F-22 Flies Cross-Country
On Aug. 26, Raptor 4002, the second F-22 fighter, flew nonstop
from Dobbins ARB, Ga., to Edwards AFB, Calif., where it joined
the first F-22-Raptor 4001-for flight testing.
Arrival of 4002 at Edwards represents the USAF fighter program's
next major flight test milestone. To date, the program has met
all its requirements, DoD said. Many have been met earlier than
expected.
Taken together, Raptors 4001 and 4002 have flown 39 test flights
totaling 59.4 hours at Edwards and Dobbins. Thus far, F-22 test
pilots have flown at altitudes up to 40,000 feet, at 16 degrees
angle of attack, and at .95 Mach.
The Air Force plans to buy 339 of the stealthy, supercruising
fighters to replace the F-15 as the world's premier air superiority
fighter.
US Strikes Terrorist Targets
US cruise missiles on Aug. 20 slammed into terrorist-related
targets in Afghanistan and Sudan. US officials said the attacks
were mounted both for retaliation for the earlier bombings of
US embassies in East Africa and to pre-empt and disrupt imminent
terrorist acts.
The sites, a training camp in the Afghani desert and a suspected
chemical weapons materials factory in Khartoum, were both linked
to the alleged terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden, a renegade
Saudi exile. Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen claimed to
have "compelling" evidence that bin Laden was behind
the Aug. 7 bombings of embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Pentagon officials were more guarded than usual in discussing
operational details. However, it was known that the attacks entailed
firings of 75 to 100 of the Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles from
submarines and surface warships in the Red Sea and the Arabian
Sea.
US officials said the weapons caused "moderate to heavy"
damage. One of the TLAMs went off course and fell into Pakistan,
after which the unexploded weapon was retrieved by authorities.
Pakistan protested the attack for, among other reasons, violations
of its airspace. The cruise missiles fired into Afghanistan would
have overflown Pakistani territory.
Rockets Explode, Payloads Lost
Twice within weeks, two Expendable Launch Vehicles exploded shortly
after liftoff from Cape Canaveral, Fla.
The first was an Air Force Titan IVA Aug. 12; the second,
Boeing's new Delta III, on its inaugural flight Aug. 26. No one
was injured in either blast, but both payloads were destroyed.
The Titan was thought to carry a $1.3 billion intelligence
satellite. The Delta carried a $225 million commercial communications
satellite.
This was the 25th launch for USAF's Titan IV, since the heavy-lift
ELV first took to the skies in 1989. It veered out of control
seconds after liftoff. Range safety officers quickly destroyed
the rocket, which had reached about 20,000 feet, to prevent possible
damage from falling debris, according to 45th Space Wing officials.
The launch was the last for the A series of the rocket, which
is being replaced by a new B model with an improved solid-fuel
booster.
The disaster-which ranks among the most expensive unmanned
launch failures ever for the US-was the second failure for the
heavy-lift ELV. In August 1993, the rupture of a solid-fuel booster
destroyed a Titan just after launch.
Initial investigation by Boeing into the Delta III launch
is focusing on the new booster's control system, stated company
officials Aug. 28. The Delta III, with its nine solid-fuel strap-on
boosters and more powerful upper-stage engine, can carry twice
the payload of the Delta II, which launches USAF's Global Positioning
System satellites.
Boeing initially postponed launch of a Delta II set to boost
five commercial satellites from Vandenberg AFB, Calif., Sept.
1. The Delta II was then rescheduled and successfully sent the
five Iridium communications satellites into orbit Sept. 8.
Adultery Rules Upheld ...
The Pentagon announced July 29 that, after a year-long examination,
top defense officials had decided to leave basically unchanged
the military's policy regarding adultery.
The way the armed services handle adultery in their ranks
had been a subject of controversy ever since the Air Force sought
to court-martial B-52 copilot 1st Lt. Kelly Flinn for lying about
an adulterous affair she had with the husband of an Air Force
enlisted woman.
