by Senior Airman Timothy Moore
86th Airlift Wing Public Affairs
2/9/2015 - Elefsis, Greece -- U.S.
Air Forces in Europe Airmen traveled to Eleusis, Greece Feb. 1 to
participate in Stolen Cerberus II, a two-week flying training deployment
designed to gauge both aircraft and personnel capabilities as well as
improve the interoperability of the Airmen and their Greek counterparts.
Airmen from the 86th Airlift Wing and the 435th Air Ground Operations
Wing along with Airmen from the 317th Airlift Group from Dyess Air Force
Base, Texas, and Soldiers from the 5th Quartermaster Detachment, 21st
Theater Sustainment Command, will work alongside the Hellenic air force
to complete training not as easily available to each respective unit
during the winter months.
"We're here to strengthen our ties with the Greeks, one of our NATO
allies, but we are also here to do training we can't always do in
Germany," said Capt. Kirk Habrun, Stolen Cerberus II deputy mission
commander. "We have a lot of mountainous terrain here we can use in our
low-level [flight training] routes we don't get in a lot of other places
in Europe."
In addition to the landscape provided, Habrun said Greece has weather
better suited for flying than Germany in the winter months, which allows
pilots to do more training such as night vision goggles training.
"That's really hard to come by in Germany, especially in the summer
time," he said. "NVG training is pretty much non-existent. We can come
here in the winter when it gets dark quicker and we have good weather."
The U.S. pilots aren't the only ones to benefit from the FTD.
"We have gotten to work with the Greeks every single day," said Staff
Sgt. Daniela Cristain, 37th Airlift Squadron aviation research
management. "They have been very supportive of us."
Cristain said the FTD has been important in building relationships with
both the Greeks and the aircrew she directly supports as they work with
their counterparts.
The Hellenic air force also benefits from the joint training.
"They get experience re-rigging their loads because they don't get to
air drop that often," said Habrun. "The Greeks don't have as many
available C-130 tails as we do since they are committed to other
missions, so us coming down here allows them to jump more than they
would out of the Greek C-130s."
According to Habrun, the Greeks also get good training flying with multiple aircraft in formations.
"For the first time, we flew a formation flight with Greek and American
C-130s," he said. "It allowed us to compare techniques and how we fly in
general.
Airmen from USAFE get the added bonus of completing upgrade requirements
because of the training they are able to complete in Greece.
"We have low-cost low-altitudes qualifications," said Habrun. "It's a
CDS pallet that's lighter weight. It's supposed to be really precise.
It's a cheap way of resupplying troops that may be at a little [forward
operating base] or in contact [with an enemy], but since you are flying
so low to the ground it can be dangerous as you can get shot at. It's a
special qualification for us."
The training helps guarantee that both the U.S. and Greek Air Forces are
able to provide airlift support to their own and their NATO allies'
troop anytime, anywhere should the need arise.
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
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