Air Mobility crews in Southwest Asia change from routine transport duty to short-notice medical evacuation—and make it look easy. Last week, the aircrew of a C-17 from Charleston AFB, S.C., deployed to the 816th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron in Southwest Asia, changed gears from “four stops in the box [Iraq]” to a rendezvous with two tankers and a flight halfway around the world, says Capt. Corbett Bufton, the aircraft commander. The unit added another pilot and switched aircraft for one with more fuel tanks, reports Capt. Teresa Sullivan. The C-17 then flew to Balad AB, Iraq, where it picked up two severely wounded soldiers and a medical team and flew them to Andrews AFB, Md. It’s the type of service, the Air Force says didn’t exist a few years ago.
Air Force Gen. Jacqueline D. Van Ovost—a trailblazer and one of the first 10 women to reach a four-star rank across the U.S. military—retired and passed control of U.S. Transportation Command to Air Force Gen. Randall Reed on Oct. 4, finishing an eventful tenure at TRANSCOM.