Roche Withdraws Name
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
on March 10 announced that Air Force Secretary James G. Roche
has requested that
he no longer be considered for the position of Secretary
of the Army. Roche will remain Air Force Secretary.
Roches nomination had been on hold since July 7 when
President Bush formally nominated him to take over as the
Armys
civilian leader. Roche was picked to replace Army Secretary
Thomas E. White, who, on April 25, 2003, resigned following
repeated disagreements with Rumsfelds office over the
future direction of the Army.
Roches nomination languished in the Senate Armed Services
Committee while lawmakers delved into a sexual assault scandal
at the Air Force Academy and examined details of the services
controversial deal to acquire new aerial refuelers from Boeing.
Many believed Roches nomination had simply become caught
up in politics, however. The day after Roche withdrew his
nomination for the Army post, a report by DefenseNews.com said
that a four-month
investigation
by the Pentagons inspector general found no wrongdoing
by Roche or other USAF officials in negotiating the tanker
deal.
B-52s Deploy to Guam
The Air Force in February deployed six B-52H heavy bombers
to the Pacific island of Guam at the request of US Pacific
Command. A PACOM news release said it had been rotating bombers
into the region for more than a year.
PACOM said the deployment is routine and part of an adjustment
of force structure to fill in combat capability for Pacific
forces deployed for operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.
PACOM did not indicate how long the B-52s would remain on
Guam, but, according to an Air Force spokesman, these rotations
normally
last about three months.
Gen. William J. Begert, Pacific Air Forces commander, recently
emphasized the strategic importance of Guam, saying that
he favors increasing the assets deployed to the US-owned
territory.
(See Washington Watch: Boosting Pacific Force Structure, March,
p. 8.) Begert said that Guams Anderson Air Force Base
has enormous unused capacity, a solid infrastructure, and
a record of hosting hundreds of aircraft during the Vietnam
War.
Guam is close enough to potential hot spots such as North
Korea and the Taiwan Strait to serve as a valuable fighter
and bomber
staging location, but it is far enough away to be relatively
invulnerable to enemy counterattack, a concern at the Air
Forces
bases in Japan and South Korea.
PACAF officials said other bombers may deploy to Guam when
the initial group of BUFFs completes its deployment.
Lord Seeks Space University
Gen. Lance W. Lord, commander of Air Force Space Command,
wants to establish a university to support the needs of space
professionals.
He wants to place it in Colorado Springs, Colo., the home
of AFSPC headquarters and several key space units.
We need a national space university here ... to be the
intellectual and operational center of gravity, for space
professionals, Lord said in an interview with Inside the Air
Force earlier
this year.
Military space operations are still relatively new, and
the Defense Department does not have a large pool of trained
space professionals upon which to draw, he said. He added
that the
university would help create the space cadre to
maintain the United States strategic dominance of
space.
Lord said the idea is, at this time, a preliminary proposal.
USAF To Issue PT Uniform
Air Force members will have a designated physical training
uniform in the near future. Gen. John P. Jumper, Chief
of Staff, publicly announced the new requirement in February
at the Air
Force Associations Air Warfare Symposium in Orlando,
Fla.
Introduction of the new uniform follows Jumpers January
announcement of a new fitness standard, expected to be
implemented Air Force-wide this summer.
The new program features exercise by units. Its
going to put the social aspects of fitness back into our
Air Force, said Jumper.
The fitness uniform will have three elements: a running
suit, T-shirt, and shorts. According to SMSgt. Jacqueline
Dean,
chief of the Air Force Uniform Board Office, the gear went
through
a fit test and wear test last month. They should be, she
said in a news release, widely available by October.
Enlisted airmen will receive two sets of shirts and shorts
and one running suit. Officers must buy their PT uniforms.
The running suit, which is the same as that worn by cadets
at the Air Force Academy, is USAF blue with reflective
white piping. The T-shirt and shorts are gray with some
reflective
elements. The shorts will have a pocket on the front, large
enough for an ID card, and a key pocket in the waistband.
Shoes remain the responsibility of each individual.
According to Dean, each of the other services has designated
fitness uniforms.
Jumper said, Were already seeing the fruits of
our labor. He noted that fitness center usage is up 35
percent and smoking is down. We are on a path to make
sure that this force is fit to fight, he said.
