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Tue, Mar 21, 2006

Globemaster Sets All-Time Airdrop Record In Afghanistan

Single C-17 Drops 32,400 Lbs Of Aid Within 40 Minutes

US Central Command Air Forces Forward news service told Aero-News Monday that a single US Air Force C-17 Globemaster III transport jet set an airdrop record last Thursday, by airdropping 32,400 pounds of humanitarian aid within 40 minutes to four locations in central and eastern Afghanistan.

This airdrop marked the most cargo dropped to this many drop zones in the shortest amount of time from a single aircraft in the history of US airdrop operations, said Air Force Lt. Col. Charles Ciuzio, chief of the Air Mobility Division at the Combined Air Operations Center. It is the policy of US Central Command Air Forces Forward to not reveal the center's location.

The record-breaking C-17 and accompanying aircrew are deployed to the 379th Air Expeditionary Wing from McChord Air Force Base, WA.

The mission delivered 24 bundles of supplies to Afghans in need. The supplies included winter survival gear, tools, school supplies, food and blankets. This relief adds to the more than 2.2 million pounds of humanitarian aid provided for the people of Afghanistan since October 2004, officials said.

"This mission definitely proves the flexibility of our airpower," said Air Force Maj. Gabriel Greiss, chief of Air Mobility Division tactics at the CAOC. "By getting so much done so quickly, we are undoubtedly optimizing the use of our air assets to help as much as we can."

Some six million people in Afghanistan and 1.5 million Afghan refugees depend on international relief programs for survival, according to White House reports.

FMI: www.centaf.af.mil

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