In response to the national uproar, Secretary of Defense William
S. Cohen ordered a review of military social mores in June 1997.
The re-look culminated in a proposal that adultery remain
"unacceptable conduct" in the military, under the Uniform
Code of Military Justice. Commanders should bring adultery charges
only when the offense interferes with good order and discipline
or discredits the military, under the proposal. This essentially
recapitulates the current guidelines.
"There have been no changes in the code, and there will
be no lowering of standards," said Cohen.
Though these guidelines largely restate long-standing policy,
the new proposal does attempt to clarify the factors commanders
can consider when weighing the gravity of someone's adulterous
conduct. These include whether the action included misuse of
government resources, whether it had an impact on anyone's ability
to carry out their duties, and the accused's marital status and
rank. Following publication in the Federal Register, the proposed
guidelines face a period of public comment before becoming final.
... Fraternization Rules To Agree
The same year-long examination led to a determination that
rules on fraternization between officer and enlisted should be
standardized and toughened-a move which could affect hundreds
of relationships, primarily in the Army.
On the fraternization issue, Cohen directed that the Army
needs to bring its policy regarding relationships across the
divide of rank into line with the other services.
The Air Force, Navy, and Marines largely prohibit fraternization
between officers and enlisted members. The Army has not, permitting
such relationships if the two involved members were not in the
same chain of command and order and discipline were not affected.
The new tougher standard could force unmarried cross-rank
Army couples to make a choice: get married or break up.
"Breaches of good order and discipline in the all volunteer
force are not widespread," said Cohen, "but perceived
and actual inconsistencies in policies and practices addressing
those breaches must be remedied."
EAF Not a "Quick Fix"
The Expeditionary Aerospace Force, far from being a "quick-fix"
solution to high optempo levels, has taken years to develop,
according to Gen. Michael E. Ryan, USAF Chief of Staff.
"In fact, the EAF concept was [nearly] eight years in
the making," Ryan argued in an Aug. 24 statement.
Ryan and F. Whitten Peters, acting Secretary of the Air Force,
announced Aug. 4 a plan to transform the Air Force into the EAF,
comprising 10 standing Air Expeditionary Forces drawing forces
from bases around the United States.
"Since the end of the Gulf War, we've been wrestling
with various ways to respond to the increasing number of contingencies
that require us to deploy forces around the world while maintaining
high-quality service at the bases from which these forces have
deployed."
This activity, said Ryan, "has taken a high toll on our
people, both on those we send to remote locations as well as
those whose workload at home station is expanded to make up for
the absence of their teammates."
Ryan said that, in early 1998, he commissioned a six-month
study by a small group of planners to use lessons of the past
eight years to devise a new framework. "Eight years of experience
and six months of intensive study-this was anything but a quick
fix," said Ryan.
Missile Defense Proponents Play
Offense
Congressional proponents of national defense against ballistic
missiles pushed their issue forward on a number of fronts this
summer.
On Aug. 5, a bipartisan group of 48 House members introduced
legislation that would make deployment of a National Missile
Defense system the official policy of the US. Such a move would
toughen the current US position, formulated by the Clinton Administration,
which calls for developing NMD technology to the point where
a decision whether to deploy within three years can by made in
the year 2000.
Meanwhile, the House passed a spending bill amendment intended
to force the Administration to submit negotiated changes in the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty to the Senate for ratification.
The changes, hammered out in talks between the US, Russia,
Kazakhstan, Ukraine, and Belarus, include such items as a limit
on the speed of theater defense missiles. NMD proponents think
such alternations would hobble future missile defense deployment.
A poll released by the pro-NMD group Coalition to Defend America
found 86 percent of respondents in favor of a missile shield
deployment. Seventy-five percent of respondents supported spending
$3 billion on the system.
Robot SMV in Successful Test
On Aug. 11, Boeing successfully drop tested a subscale prototype
of the Air Force's proposed X-40A Space Maneuver Vehicle.