F-117 Drops First JDAM
A test team at Edwards AFB, Calif., successfully released
Joint Direct Attack Munitions from an F-117 fighter in
January, the
first time the stealth fighter has used the weapon.
Lt. Col. Jim Bierstine, commander of the 410th Flight Test
Squadron at Edwards, said the Air Force is upgrading
the F-117 to carry JDAMs and other similar weapons, as
part of an effort to offer commanders greater warfighting
flexibility.
The Nighthawks are also having their avionics upgraded
to a Block 2 configuration. Officials will be testing the
new
software
from May 2005 to August 2005.
While this was the F-117s first use of the Global
Positioning System-guided JDAM, it is not the first time
Nighthawks have
used GPS-guided weapons.
On March 20, 2003, the first night of Operation Iraqi Freedom,
two F-117s launched the EGBU-27 munition to destroy a bunker
where deposed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was believed
to have been hiding. The EGBUs are 2,000-pound laser guided
bombs
that have been enhanced with GPS targeting capability.
Army Mulls USAF AEF Approach
The Army is studying whether it should adopt a rotational
deployment structure akin to the air and space expeditionary
force (AEF)
construct launched by the Air Force several years ago.
Lt. Gen. James R. Helmly, Army Reserve chief, told reporters
in January that the Army may move to develop eight to 10 expeditionary
packages for Army Reserve forces. He said a similar
approach might be developed for the active duty Army.
Unlike USAFs 15-month AEF rotation base, the Army Reserve
packages would rotate deployments over a four-year cycle.
Helmly said each package would be on callfirst
in line for major deploymentsfor a period of six to
nine months.
During steady-state levels of operations, the Air Forces
10 AEFs are considered on call for 90 days.
... Ditto, the Army National Guard
According to the head of the National Guard Bureau, the
Army Guard is developing a deployment schedule similar
to the
one the Air National Guard follows under the Air Forces
AEF rotation schedule. The goal is to reduce Army Guard
deployments
to once every six years.
The key for the Army Guard, Lt. Gen. Steven Blum said,
will be to create modular units that can fulfill both their
state
and federal missions.
Speaking to Washington reporters in February, Blum said
the Army Guard is going to be on pretty high stress for
about 18 months until it sorts out its new deployment plans.
Blum said some reports of unhappiness with operational
tempowhich
were obtained through voluntary surveysneed to be
taken with a grain of salt. He acknowledged, though, that
some specialties,
such as military police and special forces, have been stressed
because of the high demand for those skills.
Senior defense officials have said repeatedly in recent
months that although they remain concerned about the morale
of US
troops, there have not yet been any signs the strains are
going to lead to a mass exodus from the armed services.
Airmen To Help Relieve Army
Some 2,000 airmen headed for Iraq this spring will be replacing
and augmenting Army forces as the Army completes a massive
troop rotation. The Navy will supply about 3,000 personnel.
All 5,000 will be engaged in ground force functions, according
to Gen. Peter J. Schoomaker, Army Chief of Staff.
Schoomaker told lawmakers in late January that to implement
the Iraq troop rotation plan, the Pentagon used joint
sourcing to fill shortfalls in the force.
One primary goal of the joint sourcing approach, he said,
was to ensure the Army could keep its commitment to soldiers
that
they spend no more than a year in Iraq.
The airmen were added to USAFs Air and Space Expeditionary
Force (AEF) Silverthe second of two 120-day AEFs
the Air Force has used to return to its normal 90-day AEF
rotations
following the demands of Operation Iraqi Freedom. (See Aerospace
World: Another 2,000 Airmen To Beef Up AEF Silver, March,
p. 14.) Among the 2,000 are personnel in civil engineering,
security, and transportation functions.
However, Air Force officials said that some of these additional
airmen may have to stay as long as 179 days.
USAF Replaces Soldiers
The Air Force said that the number of soldiers on loan
from the Army to help protect domestic Air Force bases
will drop
from 8,000 to 6,500 this year. Replacing them will be a
mix of airmen, civilians, contractors, and new technology.
Under an agreement struck in 2002, the Army was to provide
about 8,000 soldiers for two years while the Air Force
restructured to alleviate a manpower shortfall in security
forces. However,
continuing operations in Southwest Asia have put a greater
strain on Army security elements than expected, forcing
it to pull back some 1,500 soldiers.
