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    Dover Reserve lieutenant colonel, Lombard native, flies C-5M on historic mission

    Dover Reserve lieutenant colonel, Lombard native, flies C-5M on historic mission

    Photo By Scott Sturkol | Lt. Col. Scott Erickson, C-5 pilot, flies a C-5M Super Galaxy on a mission on June 5,...... read more read more

    By Master Sgt. Scott T. Sturkol
    Air Mobility Command Public Affairs

    DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. - Lt. Col. Scott Erickson, C-5 pilot with the Air Force Reserve’s 709th Airlift Squadron here, was one of 14 crew members who flew on a mission that was the Air Force’s first direct delivery airlift mission through the Arctic Circle from the United States to Afghanistan.

    The flight, which took place on June 5 and 6, 2011, was aboard a C-5M Super Galaxy from Dover Air Force Base to Bagram Air Field, Afghanistan. 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.

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

    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.

    The C-5M flew with the call sign “Reach 220.” Erickson said the C-5M performed well on the mission.

    “Having been with the M from the beginning, I'm always proud to show off what it can do," he said. “[This mission shows] it's the pinnacle of a great mobility weapons system and I'm glad it gets noticed for that.”

    As a Reservist, Erickson also noted the importance of how the Total Force concept has been an integral part of missions like the Arctic mission.

    “From the start, we in the initial cadre of the C-5M - both active and Reserve - have really sought to bring the Total Force concept into our daily operations,” Erickson said. “Over the last two-plus years, our mutual success derives directly from our 'rainbow' crews. I'm proud to say the fact that this crew is comprised of both active duty and Reserve crewmembers was not a peculiarity in the C-5M community at Dover. Total Force is our daily way of doing business.”

    According to his official Air Force job description for an Air Force airlifter pilot, Erickson did exactly what he was trained to do during the Arctic mission. The job description shows an airlift pilot like Erickson is required to “pilot airlift aircraft and command crews to accomplish airlift, training and other missions.”

    To fulfill his work as an airlift pilot, Erickson reviews mission tasking, intelligence and weather information, the job description states. He supervises mission planning, preparation, filing a flight plan and crew briefings and he ensures the aircraft is pre-flighted, inspected, loaded, equipped and manned for each mission.

    Airmen like Erickson also pilot aircraft and command crews. They are trained to operate aircraft controls and equipment and perform, supervise, or direct navigation, in-flight refueling, and cargo and passenger delivery. They also ensure the operational readiness of the crew by conducting or supervising mission specific training and they develop plans and policies, monitor operations and assist commanders with functions related to airlift operations, the job descript shows.

    Pilots like Erickson also have to maintain mandatory job knowledge in the theory of flight, air navigation, meteorology, flying directives, aircraft operating procedures and mission tactics.

    As for the Arctic mission, AMC officials said the historic 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. USTRANSCOM planners said this flight is just the beginning of understanding new ways to strengthen the northern corridor for direct delivery missions to the deployed theater.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.30.2011
    Date Posted: 06.30.2011 13:49
    Story ID: 73032
    Location: DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, DE, US

    Web Views: 120
    Downloads: 0

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