An Army Black Hawk helicopter hoisted the 22-foot-long uninhabited
vehicle to an altitude of some 9,000 feet over Holloman AFB,
N.M. Cut loose, the prototype SMV glided down to a runway landing
using autonomous onboard guidance systems.
"We wanted to validate low-speed handling qualities and
demonstrate autonomous approach and landing capability,"
said Boeing Project Manager John Fuller. "We did that today."
If it enters production, the space shuttle-shaped vehicle
would be launched into orbit 22,000 miles high and loiter there
for up to a year. It would travel to different trouble spots-a
malfunctioning satellite, say-before gliding to Earth on its
stubby delta wings.
The Air Force will probably decide within a year whether it
wants to pursue the SMV concept. If it does, the service is likely
to call for a competition to build a demonstrator vehicle, with
Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Orbital Sciences likely participants.
Panel Moves to Ban Explicit Material
Military retail services in August began the process of eliminating
all sales of sexually explicit magazines, videotapes, and audio
tapes.
Under Pentagon instructions, an eight-member Resale Activities
Board of Review met Aug. 13. The board had asked all of the military
exchanges to provide for its review materials that might be affected
by the new law.
The resulting review list includes more than 100 publications.
The board will announce findings later this year. Once the board
determines that a particular item is sexually explicit, it will
be removed and not offered for sale.
The Pentagon was responding to a ruling last June by the Supreme
Court, upholding the 1996 Military Honor and Decency Act by refusing
to review an appeal of a lower court ruling. The law requires
DoD to remove all sexually explicit materials sold or rented
by the exchange services, commissaries, and US Navy ships' stores.
More B-1 Upgrades in Store?
The Air Force is considering a new B-1B upgrade program that
would give the big bombers improved data links and avionics,
among other things.
Right now the B-1 program is in the midst of an extensive
upgrade program that is adding precision guided conventional
weapon capability to the Lancer fleet. This December will see
delivery of the first B-1s able to handle the Joint Direct Attack
Munition. Seven JDAM-ready aircraft should be on the flight line
at Ellsworth AFB, S.D., by February.
The new Block G program, if funded, would begin in 2002 or
2003, after the current effort has largely ended. Proposed Block
G components would include the Link-16 data link and an upgraded
PGM targeting system. Officials are also weighing the virtues
of including the Small Bomb System in the next round of B-1 modifications.
ABL Team Gets Biggest Glass
Ever
The contractor team developing the USAF Airborne Battle Laser
has accepted delivery of the largest piece of high-quality optical
glass ever made, according to team officials.
The 994-pound piece of glass, made by Heraeus Quarzglas of
Germany, will eventually become the turret window through which
the ABL will produce a high-energy laser beam capable of tracking
and destroying ballistic missiles in flight.
The task of producing the final window entails much more than
simply slapping glass in place, as if it were a windshield or
replacement window pane. Corning, Inc. of Canton, N.Y., is now
processing the high-quality glass into a sphere. Then a Pittsburgh
firm, ContravesBrashear Systems, will polish the window.
It will be optically coated by yet another contractor, Optical
Coating Laboratories, Inc., of Santa Rosa, Calif.
The window will have to show its stuff in 2002, when Team
ABL-made up of Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and TRW-is scheduled
to run a test against an airborne theater ballistic missile.
Short Circuit Downed THAAD
The May crash of the Theater High Altitude Area Defense anti-missile
interceptor-the high-profile program's fifth straight intercept
test failure-was caused by a short circuit in its booster, according
to investigation results.
The short occurred when a high voltage wire came in contact
with a low voltage one on the back of a connector plug in the
booster's thrust vector control. Possible causes included a loose
wire, metallic debris, or booster exhaust residue.
Ironically, the tough preflight inspections the THAAD booster
underwent may have helped caused the problem, said program officials.
The checks were meant to guard against the failures which dogged
previous test shots, but frequent handling of the now four-year-old
booster hardware may have shaken the wire or dislodged a foreign
object.
The test failures have raised serious questions about the
future of the $14 billion program. THAAD's designers point out
that many other weapons, such as the Tomahawk cruise missile,
had multiple failures in testing. They say they are confident
they are gradually shaking out the bugs in the system.
