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    Alaska Air National Guard supports ICEX 2016 mission

    ICEX 2016

    Photo By Sheila deVera | A K-loader prepares to load equipment on a C-17 Globemaster III cargo ramp at Joint...... read more read more

    ALASKA, UNITED STATES

    03.02.2016

    Story by Staff Sgt. Sheila deVera 

    Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson   

    JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska - A crew of six from the 249th Airlift Squadron flew to the Arctic Circle, 200 nautical miles north of Deadhorse, Alaska, in support of Ice Exercise led by the U.S. Navy Submarine Forces, March 2, 2016.

    One of the difficulties the Airmen overcame was the location of the camp. Since the camp is on an ice floe, moving about half a nautical mile per hour, navigation is difficult. The crew was able to pinpoint the location; making this the first time a C-17 Globemaster III based from JBER has conducted an airdrop onto the polar ice cap.

    According to the Navy website, the Arctic is experiencing a trend of diminishing sea ice extent and thickness creating the likelihood of increased maritime activity in the region, including trans-oceanic shipping and resource extraction.

    “Early this summer, Navy asked for us to assist moving their equipment to the Polar ice cap,” said Air Force Master Sgt. Cecil Dickerson. “[During the planning conference], we decided to use the air delivery method.”

    The crew loaded up equipment and helped establish a temporary command center for conducting operations in the region.

    “We had roughly 12,000 pounds of cargo and eight container delivery systems,” added Dickerson.

    This is the first time in the 249th AS had ever conducted an airdrop in the polar region; they logged roughly six hours of simulator training to see how the aircraft would react to extreme northern latitude, said Air Force Capt. Joshua Flye, 249th AS chief of tactics.

    “We did our best to look at our [technical] data for the aircraft,” Flye said. “So everything was trial and error in the simulator.”

    The squadron has been developing non-traditional methods of airdrop delivery to austere locations, by flying into these remote sites with no radio contact and locating the ground party.

    “The Navy is not used to dealing with Air Force logistics and airdrops, so we had to send some of our guys to the planning conferences to work the [logistics] of it,” Flye added. “It’s a unique cooperation between the Navy and the Air Force.”

    ICEX 2016 is a five-week biannual exercise designed to research, test and evaluate operational capabilities in the Arctic region. The event enhances submarine readiness and supports Arctic objectives and initiatives.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 03.02.2016
    Date Posted: 03.04.2016 20:11
    Story ID: 191202
    Location: ALASKA, US

    Web Views: 485
    Downloads: 2

    PUBLIC DOMAIN