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    Mobility airmen take C-5M on first direct Arctic overflight to Afghanistan

    Mobility airmen take C-5M on first direct Arctic overflight to Afghanistan

    Photo By Scott Sturkol | Air transportation airmen load a C-5M Super Galaxy from Dover Air Force Base, Del.,...... read more read more

    BAGRAM AIR FIELD, Afghanistan - Fourteen mobility airmen teamed together to fly a C-5M Super Galaxy on a direct, non-stop mission from Dover Air Force Base, Del., to Bagram Air Field June 5 and 6.

    The flight was the first time a U.S. Air Force plane flew this northern route from the U.S., over Canada and into the Arctic Circle, then back down through Russian and Kazakhstan airspace to Afghanistan.

    "Everyone involved with this mission worked very hard to make it happen," said Lt. Col. Thomas Loper, C-5 pilot and aircraft commander for the mission. "We're also very proud to be a part of the historic mission."

    U.S. Transportation Command and Air Mobility Command officials at Scott Air Force Base, Ill., said the mission was a "proof of concept" flight that will help establish future sustainment operations in Afghanistan.

    "Our mission is to provide the right effects, to the right place, at the right time through global reach, said Gen. Raymond E. Johns Jr., AMC commander. "This historic 'proof of concept' flight is the embodiment of that mission. It provides a valuable new option that allows us to be effective to those we serve."

    AMC's 618th Tanker Airlift Control Center planners at Scott AFB tasked and built the mission plans for the effort. It's part of TACC's continuing effort to support and control airlift and air refueling missions around the globe.

    "This mission validates all the hard work TACC planners do every day," said Lt. Col. Matthew Ahern, who like Loper is a C-5 pilot with Dover AFB's 9th Airlift Squadron. Ahern was also a member of the aircrew for the mission.

    AMC officials said the flight was made possible by close diplomatic cooperation and culminates months of operational planning. It further illustrates the military's commitment to finding innovative new ways to operate with increasingly constrained resources.

    Maj. John Rozsnyai, a planner in USTRANSCOM operations at Scott AFB, said his command worked with the U.S. State Department, regional combatant commands, AMC, TACC and numerous other agencies to get this historic mission under way.

    "This partnership was especially important in coordinating transit agreements with Russia and Kazakhstan," Rozsnyai said, "While civilian airlines have been using the airspace, this was the first time an AMC plane took this direct delivery route."

    To make the entire 15-plus hour flight to Afghanistan, the C-5M was refueled by a KC-135R Stratotanker from the New Hampshire Air National Guard's 157th Air Refueling Wing and Pease Air National Guard Base. The refueling took place over northern Canada.

    "It's cool to be a part of a mission like this," said Master Sgt. Sam Blackwell, in-flight refueling craftsman from the 157th ARW who refueled the C-5M to full capacity.

    USTRANSCOM planners said this flight is just the beginning of understanding new ways to strengthen the northern corridor.

    "There will most likely be other flights that will originate from the western U.S. and won't require the use of tankers," Rozsnyai said.

    "This route used by the C-5M may also be useful for swap-outs of deployed tankers and crews and for redeploying troops. The benefit might also allow for quicker trips saving days at home for deploying airmen as well as requiring less stops for aircraft."

    The aircrew for the mission combined active duty and Air Force Reserve airmen. In addition to Loper and Ahern, airmen who were part of this mission included Lt. Col. Scott Erickson, Capts. Brian Marasco and William Gleckler, Senior Master Sgt. William Johnson, Master Sgt. Bradley Bronov, Tech. Sgt. Jesse Talamantes, and Staff Sgts. Tyler Welsch, Angelo Dumanhog, Norterious Jenkins, Tramainn McKee and Steven Dow.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.06.2011
    Date Posted: 06.20.2011 17:36
    Story ID: 72442
    Location: BAGRAM AIR FIELD, AF

    Web Views: 107
    Downloads: 0

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