B-2s Take Precautionary Time
Off
The Air Force fleet of B-2 bombers suspended normal flying
operations Aug. 6-10. The cause of the stand-down was a potential
problem with the initiators that help power the aircrew ejection
system.
The glitch was discovered by the manufacturer, O.E.A. Aerospace,
during routine acceptance testing. Each B-2 has eight initiators,
and all were replaced as a safety precaution.
Aviano Airmen Support Albanian
Exercise
Eight USAF airmen from the 31st Fighter Wing, based at Aviano
AB, Italy, deployed to Albania on short notice to support a NATO
exercise dubbed Cooperative Assembly '98, the Air Force announced
Aug. 21.
The exercise was intended to display NATO displeasure at Serbian
military actions against civilians in Kosovo, a restive, predominantly
Albanian province of Yugoslavia.
The USAF contingent comprised seven air traffic controllers
from the 31st Operations Support Squadron and one ground radio
maintainer from the 31st Communications Squadron. The airmen
were called in on an emergency basis after the unexpected deployment
of US Marine controllers to Africa.
Forces participating in this exercise came from Albania, Belgium,
Canada, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Lithuania, Netherlands,
Russia, Spain, Turkey, UK, and United States.
Russian Engine, US Rocket
Lockheed Martin on July 29 started a Russian-built RD-180 engine
in the first of a series of tests of the propulsion system for
the new Atlas IIIA rocket.
The test marked the first time such Russian hardware has ever
been fired up at a US government facility--in this case, a NASA
stand at Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala., originally
built to test the first stage of the Saturn V.
The RD-180 throttled up to more than 90 percent power during
its run, which lasted 70 seconds. The engine, tanks and feedlines,
avionics, electronics, and hydraulics were all tested.
RD-180s produce 860,000 pounds of thrust and are produced
by Russia's NPO Energomash and Pratt & Whitney for Atlas
contractor Lockheed Martin. Use of the Russian hardware allows
the Atlas IIIA to fly with 15,000 fewer parts than the Atlas
IIAS.
"This test was an important milestone in our development
of the new Atlas III and EELV rockets that will enable us to
reduce assembly time and improve operational capability while
cutting costs," said Raymond S. Colladay, president of Lockheed
Martin Astronautics.
First launch of the Atlas IIIA is currently scheduled for
March 1999.
Assignment System Changes for
New Pilots
On July 31, the Air Force handed out assignments to its newest
class of pilots at Vance AFB, Okla., under a revamped assignment
system.
The assignment modifications mean that an individual's desires
have less weight when it comes to that first cockpit-but the
needs of the service will be better met, say Air Force personnel
officials.
The new pilot assignment system also foreshadows what other
Air Force officers will see when the overall Officer Assignment
System is changed in January.
In the past, graduating pilots were ranked by a combination
of flying and test scores. Students then ran a sort of reverse
draft, with the top scorer getting first pick of the aircraft
he or she wanted to fly, the No. 2 the next pick, and so on.
Choices were rotated among the Air Force's three pilot training
bases.
Under the new system, students fill out a "dream sheet"
of assignments they would like to have. Taking these desires
into account, flight, squadron, and operations group commanders,
with input from Instructor Pilots, then determine what they think
is an appropriate slot for each new set of Air Force wings.
"The old system was based strictly on numbers,"
said Col. Dale "Muddy" Waters, 71st Operations Group
commander. "We added up all the flying and academic scores
to determine a class ranking, then let the students pick assignments
based on how they ranked. There was a transparent sort of purity
to that system, but it did not always match students with assignments
in a way that was best for the service."
Mismatches were fairly common under the old way. Sometimes
IPs would tell commanders that a student was not ready to become
a first-assignment instructor, but under the rank system the
top levels had no control over a student's selection.
"I know there is some concern among the students about
how the new system will affect them," said Waters. "I
believe they will find out that the net result will probably
not be too much different than when the students picked the assignments
themselves. How you perform in training will still be the biggest
factor in determining your assignment."
