattan. They, along with Capt. Trisha Guillebeau, action officer, Air Force Media Operations, were on hand to accept the Best of Silver Anvil.

This campaign involved cross-country and international public affairs teams working together. How did you organize the communication across borders and among teams?

Kathleen A. Cook: There’s a saying out there that says, “Luck favors the prepared.” We have been, for a while now, working in a very collaborative and integrated way to get at some deliberate communication. Processes were in place and procedures were available.

And so when this happened and Airman Stone stepped up and met the challenge, we worked with our European counterparts, we worked with our public affairs folks in New York, California and Washington, D.C., and thankfully, because of the way we’d been operating for a while now, that integration and collaboration worked, and we were able to get to the most deliberate and most strategic answer. And so it was something that, when you say “Luck favors the prepared,” I don’t think Stone would say that he was lucky to be on that train that day, but I think certainly, for national security, it is lucky that he was.

Glen Roberts: Immediately after this happened,within 48 hours, [Stone] was meeting the president of and receiving a medal, and he didn’t even have his own clothes. The three of them received the highest medal that France offers in a polo shirt and khakis, because it was all they could come up with in 36 hours while he was injured and basically still numb from the medicine from his very serious injuries.

It was a very quick thing, and we had to react very quickly with media training. We had to coordinate with the Department of State. We had to coordinate with international media and translators. So much of this was in French, so there were a lot of circumstances early on that made this a unique situation.

Also, only one of them was military. The other one was a national guardsman, and one was not military at all. So we had three very different sets of individuals, and they came together very nicely into one team.

After the train incident, news coverage continued for 13 days. As the story evolved, how did the communications plans change over the course of nearly two weeks?

KC: The first plan always changes, but because we had the process in place and the machine was built to prepare and be ready for a crisis communication situation, we got a good start. When you become a global interest overnight, you have to respond quickly.

We were able to do the research and figure out what was going to be the best thing for Airman Stone and his family, and the two others involved, but also put the Air Force story out there. And we were able to do that.

Wendy Varhegyi: We started the international outreach with an interview with by phone, which began the whole initiative. And then, it took some time to coordinate and get [Airman Stone] healthy, because he had medical concerns, first.

Then we had a two-week block of time that we planned out, which was partly in New York and partly in Washington, D.C., because we were balancing the needs of the military services and Department of Defense wanting to recognize all of their contributions. We worked high-level awards ceremonies, visits to the , visits to senior leadership, as well as our major Air Force conference. We balanced all that with the demands on [Stone’s] time for media interviews, and we weighed the pros and cons of each request, ensuring that we were not overloading anybody’s schedule.

KC: We saw two challenges rather quickly. When you have an event like this, the world wants you, and they want you first, and they want you only. The challenge of being able to support all of the requests and the exclusives that were coming in, that was really challenging from a communications standpoint. How do you determine which ones to do? And I thought the team did that exceptionally well. And then the other challenge was that Airman Stone and his two friends are going to be of interest for a very long time. So how do you balance telling the story and taking care of the airman, and actually providing an end date, where that airman needs to get back to work, and he has to have some kind of normal life again? The priority was to make sure that he was healthy at the end of this, both physically and mentally.

What were some of the media appearances and televised interviews that the Air Force coordinated for the three men?

GR: We ended up [choosing] , which was a full hour. It was prime time, and it [featured] all three gentlemen together. There was a comfort level for them and [the fact that] all of their families were able to participate as well. That, to us, was a huge bonus. And you can see how relaxed they were during that interview.

WV: Part of it was just pure logistics, because some of the requests we got were for all three together, and timing didn’t work out for that to happen for all three of them. Spencer was the only one who was injured, so he had some different requirements and wasn’t able to be the same places that the other two were. So “Jimmy Kimmel” [also] ended up being a good choice for us.

What does it mean to be receiving the Best of Silver Anvil?

KC: Being selected as the best is a highlight of my career, personally, but I can probably speak for the rest. We’re here today representing 5,500 public affairs professionals who work hard every day to tell the Air Force story.

For more information, click here: https://bit.ly/2018anvils.