Armed Forces Day: Ready for the call

  • Posted: Thursday, May 15, 2025, 7:41 am

Tyler White (left) and Mark McKinley (right)
Tyler White (left) and Mark McKinley (right)

In 1949, President Harry S. Truman established Armed Forces Day. Designated the third Saturday in May, this day is a joint celebration of all six branches of the U.S. military to honor all who serve. At Pantex, many employees remain enlisted. We honor these individuals on May 17 this year.

Enter General Counsel Tyler White and Physical Security Systems Senior Specialist Mark McKinley. White is a Lieutenant Colonel in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps (JAG) for the New Mexico Air National Guard. McKinley is a Lieutenant Colonel and serves as executive officer in Readiness Support Program 5 in the Marine Corps. Each has a decorated, decade-spanning military career. Both served in Operation Iraqi and Enduring Freedom, although they never crossed paths. Their military experiences differed, yet their motivation to enlist followed a similar thread.

“I needed help to pay for college,” White said. “I had an uncle in the Air Force and Air National Guard. He recommended I enlist to help with tuition as well as gain some life and career skills.”

McKinley has a family history of military service dating back to the Civil War, yet the blood ties weren’t primary motivators to sign up.

“I always wanted to join after I saw ‘Top Gun,’” McKinley said. “Later, that want included the need to support my family.”

After active duty, McKinley got into the oil and gas business with his engineering degree and ended up sipping Texas Tea at Haliburton in Pampa, then later with O-Tex and C&J in Oklahoma City until 2020. In 2021, he headed out to Pantex.

“I wanted a different life,” McKinley said. “The oil and gas business was 24/7/365. Pantex gave me time to be with my family. I love that about this place. You can’t buy time back later, and they understand that.”

After graduating from law school, White used his degree in the military as well as the civilian sectors, more specifically at the Idaho National Laboratory, where he worked on the federal side. In 2024, Pantex offered him a job and he made his way to West Texas.

“I feel like I had done everything I had set out to do in the federal civilian service and wanted to experience the contractor side,” White said. “It was time for a new challenge and I found it. I also found some amazing people. They take the mission seriously here and that’s infectious.”

White and McKinley bring their experience and expertise daily to impact mission success. While they are proud of that, there’s still a draw to the military. Benefits are quite the lure, but there’s also another pull, one that runs deeper than deductibles and tuition assistance.

“I’ve gotten to the point where I’ve been in the military longer than I haven’t,” White said. “I find it hard to imagine not serving. I have a couple of remaining goals including retirement.”

“The reasons I stay has changed over the years,” McKinley said. “At first, it was to serve my country and provide for my family. It evolved into wanting to double down on benefits, then into an uncontrollable addiction to stay part of the organization and fulfill a retirement.”

White, McKinley, and many other Pantexans work day-to-day to meet goals in both their military careers and the Pantex mission. When duty calls, however, they will gear up and set out to protect friends, family, and their nation. We can’t be land of the free without being the home of the brave. Take time on Armed Forces Day to honor those who continue to serve their country.