Brig. Gen. James M. Shamess, Air Force director of security
forces, said in a release that the Air Force will make
up the difference in a variety of ways, utilizing new technology
when
possible.
Instead of having a human assigned to a patrol, well
use systems where we can see areas farther out than a
person can, run the information back to a central location,
and respond
as needed, said Shamess. The service also plans
to use automated identification checks and new explosive
detection
equipment.
To help fix the manpower problem over the long term,
the Air Force began directing more new recruits into
security
forces
and expects to retrain airmen from overage career fields.
DOD Authorizes Korean Medal
The Defense Department on Feb. 9 announced the creation
of a medal for uniformed personnel who have served or
are serving
in support of the defense of South Korea. The new decoration
is called the Korean Defense Service Medal.
Eligible are troops who served 30 consecutive or 60 nonconsecutive
daysanytime between July 28, 1954, and a to-be-determined
future date. According to the DOD announcement, that
includes more than 40,000 US troops every year.
The medal is available to active duty and reserve personnel,
veterans, and retirees. Only one medal, which is above
the Armed Forces Service Medal in precedence, will be
awarded per individual, regardless of number of tours
in South
Korea.
The Air Force will begin to issue the new medal to active
duty and reserve personnel in the fall.
Veterans and retirees may claim entitlement by providing
documentation to the National Personnel Records Center,
9700 Page Ave., St.
Louis, Mo., 6312-5100, or may call 314-801-0800 for more
information. Air National Guard or Air Force Reserve
Command veterans and
retirees younger than 60 should send documentation to
Air Reserve Personnel Center, 6760 Irvington Pl. 4000,
Denver,
Colo., 80280-4000,
or call 303-679-6134.
Bush Forms Bipartisan Panel
President Bush, on Feb. 6, established a bipartisan commission
to study US intelligence operations, specifically intelligence
about weapons of mass destruction. Chairing the panel
will be former Sen. Chuck Robb (D-Va.) and retired federal
judge
Laurence Silberman.
The commission not only will review intelligence activities
leading up to the war in Iraq but also American intelligence
estimates of WMD programs in countries such as Iran and
North Korea. It will have full access to the findings
of the Iraq
Survey Group and compare what the ISG learns with
the information we had prior to our Operation Iraqi Freedom, said
Bush.
The panels report is due by March 31, 2005. It will
include specific
recommendations to ensure our capabilities are strong, said
the President.
Bush announced five other panel members: Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.); Lloyd Cutler, former White House counsel to
two Democratic
Presidents; Rick Levin, Yale University president; Bill
Studeman, former CIA deputy director; and Pat Wald, a
former judge
with the D.C. Court of Appeals. The President may appoint
two more
members.
DOD Kills Internet Voting Plan
Security concerns prompted the Defense Department to
nix plans to offer online voting for the upcoming Presidential
election.
The Pentagon made the announcement Feb. 6.
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz, on Jan. 31,
signed a memo rejecting use of the Secure Electronic
Registration and Voting Experiment because of our inability to ensure
the legitimacy of the votes, a spokesperson said.
DOD had asked 10 computer security experts to evaluate
the system. The experiment was canceled after four of
the 10
reported that there were a number of ways that
computer hackers could crack into the system.
Congress mandated the program in the 2002 defense authorization
bill after a 2000 proof-of-concept demonstration the
Pentagon ran for elections in Florida, South Carolina,
Texas, and
Utah. A total of 84 voters participated in the test.
The Pentagon plans to continue research into Internet
voting. However, Wolfowitz said researchers must prove
integrity
can be maintained.
DOD Announces Top Contractors
The Pentagon, in February, announced that it awarded
$209 billion in contracts during Fiscal 2003an
increase of more than $28 billion compared to 2002.
Topping the list as prime contractors, in the same order
as a year ago, were Lockheed Martin with $21.9 billion,
Boeing with $17.3 billion, and Northrop Grumman with
$11.1 billion
in contracts.
That contracting big three, which accounted for
nearly a quarter of all defense contracts, was followed
by General Dynamics ($8.2 billion), Raytheon ($7.9 billion),
and
United Technologies ($4.5 billion), the parent company
of airplane engine maker Pratt & Whitney.
The biggest gain on the list was posted by Halliburton,
thanks to the companys major role in stabilization
efforts in Iraq. After being 37th on the list a year
ago, Halliburton
moved up to No. 7, with $3.9 billion in contracts.
