Leader Presence: The Honorable Service of CW2 Fuchigami
By Warrant Officer Candidate Robert A. Sanders, WOCS Class 25-02 (Fort Novosel)
Article published on: October 1st 2024, in the October-December 2024 Edition of Strength in
Knowledge: The Warrant Officer Journal
Read Time: < 4 mins
Editor’s Note: Warrant Officer Candidate Robert A. Sanders penned this article during his study of Army
Leadership Doctrine in the Warrant Officer Candidate Course. After grading the assignment, his
instructor submitted the article for editor’s review based on the power of his words. The editors
formatted the article and made minor corrections for ease of reading; however, the content is that of
the author’s. As such, this is the first article selected for publication from a warrant officer
candidate since the inception of Strength in Knoweldge: The Warrant Officer Journal.
When I was in high school, I met a young man named Kirk Takeshi Fuchigami Jr. He was short and scrawny but
funny, friendly, smart, and never boasted or beat his chest. In high school, that is a rare trait. What I
did not realize then was that my new friend would be a Chief Warrant Officer 2 (CW2), a Bronze Star
recipient, and a hero to a very scared group of soldiers in Afghanistan.
Army Doctrine Publication (ADP) 6-22, chapter 2-1, states that: “Influences such as background, beliefs,
education, and experiences affect all soldiers and DA civilians.” This becomes apparent without the reading
when you look at people like CW2 Fuchigami. Even before becoming a soldier, he displayed all three
leadership attributes as if they were his first language. During our years in high school, Kirk was active
in AFJROTC and our school’s aviation magnet program. He was often found in a leadership role that required
him to do public speaking, cite regulations, critique strangers’ uniform wear, and occasionally teach
various subjects. He always did so with confidence, professionalism, and expertise that would make you think
he had been doing it for years. During high school, he became one of the youngest people in the school’s
history to earn his private pilot’s license. Now, anyone who has ever flown a plane knows that doing so is a
very mentally challenging task. To fly an airplane takes a great deal of mental agility, confidence, and
discipline. Now, do that same task when you are sixteen or seventeen years old when your brain is still
developing. Kirk was able to perform expertly years beyond his age level. That is, in my opinion, something
that made him such a perfect candidate for warrant officer.
Kirk was a good man and a good friend. That made it that much harder when I learned of his passing. I had let
life get away from me and, as a result, had not spoken to Kirk in several years. I had no idea he had become
a Warrant Officer, an Apache pilot, or a husband until I read his obituary on a popular social media page.
That was when I learned that my friend had died a true leader and a savior to a platoon of men. On November
20, 2019, CW2 Fuchigami died while he was helping a group of soldiers whose lives hung in the balance. A man
named Brandon Hernandez posted on Kirk’s obituary page that his platoon had been hit with a vehicle-borne
IED a week prior; he was nervous, anxious, and scared when he had to go on patrol again so soon. Those
emotions grew exponentially when the mission “ended up going wrong”, as he put it. The man explained how he
“was panicking, nervous, and scared that he was going to lose his life, he was losing faith with every
minute.” But when he heard the Apache in the sky, flown by CW2 Knadle and CW2 Fuchigami, his fear turned to
hope, and his anxiety calmed. He explains that the mission ended up being 18 hours long, and the Apache were
with them all the way.
During that one engagement, Chief Fuchigami showed clear leadership competencies and attributes. When he
arrived on-site, his presence motivated and inspired the rest of the platoon to carry on the mission. By
staying there to provide overwatch for the platoon, he and his copilot helped build trust in those soldiers
on the ground. They knew that someone had their back. They could see it, and that made all the difference in
their ability to achieve mission success. From what I have been able to find, CW2 Fuchigami and CW2 Knadle
died when their AH-64 Apache crashed due to mechanical failure. I’ve never met Kirk’s widow, and I may never
know the finer details of that mission. But I knew I had not considered becoming an Army Warrant Officer
until I learned about it. When I learned about Kirk’s passing, I looked into the Warrant Officer school and
learned more about it. All I knew at that point was that they were technical experts and the only service
members who could be pilots without a college degree. I don’t know why anybody would want to do anything
else; I know I have a lot to learn.