Airman instructs Afghan mechanics

  • Published
  • By Tech. Sgt. Kevin Wallace
  • 100th Air Refueling Wing Public Affairs
Far from home station and the KC-135 Stratotankers he normally maintains, one Airman from here now spends much of his time around Russian-built helicopters as he instructs and prepares mechanics from the emerging Afghan air force on his trade.

Master Sgt. David Penisten is deployed to the 440th Air Expeditionary Advisory Squadron where he works daily at the Afghan air force compound in Kabul training Afghan airmen on Mi-17 and Mi-35 helicopter maintenance.

"Each day, I advise and mentor 45 Afghans on hourly inspections and heavy maintenance for Mi-17 and Mi-35 aircraft," Penisten said. "This entails maintenance issues as well as professionalization of their air force. We provide the inspection process for 100, 200 and 300-hour inspections for Kabul, Mazar-I-Sharif and Shindand aircraft, as well as Presidential Mi-17's in Kabul."

One major challenge maintainers face is lack of experience working on specific Afghan air force helicopters. For Penisten, this challenge is compounded, as the Mi-17 and Mi-35 are both night-and-day contrasts from the airframes he's typically maintained during his career.

"At first, I thought I would struggle because I have never worked helicopters," Penisten said. "I've come to realize that most (Afghan air force maintainers) have been working these helicopters 25 years or more, and that makes my job really easy. I'm not teaching them specifics; I'm more guiding them down a different path of getting things done."

Another challenge Penisten has is teaching Afghans to run an efficient foreign object damage program, he said.

"We are trying to teach them FOD accountability so we don't potentially damage the aircraft," Penisten said. "The Afghans were taught that soldiers will clean up once a week so FOD doesn't matter."

Penisten admits that most advisers agree their mission is demanding, but that it's also unique. U.S. Airmen aren't the only maintainers providing mentorship to the Afghan air force.

Airmen from Croatia, the Czech Republic, Mongolia and Hungary work in the Afghan air force compound in Kabul. Elsewhere in Afghanistan, Belgian, Mongolian, Canadian, Singaporean, Georgian, Norwegian, Slovenian, Italian and Spanish airmen also mentor the Afghan air force.

"Our coalition partners provide a technical expertise on Mi-17 and Mi-35 maintenance that is critical to our mission of training and mentoring," said Capt. Michael Bradley, deployed to the 438th Air Expeditionary Advisor Group.

According to Penisten, mentor teams have limited supplies and tools, but the Afghan air force and coalition maintainers continue to make it work.

"We are showing the Afghans the importance of preventative maintenance, sound maintenance practices and how to manage their scheduled-maintenance program," Penisten said.

While coalition mentors deploy to Afghanistan then return once their tour is over, those whom they mentor are the future of Afghanistan, are already at home and have a long but vital road ahead.

"The biggest thing I've learned is what the Afghans are really like," Penisten said. "They want peace for their country."

Editor's Note: Capt. Jamie Humphries, 438th Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs, contributed to this article