Aircraft Arrival Heralds Activation of 4th ERS
The newest aircraft on the Air
Force's inventory arrived Dec. 27th, 2009, at Bagram Airfield,
Afghanistan. The MC-12 aircraft, tail number 090623, was the first
of an undisclosed number of aircraft for the new 4th Expeditionary
Reconnaissance Squadron. Following the MC-12's arrival, the 4th
Expeditionary Reconnaissance Squadron was activated to carry out
MC-12 operations in the Afghan theater of operations.
Col. Patrick McKenzie, the 455th Expeditionary Operations Group
commander, presided over the brief ceremony attended by
approximately one hundred Airmen and Soldiers.
"The MC-12 is much more than just a fleet of aircraft, its
pilots and maintainers. It also consists of equipment and personnel
that collect and broadcast full-motion video and signals
intelligence, as well as crews that process, exploit and
disseminate the information," Colonel McKenzie said. "In addition,
the MC-12 encompasses a host of communications experts that support
and maintain the added capability that the aircraft brings to the
warfighter."
Taking the reins of the 4th ERS was Lt. Col. Douglas Lee,
deployed from Columbus Air Force Base, Miss., and a native of
Tuscaloosa, Ala.
"As a boy growing up in the Air Force, I could only imagine this
day and for this opportunity to come along - [serving] in combat is
why we raise our right hand to begin with," he said. "Knowledge is
power and that is what we provide. This knowledge will help protect
Afghans, provide security and protect Coalition lives. All of these
things directly contribute to the combined effort that secures the
battlespace and helps the Afghan people to defeat the
insurgency."
As the demand for Air Force ISR increases assets, the MC-12 is
positioned to meet that demand. The first of its kind for the Air
Force in Afghanistan, the MC-12 provides real-time ISR in the U.S.
Central Command area of responsibility. The aircraft bring another
capability to Operation Enduring Freedom because the MC-12 is not
just an aircraft, but a complete collection, processing, analysis
and dissemination system of Airmen committed to securing
Afghanistan and protecting Afghan and coalition lives.
Eighteen months ago, 'Project Liberty' was on the drawing board.
Today, the aircraft and its crews and maintainers supporting the
4th ERS are operational and ready to go at Bagram Airfield.
"We are not the first to provide ISR, but we hope to enhance the
joint effort through synergy with our sister services," Colonel Lee
said.
Overall, the MC-12 will augment information gathered by other
ISR assets already operating in Afghanistan and complement existing
capability. The platform will enhance how Air Force ISR complements
the total intelligence 'picture' in the respective commander's
scheme of maneuver in the battlespace.
With a unique mission to execute, members of the 4th ERS are
eager to "look for trouble," as their squadron motto states, but
hope to see it first so U.S. and coalition ground forces can avoid
it. [ANN Salutes Tech. Sgt. John Jung, 455th Air Expeditionary Wing
Public Affairs, for the story.]