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MC-12 Liberty 10,000th Combat Sortie
An MC-12 Liberty taxies out toward the runway Oct. 19, 2011, at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan. The flight marked the 10,000th combat sortie flown in support of ground operations that led to the capture or elimination of more than 4,000 targets. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Krista Rose)
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MC-12 reaches major milestones in Afghanistan

Posted 11/2/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Capt. Korry Leverett
455th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs


11/2/2011 - BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan (AFNS) -- Airmen from the 4th Expeditionary Reconnaissance Squadron here achieved three major milestones in the month of October supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

The squadron, which operates the MC-12 Liberty, surpassed 10,000 sorties flown, 50,000 flight hours and supported ground operations that led to the capture or elimination of more than 4,000 targets.

"The program was brought to Bagram (Airfield) in June 2009 and in less than two years with roughly two dozen airplanes we've been able to fly 10,000 sorties and 50,000 flying hours," said Lt. Col. James Thompson, the 4th ERS commander. "It's been amazing. According to Headquarters Air Force, we are the No. 1 sortie rate per manned aircraft in the Air Force. "

In April 2008, then Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates established a Defense Department-wide Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Task Force to identify and recommend solutions for increased ISR assets in the Central Command area of responsibility. Gates tasked Air Force officials July 1, 2008, to acquire 37 C-12 aircraft to augment remotely piloted aircraft.

"If you take a look at the start of the MC-12 Liberty program, it was created in about six months," Thompson said. "Because of the speed at which this platform was brought to the fight, the program was named in honor of the Liberty Ships, which were mass produced during World War II."

According to Thompson, the MC-12 is the workhorse of the Air Force. Aircrews hit the maximum flying hours authorized every month, he said. Airmen from the 4th ERS work seven days a week, with virtually no days off for six months.

Not only do the Airmen work every, day but so do the aircraft. An F-16 Fighting Falcon or F-15E Strike Eagle is typically retired when it hits approximately 8,000 flying hours. In the two years since the program was created more than 4,000 hours have been put on the MC-12s.

To maintain proficiency of the pilots and crews during combat operations, Thompson instituted a simple process he said he learned as an air officer commanding at the United States Air Force Academy.

"The way we do it is to have the seniors teach the freshmen," Thompson said. "The first month your job is to study. The second through fifth months your role is to work, and the final month is to teach the new folks. By making it a cyclical process, it only continues to improve and get better."

With this basic program in place, the squadron has doubled the number of sorties flown since Thompson arrived in November 2010, with the same number of aircraft, and increased flight times by 20 percent. Combined with new tactics and procedures, the unit members have more than doubled the amount of support provided to troops on the ground.

"Ours is but a small piece in the puzzle," Thompson said. "This is an 100 percent support asset, and our motto is the customer is always right. We've received countless feedback -- things like 'We don't want to operate without you,' or 'You are a godsend.'"



tabComments
11/19/2011 8:14:38 AM ET
It is not so much the speed of the program that is amazin,g but the fact that in this era of UAVs and ISR via space assets, here we find a MANNED airplane, the MC-12, that operates rather leisurely around Afghanistan. What we see in play is certainly two of the tenets of aerospace power ... flexibility, persistence. Yes, indeed we have adapted a basic airframe to accommodate a much-needed mission, and this thing can do a lot of stuff for long periods of time as evidenced by the hours it has accumulated. Another lesson is that no matter how sophisticated we execute air and space ops, there always seems to be the need for the man or woman in a cockpit with eyes on the battlespace. And somewhat romantically, it harkens back to the days of the L-4 Grasshopper. SweetJOHN R. CULCLASURE Colonel USAF ret Old B-52 driver
John Culclasure, Washington DC
 
11/4/2011 8:24:54 PM ET
Six months and a program this vital is started and refined to a high degree. Way to go! I only wish all departments of the US Government would emulate the military.
Curt Joyner, Sailing vessel at sea
 
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