New Early Retirement Program
Opens
The Air Force is offering another early retirement program in
Fiscal 1999. The only incentive is early departure; no money,
such as the Special Separation Bonus, is offered.
Only officers need apply. With the end of large-scale force
reductions, waiver programs and other specialized personnel management
tools are helping the Air Force shape the force it needs, say
personnel officials.
Basic eligibility criteria include completion of at least
15 years-but less than 20 years-of federal commissioned service.
Eligible officers include:
- Deferred Biomedical Sciences Corps captains, majors, and
lieutenant colonels in all specialties and nondeferred BSC captains,
majors, and lieutenant colonels in Air Force specialties 42BX,
physical therapist; 42EX, optometrist; 42FX, podiatrist; 42NX,
audiology/speech pathologist; 42TX, occupational therapist; 43BX,
biomedical scientist; 43DX, dietitian; and 43YX, health physicist.
- Nondeferred and deferred Nurse Corps captains, majors, and
lieutenant colonels in Air Force specialties 46AX, nurse administrator;
46GX, nurse-midwife; 46NX, clinical nurse (without shredouts);
and 46PX, mental health nurse.
- All Medical Service Corps deferred captains, majors, and
lieutenant colonels; and Chaplain Corps nondeferred and deferred
captains, majors, and lieutenant colonels.
Operation Flipper Drop
In an airlift that some participants dubbed "Operation Flipper
Drop," an Air Force Reserve Command C-141 Starlifter flew
five US military dolphins to Lithuania to participate in a Partnership
for Peace exercise in early July. [See "Baltic Guard,"
p. 26.]
The bottle-nosed dolphins, Tacoma, Wenatchee, Cinder, Spetsnaz,
and Punane, are all members of the Navy Explosive Ordnance Disposal
Mobile Unit Three, based in Coronado, Calif.
The "teenagers," as some of their handlers call
them, are trained to locate and mark mines and other munitions
on the ocean floor. During Baltic Challenge '98, an 11-nation
joint land, sea, and air exercise, the dolphins did their stuff
on the floor of the Baltic Sea.
Airlifting the marine mammals required more care than is lavished
on the usual C-141 cargo. A C-141 crew from the 445th Airlift
Wing, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, flew to NAS North Island, Calif.,
to pick up the animals and their handlers July 8. They were flown
to Lithuania in carriers that resembled big blue bathtubs on
wheels. When filled with water and a dolphin, each carrier weighed
1,900 pounds.
Electric Starlifter Unplugs
The C-141 Electric Starlifter program came to a successful close
at Edwards AFB, Calif., July 29.
Electric Starlifter testing marked the first time in aviation
history that a large military cargo aircraft has both been fitted
with electric flight controls and flown more than 1,000 operational
hours.
The program went beyond fly-by-wire techniques, in which electrical
signals trigger hydraulic systems to move ailerons and other
controls. It used power-by-wire techniques, in which the flight
control surfaces are moved by electrical, not hydraulic, motors.
The program's purpose was to demonstrate the feasibility of
such fly-by-wire/power-by-wire control systems for future platforms,
under the Air Force's More Electric Aircraft program.
"The major benefit is the elimination of the central
hydraulic systems," said Lockheed Martin Program Manager
Walt Porter. "This will enhance reliability and safety;
it eliminates the numerous requirements posed to maintain a central
hydraulic system, and it greatly reduces the weight of the aircraft."
The Electric Starlifter-the second C-141 platform ever manufactured-was
put through an exhaustive flight qualification test program,
including temperature, shock, vibration, and electromagnetic
interference exams. The program brought the technical readiness
level of the electric actuator to flight-qualified status.
The plane's 1,000 hours were amassed in routine cargo and
passenger-carrying missions for Air Mobility Command. The electric
actuator unit was also bench-tested to over five million cycles.
The Joint Strike Fighter, the F-22, and the next-generation
C-130J transport are among the aircraft that could benefit from
the program's results, said Air Force officials.