Rounding out DODs top 10 were General Electric ($2.8
billion), SAIC ($2.6 billion), and Computer Sciences
Corp. ($2.5 billion).
All told, the 10 largest contractors accounted for $82.7
billion in contracts. Each of the top 10 contractors
had an increase
in total contract value compared to the previous year.
Big Three Top USAF List, Too
Air Force contracts in Fiscal 2003 totaled more than
$55 billion for the year. The top three contractors were
the
same as for
DOD as a whole, with Lockheed Martin ($12.6 billion),
Boeing ($9.1 billion), and Northrop Grumman ($4.9 billion)
capturing
48 percent of USAFs total for the year.
Those three companies were followed by United Technologies
($2.1 billion) and Raytheon ($1.6 billion).
Coming in sixth and seventh on the Air Force list were
two companies not generally known as defense contractors:
North
American Airlines ($1.2 billion) and FedEx ($1.0 billion).
The Air Forces top 10 list for 2003 concluded with
General Dynamics ($0.95 billion), L-3 Communications
($0.92 billion),
and Computer Sciences Corp. ($0.86 billion).
Obituary
Retired Adm. Thomas M. Moorer, Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff from July 1970 to June 1974, died
Feb. 5 at the
age of 91.
Moorer also served three years as Chief of Naval
Operations immediately prior to being named JCS
Chairman.
He was a 1933 graduate of the US Naval Academy
and was serving at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, when
the US
was attacked
by Japan
on Dec. 7, 1941. Two months later, he was awarded
a Purple Heart after he was shot down while flying
a
combat mission
off the coast of Australia. Later in World War
II, Moorer was awarded a Distinguished Flying
Cross for
flying supplies
into
and wounded troops out of the island of Timor
in the face of superior numbers of enemy aircraft.
USAF Seeks To Retire Some F-117s
The Air Force wants to retire a fifth of its F-117 stealth
fighter fleeta decision being made primarily to
save money.
The Fiscal 2005 budget request discloses that USAF wants
to deactivate 10 of the 52 Nighthawk fighters currently
based at Holloman AFB, N.M.
Explaining the decision to reporters at the Air Force
Associations
Air Warfare Symposium in Orlando, Fla., Gen. Hal M. Hornburg
said the F-117s, while valuable in every war in which they
have participated, have always been used and deployed in
small numbers. The head of Air Combat Command said he could
understand why some people might be upset with the decision,
but he added that it is a good time for a capabilities
tradeoff.
Sen. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) was one who expressed some
concern. He said, I really want to see the justifications
for the reduction in F-117 stealth fighters at Holloman.
The Air Force expects the move to save about $75 million
over five years.
First used in 1989, the F-117 has repeatedly proved
its value in major Air Force campaigns. The fighters
were most
recently used for Operation Iraqi Freedom; a pair of F-117s
began the war with a predawn attack last March 20.
However, the aircrafts capabilities will soon
be replicated by the F/A-22 and F-35 fighters. The Air
Force
is in the early stages of an effort to create a bridge from
its legacy platforms to its next generation systems.
The service hopes to use the operating savings to fund
upgrades to F-117s that remain in service. |
Air Force Study Finds Agent Orange Cancer Link
A new analysis of cancer incidence among Air Force veterans
of the Vietnam War found increased rates of prostate
cancer and melanoma for airmen who sprayed the defoliant
Agent Orange and other herbicides. The Air Force, on
Jan. 22, said that previous results of the services
study on Operation Ranch Hand had not found such a link.
Since it first conducted health examinations in 1982,
the Air Force has tried to determine whether long-term
health
effects exist in Ranch Hand fliers and ground crew, the
news release stated.
The latest results, said USAF, include a statistical
adjustment for years served in Southeast Asia that
reveals increased risks of prostate cancer, melanoma,
and cancer at any anatomical site among those with the
highest dioxin exposure.
The study compared Ranch Hand veterans against airmen
who served in SEA during the war but did not spray
herbicides.
According to the release, dioxin exposure was probably
greater for Ranch Hand participants than for the average
Vietnam veteran.
The new analysis, which was prompted by discussions
with an advisory committee of nongovernmental scientists
appointed
by the FDA, also found a significant decrease in
some cancers for both the Ranch Hand group and the comparison
group. It found no significant increase in the risk
of death from cancer for either group when compared
to national rates.
