Liberty Enters the Fight

The MC-12W, the Air Force’s newest intelligence-reconnaissance-surveillance platform, flew its first combat sortie yesterday, a four-hour mission from Joint Base Balad, Iraq, over the Middle Eastern nation. “It feels good being out here and doing something good for the warfighter,” said Capt. Jason Goodale, the pilot, after the historic mission. Manned by a four-person crew, the MC-12W is a turboprop aircraft equipped to collect signals intelligence and provide overhead live-streaming video in support of ground troops at the tactical level. The Air Force is acquiring 37 of these “Liberty Project Aircraft,” under an accelerated acquisition initiative, to bolster overhead ISR in Afghanistan and Iraq. Seven will be trainers and the rest will constitute two operational units. The aircraft arrived at Balad June 8 in fully-mission-ready status. It is assigned to Balad’s 362nd Expeditionary Reconnaissance Squadron, which activated on June 9. "This is the first combat mission for the 362nd ERS, and it was a huge success," said Col. Mike Fantini, 332nd Expeditionary Operations Group commander. He added, "The milestone continues the extraordinary program to push more ISR capability to the joint-force commander." (Includes Balad reports by SSgt. Dilia Ayala on the MC-12W’s arrival and inaugural combat mission)

Sustainment Challenge?

Testifying before the Senate Armed Services airland subcommittee Tuesday, Lt. Gen. Mark Shackelford, the Air Force’s military acquisition deputy, raised questions about long-term sustainment of an F-22 fleet comprising only 187 aircraft. (The actual number, as of today, will be...

TSAT Work Axed

The Air Force announced on June 8 that it was “terminating for convenience” its $2 billion contract with Lockheed Martin for the transformational satellite communications system mission operations system, or TMOS, for short. This information was included at the top...

Viper Durability

With the F-16 fleet aging overall and some variants facing structural issues like bulkhead cracks and wing pylon corrosion, the Air Force intends to conduct a full-scale durability test on an F-16 in Fiscal 2011 to help establish the fleet’s...

Home Stretch

About 60 of the Air Force’s A-10s ground-attack platforms are still not flying due to concern over wings cracks, but are expected to be cleared for return to flight status by the end of the month, two Air Force generals...

Gould Takes Over at Academy

Lt. Gen. Michael Gould became the 18th superintendent of the US Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo., at a ceremony there June 9. Gould was nominated for the academy’s top post in February to replace Lt. Gen. John Regni...

Welcome to the Jungle

The first batch of new-hire employees that the Air Force is bringing on at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, to bolster its acquisition workforce there joined the ranks on June 8 and is now undergoing nine weeks of intensive training to emerge...

Raptor Pilot to Lead Thunderbirds

The Thunderbirds air demonstration squadron’s list of officer selections for the 2010 demonstration season includes, for the first time, an F-22 pilot. In fact, Lt. Col. Case Cunningham, currently director of operations for the 43rd Fighter Squadron, a Raptor training...

Really Big News

The Air Force announced earlier this week that it intends to award Boeing a contract before the end of the year for the purchase of up to 20 massive ordnance penetrators. The company has been developing these 30,000-pound-class GPS-guidance-aided munitions...

Airmen Receive Bronze Stars

The Air Force has awarded Bronze Star medals for meritorious service to Capt. Raymond Kerr and TSgt. Ronald White, airmen assigned to the 36th Wing at Andersen AFB, Guam, for their actions while deployed to Afghanistan. Kerr, chief of construction...

Air Sorties from SWA

Air Sorties in War on Terrorism, Southwest AsiaJune 8, 2009 Sortie Type OIF OEF OIF/OEF Total YTD ISR 23 22 45 6,451 CAS/Armed Recon 26 85 111 15,485 Airlift 140 140 21,711 Air refueling 53 53 7,154 Total 349 50,801...