Strikers Squeeze Incirlik
US Air Force fighters based at Incirlik AB, Turkey, continued
to carry out operations over northern Iraq despite the outbreak
of labor strife that all but closed base services and restricted
US personnel throughout Turkey.
On July 23, some 1,400 unionized Turkish employees went out
on strike, demanding more pay and benefits. By late August, the
strike had begun to affect the more than 7,000 American military
members, DoD civilian workers, contract employees, and family
members at installations in Ankara, Izmir, Incirlik, and several
smaller sites in Turkey.
Union members continued picketing at facilities throughout
Incirlik AB, near Adana in southeastern Turkey. Turkish law permits
unions to strike and gives striking workers access to their work
sites to picket.
About 5,300 Americans are stationed at Incirlik, a Turkish
air force facility that houses the US Air Force's 39th Wing and
the 39th Air and Space Expeditionary Wing. The American units,
along with British and French allies, enforce the UNmandated
no-fly zone over northern Iraq.
About 45 US and Allied aircraft continue to fly daily sorties
as part of Operation Northern Watch. "Military operations
have not suffered at all," DoD spokesman Kenneth H. Bacon
said at the Pentagon Aug. 11.
People at Incirlik are operating under difficult circumstances,
Bacon said. To avoid conflict with striking union members, Air
Force officials have restricted travel to the local community
to official business only. People who live off base, however,
are allowed to travel back and forth.
Since the closure of the base commissary, base officials have
arranged for small groups to shop at an off-base supermarket
each day in the company of US military and Turkish national police.
Field kitchens have been set up to feed service members supporting
Operation Northern Watch.
Gen. John P. Jumper, the commander of US Air Forces in Europe,
visited Incirlik in August to answer questions about the situation.
The USAFE commander then went to Ankara, the capital of Turkey,
to discuss the strike with Turkey's senior military leadership
and the American ambassador. He said his intention was to persuade
leaders to help resolve legal issues associated with the strike.
News Notes
- On Aug. 4, the Air Force announced that its staff sergeant
promotion rate for the latest cycle was 22.65 percent-the highest
promotion rate to that rank in 27 years.
- Undermanned security forces could get a boost from new recruiting
incentives that went into effect Aug. 12. Four-year enlistees
entering active duty now receive a $1,000 bonus for choosing
the security forces career field. Six-year enlistees receive
a $3,000 bonus.
- NORAD plans to expand its duties to include cruise missile
threats. The command, which has operations located in Cheyenne
Mountain, Colo., has long watched for ICBM launches that could
threaten the US but has become increasingly concerned that cruise
missiles could be launched at North American cities from ships
or through other clandestine means.
- Gen. Richard B. Myers took command of NORAD, US Space Command,
and Air Force Space Command at a Peterson AFB, Colo., ceremony
Aug. 14. Myers took over from Gen. Howell M. Estes III, who had
been the commander since August 1996.
- Following its 1996 order for four Boeing KC-135R Stratotankers,
Singapore has set up a KC-135 training detachment at McConnell
AFB, Kan. The unit will use KC-135 transporters leased from USAF
until its own aircraft are delivered next year.
- A new Milstar satellite ground station was installed at Elmendorf
AFB, Alaska, this summer. This important link in the new secure
next-generation space communications system should be operational
Oct. 1. Half of the planned fleet of six Milstar satellites will
be in orbit by the end of the year.
- USAF marked the 10th year of delivering humanitarian aid
to the impoverished former Soviet republic of Armenia with an
August delivery of $8 million worth of medical supplies and equipment.
Lack of infrastructure at Armenia's Zvartnots Airport led to
an assembly line of forklifts and baggage carts to off-load the
140,000 pounds of donated supplies.
- An Air Force F-16CJ crashed on the end of a runway at Misawa
AB, Japan, July 24. The pilot, 1st Lt. Melvin B. Simpson, ejected
safely, but his parachute carried him into the plane's burning
wreckage. A USAF staff sergeant and five members of the Japanese
self-defense forces pulled Simpson to safety, although he remained
hospitalized for burn treatments as of mid-August.