The latest results from the Ranch Hand study were to
be published in February in the Journal of Occupational
and
Environmental Medicine. |
EELV Costs Up At Least 25 Percent
The Air Force announced in early February that unit
costs for its Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle program
had
increased by at least 25 percent.
Service officials blamed the cost growth, in large
part, on the downturn in commercial space launches. The
Air Force
had counted on a robust commercial sector to help keep
the EELV program efficient. Also contributing were competition
violations by Boeing, which forced the Air Force to shift
some already planned launches to competitor Lockheed Martin.
The cost increase means the program is in violation
of the so-called NunnMcCurdy rule, which means
the Air Force must certify to Congress that the program
has a cost
control plan in place and that EELV is critical to national
security.
The Administration requested $638 million in Fiscal
2005 for the EELV program$611 million of which
is for procurement. |
The Iraq Story Continues
Expeditionary Wing Moves to Balad
The 332nd Air Expeditionary Wing recently relocated
from Tallil Air Base in southeastern Iraq to Balad Air
Base,
north of Baghdad. The wing relocated Jan. 30 as part of
a US Central Command Air Forces initiative to consolidate
forces into one location, according to a Feb. 2 news release.
The 332nd had been operating out of Tallil for six
months.
Officials noted that CENTAF has not completely vacated
the base in southern Iraqthe 407th Air Expeditionary
Group, commanded by Col. Kevin E. Williams, is remaining
at Tallil.
Airman Dies in Vehicle Accident
Air Force MSgt. Jude C. Mariano, 39, of Vallejo, Calif.,
died Feb. 10 from injuries he sustained in a motor
vehicle accident in Qatar on Feb. 5. Mariano was
supporting Operation
Iraqi Freedom at the time of the accident.
A Feb. 12 USAF release said Mariano was serving as
an air mobility division information manager
in the combined
air
operations center in Qatar. He was deployed from
the 615th Air Mobility Operations Squadron, Travis
AFB,
Calif.
Casualties
By Feb. 19, a total of 543 US troops had died
since the beginning of Operation Iraqi
Freedom last March
20. Of
these casualties, 376 were killed by hostile
action, while 167 died in noncombat incidents.
Major combat operations were declared over
on May 1, 2003. Since that time, 405
troops have
died
in Iraq:
261 in combat
and 144 in nonhostile incidents. |
USAF Targets Chief Master
Sergeant Development
The Air Force is changing how it manages its complement
of chief master sergeants to put the right leadership
in the right place at the right time, said CMSAF
Gerald R. Murray. The effort is part of the service-wide
force development program.
Murray said in a Jan. 14 Air Force release that USAF
has more
than 100 empty chief master sergeant positions. He
called the leadership void unacceptable.
The Air Force Senior Leadership Management Office recently
took over development and assignments for the chiefs. Previously
the services nearly 3,000 active duty chiefs had
been managed by the Air Force Personnel Center. The move,
said Murray, will provide the same focused development
for chiefs as is given to senior officers and civilians.
Other USAF plans to enhance development of its senior-most
enlisted personnel include establishing a new professional
military education course, cross flowing chiefs from overage
career fields to shortage fields, and establishing an assignments
rotations policy for special duties and staff positions.
Brig. Gen. Richard S. Hassan, who heads the senior leadership
office, said the Air Force has denied itself
the full benefit of its chiefs by not openly cross
flowing them to positions when and where they are
needed.
We view that as a denial to both the individual
... as well as to the units who do not have a chief master
sergeant
to lead them, said Hassan. He added, It is
certainly a waste to have [E-9s] serving in E-8 and E-7
billets.
Murray said that, beginning in the 2004 promotion cycle,
the Air Force plans to establish a three-year service
commitment to be promoted to chief. That is the
same policy that is in place for newly minted colonels. |
USAF Can Cut Mishaps 50 Percent
The Air Force believes that Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfelds goal of cutting aircraft mishaps
by 50 percent in two years is achievable.
Gen. John P. Jumper, Chief of Staff, went one step
further Feb. 18 when he codified a new Air Force
safety goal of
zero mishaps.
Any goal other than zero implies that some mishaps
are acceptable, Jumper said in a statement.
Maj. Gen. Kenneth W. Hess, head of USAF safety, told
a House committee in mid-February, We can make
significant improvements in safety, and added
that Rumsfelds
goal is achievable and will directly increase
our operational readiness.
