By Claudette Roulo
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Dec. 30, 2013 – Initial airlift operations are
complete in the Central African Republic, Pentagon spokesman Army Col. Steve
Warren said here today.
A small U.S. Air Force support team and two C-17 Globemaster
III aircraft began airlift operations Dec. 12 in response to a French request
for airlift support. The U.S. airmen conducted 16 flights from Burundi to the
Central African Republic, Warren said, transporting 857 Burundi troops, 73
pallets of equipment and 18 Burundian military vehicles.
The Burundi troops -- a light infantry battalion -- are part
of an African Union-led international support mission intended to help prevent
the further spread of sectarian violence, Assistant Pentagon Press Secretary
Carl Woog said in a Dec. 9 statement.
Fewer than 10 Americans remain on the ground serving as
liaisons with the French military, Warren said.
Also, three of the four U.S. service members wounded Dec. 21
in South Sudan have returned to the United States for treatment, Warren said.
The fourth remains in a U.S. military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany.
All four service members are in stable condition, a Defense
Department spokesman said.
The service members were wounded when they attempted to
evacuate Americans from the town of Bor, South Sudan, according to a U.S.
Africa Command statement. They were hit by small-arms fire from unknown forces
when their three CV-22 Osprey aircraft attempted to land in Bor. Africom is
reviewing the incident, Warren said.
To date, more than 870 people have been evacuated from South
Sudan on a mix of military and charter aircraft, he said. The Defense
Department has flown three airlift missions with C-130 Hercules aircraft and
one mission with a C-12 Huron.
Army Gen. David M. Rodriguez, Africom’s commander, ordered a
platoon-sized element of Marines and a Marine Corps KC-130J Hercules aircraft
to Entebbe, Uganda, on Dec. 24 to serve as a contingency force, Warren said.
The Marines are part of Special-Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force Crisis
Response, based at Moron Air Base, Spain, and were initially sent to Camp
Lemonnier, Djibouti, before being moved to Uganda.
Rodriguez had earlier ordered elements of the East Africa
Response Force to be positioned in Juba, South Sudan, to augment security at
the embassy.
“This is all exactly what you’d expect [given the security
situation],” Warren said. “It’s a combatant commander positioning forces in
such a way that he’s got options.”
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