Showing posts with label pilots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pilots. Show all posts

Friday, May 13, 2011

Face of Defense: Guard Pilot Serves Third Iraq Deployment

By Army Capt. R.L. “Ed” Edwards
40th Combat Aviation Brigade

CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE SPEICHER, Iraq, May 13, 2011 – You can see the twinkle in his eye as he sits down.

Army Chief Warrant Officer Wayne Wade — father, husband and pilot — would rather spend this interview talking about his 18-month-old twins, Ross and Sydney, or his wife, Samantha, and how he is going on two weeks of rest and recuperation leave.

“I’m going back to Fulton, Miss., spending time with my wife and kids,” he said. “I think we are getting a family portrait done, but that is it.”

Wade is on his third tour to Iraq — this time with the Mississippi National Guard’s 1st Assault Helicopter Battalion, 185th Aviation Regiment. The battalion is attached to the 40th Combat Aviation Brigade, which is deployed to Iraq in support of Operation New Dawn.

Wade has flown a different type of helicopter on each of his tours in Iraq. On his first tour, he flew OH-58 Kiowa Warrior scout helicopters. He then moved over to AH-64 Apache attack helicopters, and now he flies UH-60 Black Hawk utility helicopters.

When he enlisted in the Army Reserve in 1987, Wade spent five years as a crew member and crew chief onboard UH-1 Huey helicopters. This was enough, he said, to start him down what he called “the road to ruin” to becoming an accomplished helicopter pilot.

He flew as a UH-1 medical evacuation pilot for the Army Reserve in Mississippi, followed by specialized training on the OH-58. After moving from the Reserve to the Mississippi National Guard, he was cross-trained on the AH-64 Apache.

Wade finished his training on Apaches just in time for the buildup before the start of the Iraq invasion in 2003. But the Army’s needs took precedence, and Wade became an individual augmentee with 3rd Infantry Division, flying OH-58s.

Ten months of boots on the ground and in the air as a scout for tanks was very different from today’s environment, Wade said. “Back then, there was almost no electricity in Iraq,” he explained. “We would land next to a [heavy expanded mobility tactical truck], fill up the bird and take off again. When we got tired, we would stop, sleep in the dirt, get up and do it again.”

Wade said he was part of the invasion all the way to Baghdad.

“I looked at one of my journals from that time a while back and saw that it was several weeks into flying missions before there was an entry of, ‘Didn’t get shot at today,’” he said.

In 2006, he was deployed as an Apache pilot with the 36th Combat Aviation Brigade at the height of the surge. His flight company was based in Balad, but as a core asset, they were moved around a lot. Wade said he worked everywhere from Contingency Operating Base Speicher and south.

He also spent some time in Basra supporting the British, he said.

“In ’06 and ’07, there were aircraft and people everywhere,” he recalled. “There were so many aircraft in the air you had to be careful that you didn’t run into each other.”

Following his second tour in Iraq, Wade attended the Black Hawk transition course at Fort Rucker, Ala., eventually becoming an instructor pilot at a flight facility in Tupelo, Miss. He flew a civilian helicopter ambulance for a while out of Oxford, Miss. “But I decided that with the little ones on the way, the Army made better sense for us as a family,” he said.

This third tour has been spent at the controls of a Black Hawk utility helicopter. As a senior aviator with more than 3,400 hours, Wade said, he likes the theory behind the use of the Black Hawk to move assets around the country instead of by convoy.

Wade became reflective when asked the differences between now and the beginning of the war in Iraq.

“Now it seems that there is really a much greater sense of normalcy throughout the entire country,” he said. “The people in the country seem to be moving forward. Now it seems like the land is lush and there is farming, whereas before, when there was no electricity, all of the irrigation was gravity-fed, and there was a lot less farming going on.”

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Pilots, Equipment to Jump-Start Afghan Air Corps

By David Mays
Special to American Forces Press Service

Oct. 31, 2007 - Highly experienced Afghan
pilots soon will take to the skies in newly acquired aircraft as part of a concerted effort to accelerate progress of Afghanistan's nascent air corps, a coalition commander said today. "When you look at the country of Afghanistan, with the limited road structure -- there is no rail capacity -- just the ability to move logistics by air will be a tremendous enabler capability to the army," Air Force Brig. Gen. Jay Lindell told online journalists and "bloggers" during a conference call from the Afghan capital of Kabul.

Lindell commands the Combined Air Power Transition Force, which is the aviation component of Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan overseen by U.S. Central Command. He and 130 American soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines are helping build capability in the Afghan National
Army Air Corps.

"Most of what the Afghan air corps needs are resources: aircraft, spare parts and maintenance support equipment," Lindell said. "The Afghan air corps has ability and desire; they need resources to give them capability. And that's what we are doing; we are boosting their capability rapidly."

For instance, the coalition transition force has arranged to add 16 MI-17 transport helicopters, six MI-35 attack choppers and four Antonov 32 transport turboprop planes to the Afghan flightline over the next six months, the general explained. Additional Western medium-lift aircraft are expected to arrive in 2009, he said.

"As we give them these aircraft, they'll be able to train themselves with their own instructors and quickly generate capability," Lindell said.

The average age of Afghanistan's 165 existing
pilots is 43, the general explained, and each has an average 2,500 hours of flying time, plus superb instructors and training curriculum.

"We're counting on these pilots that we have now to at least jump-start the Afghan air corps," Lindell said, noting that existing experienced pilots are expected to fly five to eight more years. "We've got to grow youth into the Afghan air corps, and we are currently working on a plan to do that."

To that end, the new Afghan National
Military Academy expects to graduate its first class of 90 cadets in 2009. Ten percent of those graduates are slated to join the Afghan air corps, and the hope is that all of those will screen to enter pilot training, Lindell explained. Air corps members also will have a brand new headquarters, opening later this year at Kabul International Airport, from which to operate.

"When they get their new aircraft, or their refurbished aircraft here, then move into their new facilities, they're just going to launch off the ground and take off the capability," Lindell said.

"The Afghans have the desire and motivation to learn, grow and develop, and they want to rid their country of the Taliban," he said. "They want a better life and a better life for their children. With our continued support, the Afghan air corps will develop into a fully capable, self-sustaining and independent air corps capable of meeting the security needs of Afghanistan."

(David Mays works in New Media at American Forces Information Service.)