Hess noted in his testimony that this effort is challenging
and will not be business as usual because it
requires real cultural change.
Jumper said that over the past decade, despite
some excellent safety programs, the Air Force had
not made much progress and had, in fact,
been moving
in the wrong direction. He wrote, Another
program, procedure, or lecture wont help. Each
of us paying attention will.
The overall lack of progress in improving aviation
safety by all the services in recent yearsand
a spike in mishaps during Fiscal 2002caught the
attention of Rumsfeld and Jumper. Both have issued
memos calling the
recent trends unacceptable. (See: A Plague of
Accidents, February,
p. 58.)
The Air Force is working with the other services to
find areas
that have the highest potential payoff in reducing
fatalities, the number of destroyed aircraft, and,
ultimately, reducing
the mishap rate, Hess told the House Armed Services
Committee.
One focus of the effort will be to look for trends
in incidents attributed to human error, now a leading
cause
of mishaps. |
News Notes
By Tamar A. Mehuron, Associate Editor
A Titan IV rocket, equipped with an Inertial Upper Stage,
launched a Defense Support Program satellite into orbit Feb.
14 from Cape Canaveral, Fla. The launch was the final mission
for Boeings IUS booster.
The Florida Air National Guards 125th Fighter Wing,
in February, received the first of 19 F-15A/Bs retrofitted
with E-kit upgrades, providing additional thrust and enhanced
combat capability at much less cost than a new engine. According
to Pratt & Whitney, the Florida ANG will receive all
19 by 2006. USAF also plans to retrofit F-15s for ANG units
in Hawaii, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Missouri, and Oregon.
USAF enlisted personnel have three months, instead of 12
months, to decide whether to re-enlist, officials announced
in February. The change marks a return to the policy prior
to 2001 and will give USAF a better picture of its anticipated
end strength.
The Ogden Air Logistics Center, Hill AFB, Utah, earlier
this year completed modifications on the first F-16 fighter
under a $1 billion program that will replace or repair structures
that are known to lead to widespread fatigue damage. The
first F-16 went to the Minnesota ANGs 148th Fighter
Wing. USAF plans to modify more than 1,200 F-16s to ensure
the fighters remain viable beyond 2020.
USAF accident investigators said pilot error caused a Thunderbirds
aircraft to crash during an air show Sept. 14 at Mountain
Home AFB, Idaho. Their report said that the pilot misjudged
the altitude required to complete a Split S maneuver.
When he realized something was wrong, he maneuvered his F-16
to avoid the crowd and ejected with barely a second to spare
before impact. He had minor injuries, but the aircraft was
destroyed.
Beginning in fall 2007, Guard and Reserve C-130s will undergo
avionics modernization, USAF announced. The avionics modernization
program will upgrade 520 aircraft by 2016.
Northrop Grumman will team with Lockheed Martin in USAFs
Space Based Radar development competition, Lockheed officials
said in January. SBR, with an initial launch scheduled for
2012, is being designed to provide worldwide, on-demand,
persistent surveillance and reconnaissance.
The Precision Strike Association honored the Air Force
Joint Direct Attack Munition Joint Program Office in January
with the William J. Perry Strike Award for the JPOs
work on JDAM.
Lt. Col. Michael Fossum, Air Force Reserve individual mobilization
augmentee, was named as a NASA astronaut to fly on the space
shuttle in November for mission STS-121 to resupply the International
Space Station. Fossum will serve as mission specialist.
Battling unusually severe winter storms, personnel from
Elmendorf AFB, Alaska, located, with the aid of forensic
archeologists and ground-penetrating radar, unmarked graves
of 15 Alaska natives on an old Air Force radar site near
Port Heiden. In December and January, the team removed the
remains, which were in danger of being washed out to sea,
and turned them over to villagers for reburial.
After about a five-year hiatus, North Korea and the US
will resume repatriating the remains of US service personnel
found in North Korea during joint recovery operations. US
teams will bring the remains across the demilitarized zone
at Panmunjom. An Administration official praised the level
of cooperation shown by the North Koreans during recent talks.
Civil Air Patrols inaugural Civic Leadership Academy,
in late February, drew 32 cadet participants. The week-long
program in Washington, D.C., featured visits to Congress,
the Supreme Court, presentations from government representatives,
and team projects.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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