C-17s Will Fly Over 150 Tons Of Cargo And Supplies
The Air Force has begun airlifting Rwandan peacekeeping
equipment and supplies from Rwanda to Sudan's Darfur region as part
of a United Nations-African Union peacekeeping mission.
The first mission was completed Wednesday by the "Spirit of The
Golden Gate," a C-17 Globemaster III transport jet deployed to
Africa from Travis Air Force Base, CA. Another Travis-based C-17
flew a second mission.
Each aircraft carried about 30 tons of cargo. In all, the Air
Force will transport more than 150 tons of equipment and supplies,
including nine oversized vehicles, water purification systems,
water trailers, tents and spare parts.
"This equipment is essential to the successful completion of
our mission in Darfur," Maj. Jill Rutaramara, spokesman for the
Rwandan Defense Forces, said. "It will assist us in whatever we do
there and improve the quality of life for our soldiers deployed to
Darfur."
Rwanda has four battalions of peacekeepers in Darfur, totaling
2,566 personnel, with a goal of increasing the peacekeeping force
to 3,200, Ruteramara said. The Rwandan peacekeepers are assigned to
the hybrid United Nations-African Union mission in Darfur, known as
UNAMID.
President George W. Bush announced the decision to airlift the
equipment January 5 as part of the US government's ongoing support
for international peacekeeping efforts in Darfur.
Since 2003, conflict in the Darfur region of western Sudan has
displaced an estimated 2.5 million people and led to an estimated
300,000 deaths, according to United Nations statistics. Since 2004,
the United States has spent more than $15 million to airlift 11,400
peacekeepers and their equipment to and from Darfur and has
provided more than $100 million to train and equip those forces,
according to a White House fact sheet. Much of this support is
coordinated through the State Department.
"I have provided a waiver to the State Department so they can
begin to move 240 containers worth of heavy equipment into Darfur,
and that the Defense Department will be flying Rwandan equipment
into Darfur to help facilitate the peacekeeping missions there,"
Bush said. The State Department is transporting the 240 containers
under a separate contract.
The military portion of the airlift is the first major mission
planned by Air Forces Africa, US Africa Command's air component.
Air Forces Africa also is US Air Forces in Europe's 17th Air Force,
with headquarters at Ramstein Air Base, Germany.
"This was a complicated project that ultimately took several
months of interagency and interdepartmental coordination and
planning," Maj. Greg Lococo, chief of operational planning for Air
Forces Africa, said.
Air Forces Africa's 722nd Expeditionary Air Base Squadron was
responsible for working with the Rwandan Defense Forces to prepare
the vehicles and equipment for the deployment, conducting airfield
operations focusing on cargo movement as well as ironing out the
logistical details associated with the mission. The squadron
includes specialists from the 615th Contingency Response Wing based
at Travis, and US Africa Command in Stuttgart, Germany.
The airlift was provided by aircraft and crews from the
active-duty 60th Air Mobility Wing and the Air Force Reserve's
349th Air Mobility Wing from Travis. More than three months of
extensive planning and preparation made the mission "fairly
seamless for us," said Air Force Maj. Sean Pierce of the 301st
Airlift Squadron, aircraft commander for one of the two C-17
transport planes.
The mission also represents the first large-scale peacekeeper
support mission for US Africa Command since it was formally
activated October 1. Previous support missions in support of
peacekeeping in Darfur were conducted under the direction of US
European Command, which had responsibility for Africa prior to
Africom's activation.
(Aero-News thanks Eric Elliot, who works in the US Africa
Command public affairs office)