Maintenance window scheduled to begin at February 14th 2200 est. until 0400 est. February 15th

(e.g. yourname@email.com)

Forgot Password?

    Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Logo

    Federal Eagle: U.S., German paratroopers team up for joint airborne operation at Sicily DZ

    Federal Eagle: U.S., German paratroopers team up for joint airborne operation at Sicily DZ

    Photo By Sgt. Benjamin Watson | Sgt. Dwight Helmuth, left, a native of Fort Myers, Fla., and jump master with C Troop,...... read more read more

    FORT BRAGG, NC, UNITED STATES

    10.23.2009

    Story by Sgt. Benjamin Watson 

    49th Public Affairs Detachment   

    FORT BRAGG, N.C. — In German: American Airborne Soldaten freuen uns auf den Tag, sie können an Bord einer Ebene und rufen Befehle in einer fremden Sprache.
    Or, paraphrased in English: Part of the experience of being an American paratrooper involves an odd desire to one day board a plane and shout commands in a foreign language. Why? Because that scene would probably occur during a joint operation with a foreign army, an operation which just might end with paratroopers holding a shiny new set of jump wings.

    But giving out new jump wings is more or less the icing on the cake, explained Scott Murray, air officer for the XVIII Airborne Corps at Fort Bragg and the G-3's executive agent on a joint airborne operation known as Federal Eagle.

    Federal Eagle is a bi-annual event involving U.S. and German militaries in cooperative airborne operations held this year Oct. 20-23 at Sicily Drop Zone.

    AN OVERVIEW

    Twice a year, American and German Soldiers team up to share airborne tactics, said Lt. Col. Christoph Böecker, German liaison officer with the XVIII Abn. Corps.

    In the spring, the shared tactics stick primarily to freefall airborne operations.

    But each fall, in a tradition going back 13 years, six German jumpmasters from Germany's 31st Airborne Brigade and approximately 750 U.S. paratroopers conducted a series of static-line airborne jumps placing paratroopers down onto one of Fort Bragg's drop zones. On the last day of the event, a reciprocal jump is held where the German jumpmasters exit an aircraft led by American jumpmasters.

    "Federal Eagle is also a chance to get some U.S. guys the German jump wings and the opportunity to jump out of a German airplane," said Sgt. Maj. Alexander H. Göeb, who also serves as a German liaison officer with the XVIII Abn. Corps.

    "We speak the same language," said Göeb, who originates from Bavaria, Germany.

    "German and American paratroopers, we are both equal," he said, adding, "We're jumping out of a flying airplane. That's crazy!"

    SIMILARITIES, DIFFERENCES

    Böecker explained that the airplane used on nearly every Federal Eagle jump is a German C-160, an aircraft similar to the C-130 used by the U.S. Air Force and familiar to many American paratroopers. The T-10 parachutes used during Federal Eagle were also familiar to the Americans.

    Which is all to say that much of Federal Eagle's procedures this year were already familiar to the paratroopers involved, including the hand motions of the German jumpmasters.

    But the commands of the six jumpmasters — shouted in German then echoed back by all the paratroopers lined up side by side in the C-160 flying 1,300 feet above ground — may have sounded foreign, but their meaning was well understood. At least that's how Spc. Michael Callahan recalled the scene once he'd landed safely on the drop zone.

    "I don't know any German, but I know the motions for 'Hook Up!' and 'Check Static line!' and all that we go through as paratroopers," said Callahan, a paratrooper with Fort Bragg's C. Troop, 1st Squadron, 38th Cavalry Regiment (Reconnaissance and Surveillance).

    An Ithaca, N.Y., native, Callahan arrived to Sicily Drop Zone with Soldiers and paratroopers of the 1-38 Cav. Every year, a different element of Soldiers gets the task of helping coordinate the finer details of Federal Eagle. Though these details could seem tedious, they wind up affording the paratroopers the privilege of jumping with German jumpmasters — a task they understand is a rare honor, as well as one which translates to a set of foreign jump wings for their Army dress uniforms.

    "I've been looking forward to this since I came to Fort Bragg," said Pfc. Alina Zamora, a San Diego native and medic with Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, Special Troops Battalion, 82nd Airborne Division. "It really was amazing and there was nobody hesitating to get out the door at all today!"

    ALL CLEAR FOR ANOTHER YEAR

    For everyone present at the drop zone, family members and Soldiers both German and American, the skies remained clear and temperatures stayed just below 70 for most of the day. 2009's Federal Eagle fall event could hardly have gone better, which puts a little bit of pressure on next year's Federal Eagle events.

    Until then, Göeb said he and Böecker will do the best they can to ensure Federal Eagle stays a safe, bi-annual event on Fort Bragg. That's because, as Böecker explained, there is the possibility that German and American paratroopers will need to make a combined jump some day, some where. Both these armies need to be ready in case those circumstances happen to come up.

    In the meantime, said Göeb, "We look forward to Federal Eagle because it gives us a chance to give something back to the United States."

    LEAVE A COMMENT

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 10.23.2009
    Date Posted: 10.23.2009 13:35
    Story ID: 40582
    Location: FORT BRAGG, NC, US

    Web Views: 710
    Downloads: 471

    PUBLIC DOMAIN