By Air Force Maj. Dale Greer
Joint Task Force Port Opening Senegal
DAKAR, Senegal, Nov. 10, 2014 – More than 35 airmen and two
Air Force C-130 Hercules aircraft from Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, arrived
here recently to establish the 787th Air Expeditionary Squadron and fly
humanitarian cargo into Liberia as part of Operation United Assistance, the
mission to fight Ebola in West Africa.
The Dyess airmen, all from the 317th Airlift Group and 7th
Bomb Wing, joined forces with more than 70 airmen from the Kentucky Air
National Guard’s 123rd Contingency Response Group, who have been operating a
cargo hub at Léopold Sédar Senghor International Airport in Dakar since Oct. 5.
The 787th flew its first sortie into Liberia Nov. 4,
airlifting more than eight tons of medical equipment, stretchers, blood, bleach
and other supplies, according to Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Brock, a C-130
pilot and the squadron’s commander.
Delivering Supplies and Equipment
“Our airlift mission here is extremely important,
particularly as the number of deployed U.S. forces continues to increase,”
Brock said. “We will be flying daily sorties into the affected areas to deliver
supplies and equipment that are mission-essential, both to the sustainment of
troops and to ongoing efforts to contain and eliminate the Ebola outbreak.
“The 787th is executing a noble mission,” he continued. “I’m
very proud of the team and their professionalism as we’ve stood up our squadron
here. We’re excited to work with the 123rd CRG and build on the foundation
they’ve established in Dakar.”
Two more C-130 aircraft and about 90 additional airmen are
expected to arrive from Dyess and Little Rock Air Force Base, Arkansas, in the
coming weeks, bringing the 787th to full operational capacity for its 120-day
mission by the end of the month.
Working in Partnership
The 787th’s airmen are working in close partnership with
their Kentucky Air Guard colleagues, whose primary task is to offload cargo
arriving in Senegal by 747 aircraft, stage it for forward movement, and load it
on Dyess C-130s for delivery to Liberia.
Since Oct. 5, the Kentucky troops -- augmented by six
active-duty airmen from Travis Air Force Base, California, and Joint Base
Maguire-Dix-Lakehurst, New Jersey -- have coordinated flights for 128 military
and civilian-contract aircraft, processed 336 passengers and handled more than
600 tons of cargo.
“I couldn’t be more pleased by what our airmen have
accomplished in such a short period of time,” said Air Force Col. David
Mounkes, commander of the 123rd Contingency Response Group and Joint Task
Force-Port Opening Senegal. “It is especially gratifying to know that we’re
part of a much larger, global effort to render assistance to people who need
our help fighting a horrible disease that has claimed more than 4,000 lives.
“Our unit was created to respond to contingencies of all
kinds, from wartime taskings to natural disasters,” Mounkes continued. “Every
airman in the group volunteered to join because he or she wanted to be a part
of something that can deliver aid where it’s needed, when it’s needed, as
efficiently as possible. This is what we do, and we feel privileged to be able
to do it.”
Whole-of-Government Approach to Ebola Fight
U.S. Air Force operations in Senegal are part of a massive
whole-of-government approach to Operation United Assistance, directed by the
U.S. Agency for International Development and incorporating a broad array of
federal agencies from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to the
Department of Defense.
The U.S. military has committed approximately 3,900 troops
to support the mission. They will staff medical laboratories, provide training
to local health care workers, and build up to 17 100-bed Ebola treatment units
and a 25-bed hospital. More than 1,600 soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines,
Department of Defense civilian employees and contractors are currently deployed
to Senegal and Liberia in support of Operation United Assistance.
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