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Thu, Feb 23, 2006

Global Hawk UAV Welcomed Home After Three-Year Deployment

Flew Over 4,800 Hours

After supporting the global war on terror for three years, Global Hawk Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Number 3 (UAV-3) received its official homecoming Monday at California's Edwards Air Force Base.

During its overseas deployment, UAV-3 logged more than 4,800 flight hours supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Enduring Freedom and the Combined Task Force -- Horn of Africa.

On hand at the homecoming event were Maj. Gen. Curtis Bedke, commander, Air Force Flight Test Center; Randy Brown, director, Global Hawk Systems Group; Gary Ervin, sector vice president, Northrop-Grumman Integrated Systems Western region and Maj. Mike Lyons, Global Hawk pilot and chief of standardization and evaluation, 12th Reconnaissance Squadron.

The Global Hawk program is managed by Aeronautical Systems Center’s Global Hawk Systems Group of the Reconnaissance Systems Wing at Edwards.

Global Hawk UAV-3 was deployed after the attacks of September 11, 2001. The Air Force decision to deploy it while still an advanced concept technology demonstrator expressed the confidence the Air Force has in it and future unmanned aircraft systems for the global war on terrorism, Global Hawk officials said.

Its capabilities were proven in combat environments while still in the pre-production stage of the acquisition cycle. While deployed, UAV-3 flew 249 total sorties -- 191 were combat sorties. It provided tens of thousands of battlefield images to military decision-makers.

"We’ve seen an incredible transformation with unmanned vehicles, especially with Global Hawk," Brown said. "We’re learning a lot about how we can build things better and smarter, but more importantly, we’ve learned how we can get capability into the warfighter’s hands much quicker than we would traditionally."

"This system and this team has been the key to us being able to rethink how we deliver capabilities to those who really need it to support the global war on terror, and it is a major milestone in the program and one that is historical for the future of U.S. Air Force reconnaissance," Brown added.

According to program officials, the success of this program has been a team effort, evolving from the drawing board concepts to actual unmanned flight in combat environments.

"Global Hawk’s all-weather imaging capability has truly pulled back the veil of protection once offered by darkness and poor weather and tied that capability to a platform that can remain on task for nearly a full day," Major Lyons said.

"This synergy of capabilities is a true revolution in the reconnaissance arena," he said. "I am proud to have had the opportunity to work with the many civilian contractors and military professionals that form the Global Hawk team. Without the daily efforts of literally dozens of people, this system would not continue to operate."

"We are very proud of this program. Mostly, though, it’s not about the airframe; it’s about the people who designed, built, tested, acquired, (operated) and maintained this airframe both during test and at war," General Bedke said.

"It doesn’t matter whether they’re contractors, Air Force civilians or Air Force military. It doesn’t matter if they’re test pilots, test engineers or other aircrew. They are all part of what we call the Global Vigilance Combined Test Force," he said. "We have the good fortune of living and working at a place that cherishes its history, its heritage and its heroes. That heritage and history now includes Global Hawk Air UAV-3, and its heroes include all of the people who assured it could do its mission and continue to test at the same time."

(Aero-News salutes Laura McGowan, Aeronautical Systems Center Public Affairs, as well as 95th Air Base Wing Public Affairs and Air Force Flight Test Center, both located at Edwards Air Force Base.)

FMI: www.af.mil

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