by Maj. Dale Greer
123rd Airlift Wing Public Affairs
10/10/2014 - DAKAR, Senegal (AFNS) -- More
than 80 Airmen from the Kentucky Air National Guard's 123rd Contingency
Response Group stood up a cargo hub here Oct. 5, that will funnel
humanitarian supplies and equipment into West Africa in support of
Operation United Assistance, or OUA, the international effort to fight
Ebola.
The epidemic has already claimed more than 3,500 lives, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.
The majority of Kentucky ANG Airmen arrived Oct. 4, joining a 13-member
assessment team that has been in place since Sept. 28. They're operating
an intermediate staging base, or ISB, to support Joint Task Force-Port
Opening operations at Léopold Sédar Senghor International Airport,
according to Col. David Mounkes, the 123rd CRG commander.
The ISB is designed to accept large quantities of cargo arriving on C-17
Globemaster IIIs, process the material so it can move forward, and load
it onto C-130 Hercules aircraft for distribution into affected areas.
Soldiers from the Army's 689th Rapid Port Opening Element also are
assessing the movement of cargo here from seaports along the African
coast.
The Kentucky ANG Airmen landed in Senegal with all the equipment they
need to provide command and control of aircraft and aerial port
operations, including all-terrain forklifts, satellite communications
gear and power-production capability.
"Our job is to get the right cargo to the right place at the right
time," Mounkes said. "This is the mission we train for 365 days a year,
and our personnel are some of the best in the business. We're ready to
execute."
The Defense Department has committed to deploying up to 3,000 troops in
support of the U.S. Agency for International Development, the lead
federal agency coordinating the U.S. government's comprehensive response
for Operation United Assistance. In addition to the creation of the
cargo hub here and logistics nodes across West Africa, American forces
will construct a hospital and more than a dozen other treatment
facilities in affected areas.
Lt. Col. Matt Groves, the 123rd's Global Mobility Readiness Squadron commander, underscored the importance of the ISB mission.
"What we're doing here could save hundreds of thousands of lives,"
Groves said. "We're talking about a disease that, if left untreated, has
a mortality rate of up to 50 percent. There is absolutely no other
mission we will perform this year that is more important, or will impact
more people, than this one."
The 123rd CRG is the only unit of its kind in the ANG. Conceived as an
"air base in a box," the group acts as an early responder in the event
of contingency operations worldwide. Its personnel are capable of
deploying into remote airfields, providing command and control of
aircraft, and establishing airfield operations so troops and cargo can
flow into affected areas.
Unit members represent a broad spectrum of specialties, including
airfield security, ramp and cargo operations, aircraft maintenance, and
command and control.
In 2010, the group was one of two Air Force contingency response units
to establish overseas airlift hubs supporting earthquake-recovery
efforts in Haiti, directing the delivery of hundreds of tons of relief
supplies into the Dominican Republic for subsequent trucking to Haiti.
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