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12/21/2006 - HICKAM AIR FORCE BASE, Hawaii (AFPN) -- Another
airpower milestone was reached Dec. 20 with the completion of the first
C-17 Globemaster III airdrop mission that delivered about 70,000 pounds
of supplies to the South Pole.
The airdrop's success is due to
the combined effort of people from Joint Task Force-Support Forces
Antarctica Operation Deep Freeze; the 62nd Airlift Wing and the Air
Force Reserve Command's 446th Airlift Wing both from McChord Air Force
Base, Wash.; the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division; the Royal New
Zealand Defense Force; the National Science Foundation; and Raytheon
Polar Services Corporation.
By validating the C-17 capability
of conducting an airdrop at the geographical South Pole, JTF-SFA's
Operation Deep Freeze demonstrated its ability to provide mid-winter
emergency re-supply and flexible support to the National Science
Foundation and U.S. Antarctica Program. Operation Deep Freeze is a
unique joint and total force mission that first anchored U.S. national
policy in Antarctica in1955.
The ability to airdrop supplies
using the C-17 versus the ski-equipped LC-130 Hercules, the traditional
aircraft used to airland supplies on the ice, allows aircrews to
deliver up to four times as much supplies in a single airdrop mission
in conditions that do not allow airland missions.
During the
winter season at the South Pole, temperatures often dip as low as minus
100 degrees Fahrenheit and can paralyze an aircraft's hydraulic
systems, crystallize the fuel and solidify lubricants. Around-the-clock
darkness and crosswinds up to 60 miles per hour create blizzard
conditions and zero visibility, making it impossible for an aircraft to
land.
A medical emergency in 1999 highlighted the need to
maintain a mid-winter airdrop resupply capability to sites in
Antarctica. In that year, Dr. Jeri Nielsen, the only physician at
Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, critically needed medical supplies
to treat her tele-medically diagnosed cancer. An LC-130 airland mission
was not possible before October, so NSF requested and funded an Air
Mobility Command out-of-cycle airdrop of medical supplies to the South
Pole station.
An economy-of-force driven decision provided a
C-141 and handpicked aircrew from the 62nd AW and 446th AW from McChord
AFB, to execute the aerial delivery. The nearly 50-flying-hour mission
was described by then-AMC commander Gen. Charles T. Robertson Jr., as
"a truly heroic effort."
The 2006-2007 Operation Deep Freeze
kicked off in August with C-17 flights from Christchurch, New Zealand
to McMurdo Station to stage essential personnel and equipment to
prepare the ice runway for the main C-17 and LC-130 operations. Main
body resupply consists of C-17 intercontinental flights between
Christchurch and McMurdo Station and LC-130 flights from McMurdo,
Antarctica to the South Pole and other camps throughout Antarctica.
Up
to two C-17s based at Christchurch fly missions as required each week
while up to nine LC-130s, depending on mission requirements, fly
multiple daily missions daily from their hub at McMurdo Station.
Vessel
re-supply operations consist of two Military Sealift Command vessels
delivering fuel and supplies to McMurdo Station. In early January,
prior to the MSC vessels' arrival, the U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker
Polar Sea will cut a channel through miles of ice allowing the ships
access to the McMurdo Ice Pier.
Operation Deep Freeze is
unlike any other U.S. military operation and is one of the most
demanding peacetime missions due to the extreme adversity of the
environment and the remoteness of Antarctica. Antarctica is the
coldest, windiest, driest, highest and most inhospitable continent on
the globe, and Operation Deep Freeze provides a challenging opportunity
to demonstrate the reach and flexibility of airpower, the capabilities
of the joint force and the integrated support of active duty, Guard and
Reserve military personnel.
Through the office of the
Secretary of Defense, the commander of U.S. Pacific Command has been
designated to support the 2006-2007 Joint Task Force-Support Forces
Antarctica operation.
The PACOM commander has delegated this
joint operation to the commander who further delegated primary
responsibility for execution of the JTF SFA operation to the 13th Air
Force commander.
The U.S. military is uniquely equipped to
assist the National Science Foundation in the accomplishment of its
mission to explore Antarctica, and the 613th Air and Space Operations
Center at Hickam has the capability to provide joint operational and
logistics support to the NSF around the clock.
Through the 613th
AOC's strategic airlift, LC-130 field support airlift and other airlift
as required; aeromedical evacuation support; emergency response;
sealift; seaport access; bulk fuel supply; port cargo handling;
communication and transportation requirements are coordinated.
Operation
Deep Freeze involves active duty and Reserve C-17 support from McChord
AFB, LC-130 support from the New York Air National Guard, and other
aircraft as necessary; U.S. Coast Guard icebreakers, and the U.S. Navy
Cargo Handling Battalion One to provide critical port services at
McMurdo Station.
The U.S. Navy ran the first Operation Deep
Freeze mission in 1955 for exploration and scientific research and
began supporting the National Science Foundation's research in
Antarctica in 1959. The operation has evolved into a huge logistical
effort, moving passengers and cargo for the NSF's research facilities
in Antarctica.
Christchurch International Airport is the
staging point for deployment to McMurdo Station, a key research
facility for the USAP.
Source:
http://www.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123035895
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