WASHINGTON – As President Barack Obama
thanked firefighters and volunteers, and met with impacted families in
wildfire-devastated areas in and around Colorado Springs, Colo., yesterday, he
also vowed to marshal all federal resources -- including military -- to combat
the fires.
“We're going to continue to make sure
that the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Forest Service, our military
and National Guard and all the resources that we have available at the federal
level are brought to bear in fighting this fire,” Obama said today in his
weekly video address to the nation. He recorded this week’s address during his
Colorado visit.
The federal government has marshaled
thousands of firefighters, hundreds of fire engines, and more than 100
aircraft, including 19 air tankers, to support firefighting efforts in a number
of Western states including Colorado, White House officials noted.
Meanwhile, four Department of Defense
C-130 aircraft equipped with U.S. Forest Service Modular Airborne Fire Fighting
Systems and under the command and control of U.S. Northern Command are
assisting in the efforts to control fires in the Rocky Mountain region at the
request of the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, according to a
Northcom news release issued today.
Northcom, based at Peterson Air Force
Base, Colo., partners with other agencies to conduct homeland defense, civil
support and security cooperation to defend and secure the United States and its
interests.
Four additional MAFFS-equipped aircraft
will be arriving later today to assist with firefighting efforts within the
Rocky Mountain region, the Northcom release said.
As of early today, DOD aircraft have
flown the following wildfire fighting missions in Colorado:
-- Waldo Canyon Fire, near Colorado
Springs, : Fifty air drops, employing approximately 133,500 gallons of flame
retardant;
-- Flagstaff Fire, near Boulder, : Five
air drops, employing about 13,200 gallons of flame retardant; and
-- Arapahoe National Forest Fire, : Six
air drops, employing approximately 13,250 gallons of flame retardant.
Military units that conducted those
missions are the 302nd Airlift Wing, Air Force Reserve, Peterson Air Force
Base, Colo., and the Wyoming Air National Guard’s 153rd Airlift Wing based in
Cheyenne. Both units are currently flying missions out of Peterson Air Force
Base, Colo.
The California Air National Guard’s
146th Airlift Wing, from Channel Islands, and the North Carolina Air National
Guard’s 145th Airlift Wing, from Charlotte, will soon join the 153rd and the
302nd, military officials said.
This is the first time since 2008 that
all eight military aircraft have been activated at one time, said Air Force
Col. Jerry Champlin, 153rd Air Expeditionary Group commander. In that year, the
aircraft were stationed at McClellan Airpark in Sacramento, Calif., to fight
fires in that state.
Champlin, a member of the Wyoming Air
National Guard, has tactical control over the MAFFS aircraft.
Although all eight C-130s will operate
from Peterson Air Force Base for now, where they will drop fire retardant
depends on the daily situation in the region, officials said. The Forest
Service also may choose to base one or more aircraft in other operating areas.
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