And Along The Way, Develop Relations With The Royal Jordanian
Air Force
Royal Air Force helicopter crews
have been training in the Jordanian desert for the first time in
preparation for operations in Afghanistan and to develop relations
with the Royal Jordanian Air Force. Over 300 personnel from RAF
Benson and RAF Odiham, many preparing to go to Afghanistan for the
first time, took part in Exercise Desert Vortex in Jordan.
Wing Commander John Watson was the Detachment Commander during
the month-long exercise at King Faisal Air Base near Amman. "This
is the first bilateral training exercise between the Royal
Jordanian Air Force and elements of our Joint Helicopter Force," he
said. "We have had six Chinooks from RAF Odiham and three Merlins
from RAF Benson, along with aircrew, engineers and support staff
from the two stations. There were three main reasons to use Jordan;
to develop relationships with their Air Force, to carry out
pre-deployment training for Afghanistan and to provide
environmental training in realistic and similar conditions to those
we will face on operations."
For many of the newly-qualified pilots, this was the first time
they had experienced flying in desert conditions. Chinook pilot
Flying Officer Tom Knapp has recently joined 18 Squadron at RAF
Odiham and is due to deploy in August. "You can't replicate these
conditions in the UK," he said. "The thin air means the engines and
aircraft have to work much harder, and the dust and humidity out
here are very similar to that which we will face in Afghanistan,
making this a great training opportunity. I am a little bit
apprehensive but at the same time I am really looking forward to
actually getting out there and doing the job that I have been
trained to do."
"I'm keeping an open mind about what I might find out in
Afghanistan - from what I have heard it will be challenging and I
know I will be faced with things I haven't experienced before,"
Knapp continued, "but I love handling the Chinook. In particular I
enjoy the dust landings, and working with the crew and
engineers."
For pilots to complete a dust landing they rely on the
assistance of the rear crew - the loadmasters - such as Sergeant
Rebecca Nicholls from 18 Squadron. "Dust landings are when we come
into an area where the pilots can lose sight of references on the
ground - the dust cloud envelopes the whole of the aircraft, making
it difficult for the pilots to see," Sergeant Nicholls explained.
"We become the pilot's eyes ... we tell them how far off the ground
we are, and whether there is any danger to be aware of."
In the last three years Sergeant Nicholls has already clocked up
three winter tours in Afghanistan, and will be going out this year
during the summer "Going to Afghanistan has become normal for me
now, it's become part of my life. I know that every ten months I'll
be going out for two months, but I enjoy my job - it's active and
interesting," she said.
Alongside the Chinook crews were 90 instructors, aircrew and
engineers from RAF Benson.
Squadron Leader Mark Biggadike from 78 Squadron oversaw the
Merlin Force part of the exercise: "We've been training Merlin
pilots and crewmen who have never operated in a desert before," he
said. "As a result of this exercise in Jordan we now have another
team of environmentally-qualified aircrew who will be ready for
deployment to Afghanistan. During their time in Jordan, the Merlins
have clocked up in excess of 230 flying hours, and carried out more
than 900 dust landings - the training has gone very well."