By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23, 2012 – With
Tropical Storm Isaac bearing down on the Dominican Republic and Haiti and
threatening to strengthen over the eastern Caribbean, the “Hurricane Hunters”
from the Air Force Reserve’s 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron are in the
air, relaying critical data to National Weather Service forecasters in Miami.
Meanwhile, staffs at both the U.S.
Southern and Northern Commands are monitoring the storm closely and ensuring
they are ready to provide support to civilian authorities, including the U.S.
Agency for International Development and Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Three six-person crews from the 53rd WRS
and their maintainers and support staff deployed to St. Croix from Keesler Air
Force Base, Miss., last weekend, Air Force Lt. Col. Jon Talbot, the squadron’s
chief meteorologist, told American Forces Press Service. Operating out of the
international airport there, they began flying their specially equipped C-130J
Hercules aircraft through the storm Aug. 21.
On a typical mission that can run up to
12 hours, the aircrews crisscross the storm in what the teams call an “alpha
pattern,” he explained. Sophisticated onboard instruments and small canisters
dropped by parachute to the ocean’s surface collect accurate measurements of the
storm’s location and intensity.
That information is fed continuously to
the National Hurricane Center via an onboard satellite link. In addition, the
aircraft sends automated messages every 10 minutes, relaying barometric
pressure, wind speed and direction, and other measurements.
“The reason this data is critical is
because, with satellites, you can track where storms are and get a general
picture, but you can’t peer into the storm and physically measure what is
happening at the ocean’s surface,” Talbot said. “That is the important piece of
information you need to know when it comes to providing warnings to the public.
The emergency management community needs to know what is going on near the
surface of the ocean, because those are the winds that are going to come
ashore.”
With about six missions already under
their belts during the past three days, Talbot said, the pace will pick up
considerably as Isaac moves west toward the United States. “Currently, we are
doing about three missions a day, but that will go up to four or five when the
storm comes within 300 miles of the U.S. coastline,” he said.
The Hurricane Hunters expect to move
west along with the storm, redeploying to Keesler Air Force Base to resume
those missions beginning this weekend. In the event that the crews have to
evacuate Keesler, Talbot said, they already have alternate operating sites
lined up. “We track these things pretty closely, because if we end up having to
jump from here, we still have to continue flying and providing that data while
we are evacuating our own resources,” he said. “It becomes a big, tangled web,
but it always works out pretty well.”
As a precaution, aircraft and ships are
being moved out of the storm’s possible path and other assets are being
secured, according to Southcom spokesman Army Lt. Col. Darryl Wright. Planning
teams are busy running rehearsal meetings and preparing to verify personnel and
resource requests, if USAID issues them, he said.
Wright emphasized that military support,
if provided, would be part of a coordinated U.S. response led by civilian
authorities. “We conduct close coordination and planning and provide DOD support
to relief efforts upon request,” he said. “Through this close coordination, we
ensure that we respond with the most efficient means available to the U.S.
government.”
In terms of disaster response, Wright
said efficiency is typically more important than speed in reducing suffering
and saving lives.
Northcom, too, is in a monitoring mode.
But with the storm expected to intensify late this weekend when it hits the
Atlantic and the Florida Straits, the command deployed a defense coordinating
officer and element to Puerto Rico on Aug. 20 to support FEMA, John Cornelio,
Northcom’s media operations chief, told American Forces Press Service.
The element of about 20 people is
assessing the situation and standing ready to provide assistance, if requested.
“We have learned the value of being forward enough to cut down on the response
time, if required,” Cornelio said.
With Isaac’s path still anyone’s guess,
officials say it’s too soon to know whether it will hit Tampa, site of next
week’s Republican National Convention. Northcom has a team deployed there to
support the Secret Service during the convention, Cornelio reported.
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