- The pilot of an Air Force F-16 based at Shaw AFB, S.C., was
rescued July 22 after he crashed into the ocean about 13 miles
southeast of Murrells Inlet. A Coast Guard helicopter plucked
the pilot from the water and delivered him, largely unharmed,
to a Charleston hospital for a checkup.
- On Aug. 1, a C-5 from Air Force Reserve Command's 433d Airlift
Wing, Kelly AFB, Texas, delivered 30 pallets of medical and educational
supplies to Guatemala City, Guatemala. The donated items included
books, desks, strollers, mattresses, sheets, cabinets, and playground
equipment meant to benefit orphans along the Rio Dulce River,
six hours by road from Guatemala's capital.
- The Air Force delivered aid to flood-ravaged central China
in August. A C-141 from McChord AFB, Wash., hauled 20 tons of
water, blankets, tents, and plastic sheeting to the region, where
an estimated 2.9 million people have been left homeless by fierce
rains.
- AFRC officials opened the new Eastern Regional Flight Training
Facility at Dobbins ARB, Ga., July 24, ushering in a new era
of better ground training for C-130 crews. The highlight of the
facility is a state-of-the-art C-130H2 weapon system trainer.
"It absolutely mirrors what our weapon system is like,"
said Maj. Gen. James E. Sherrard III, 22d Air Force commander
(nominated as chief, Air Force Reserve), after trying it out.
- During an Aug. 16 visit to Ramstein AB, Germany, Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs Dr. Sue Bailey lauded
Air Force medical units that helped evacuate victims of the US
embassy bombings in Africa. Ramstein-based USAF specialists evacuated
15 patients-10 Americans and five Kenyans-two days after the
Aug. 7 attacks. Three days later they returned to gather up seven
more Kenyan patients. "The senior leadership in Washington
understands the job and how well it was done," said Bailey.
"It's been said that they were heroes bringing out heroes.
This is military medicine at its very best."
- Civil Air Patrol searchers from the Rapid City, S.D., CAP
squadron found a downed civilian airplane Aug. 1. The aircraft,
which had been missing since July 26, was located in a mountainous
region west of Deadwood, S.D. Owner/pilot Peter Torino of Brookings,
S.D., and his wife, Sandra, were killed in the crash.
- An Air Force Research Laboratory civilian assigned to the
Directed Energy Directorate has been awarded the rank of fellow
by the Optical Society of America. LaVerne A. Schlie, a research
physicist in the directorate's laser application branch, was
recognized for pioneering continuous wave and pulsed photolytic
iodine lasers with excellent optical properties.
- The late Maj. Gen. Harry G. Armstrong, founder of the Air
Force Aerospace Research Laboratory at WrightPatterson AFB,
Ohio, was inducted posthumously into the National Aviation Hall
of Fame in a Dayton, Ohio, ceremony. Among the items Armstrong
personally developed during his long career, which ended with
his retirement in 1958, were soundproof flying helmets, aircraft
oxygen systems, shoulder-type safety belts, and the human centrifuge.
- Twenty-four crew members from the 3d Airlift Squadron and
9th AS made a world record C-5 airdrop at Yuma Proving Ground,
Ariz., this summer. The 42,000-pound load was slowed by parachutes
156 feet in diameter-the largest recovery chutes ever used.
- US Air Forces in Europe will conduct a demonstration of its
new Humanitarian Expeditionary Force concept some time next year,
according to Gen. John P. Jumper, USAFE commander. The HEF will
be composed of C-130 and possibly C-17 transports and medical,
engineer, security forces, command-and-control, and civil affairs
units.
- The Armed Forces Service Medal has been approved for US military
members who participated in Operation Provide Comfort, according
to Air Force Personnel Center officials. Eligibility is limited
to those who participated in the designated area of OPC for at
least one day between Dec. 1, 1995, and Dec. 31, 1996.