On the morning of March 12, 2026, Maj. John “Alex” Klinner stepped onto a KC-135 refueling aircraft above Iraq…

On the morning of March 12, 2026, Maj. John “Alex” Klinner stepped onto a KC-135 refueling aircraft above Iraq, doing the kind of work most people will never see — the quiet missions that keep other pilots alive in the sky. It was a job he had done many times before. Launch, refuel the fighters, keep the mission going, then come home to the people who mattered most. But on this day, the ending was different. The aircraft went down while supporting Operation Epic Fury, and six American service members never made it back. Among them was a man who wore the rank of a U.S. Air Force major… but to one small home in Alabama, he was simply Dad.

Alex was an Auburn University graduate, a mechanical engineer, and an airman who had already given eight years of service to his country. Yet those who loved him say the title he treasured most was waiting for him at home. A wife who called him her best friend. A two-and-a-half-year-old child who adored him. And seven-month-old twins who will grow up learning about their father through the stories others now carry for them. Stories about a man who never hesitated to help someone in need. A man who could turn even ordinary moments into laughter. A man who believed the people around him mattered more than anything else.

After the crash, his wife shared the words no family should ever have to write: “Our world shattered.” In a single moment, a house once filled with his voice, his jokes, and the sound of children laughing with their father became painfully quiet. But Alex’s story did not end in the skies over Iraq. Every aircraft he helped keep flying… every pilot who made it home because of missions like his… and every memory his children will carry of the man he was — all of it still carries the same name: Maj. Alex Klinner. 🇺🇸

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