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Missouri
Air Guard C-130s, Crews Fly
to Chile
By
Army Staff Sgt. Jim
Greenhill
Special to American Forces
Press Service
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ARLINGTON,
Va., March
2010 – Two
Missouri Air
National Guard
C-130 Hercules
transport
aircraft with
47 crewmembers
are en route
to aid
earthquake-ravaged
Chile today.

Aircrew
members
from
the
Missouri
Air
National
Guard's
139th
Airlift
Wing
prepare
their
C-130
Hercules
for
departure
from
Homestead
Air
Reserve
Base,
Fla.,
Feb.
6,
2010.
The
unit
flew
relief
efforts
to
Haiti
after
it
was
devastated
by
an
earthquake
on
Jan.
12,
2010.
The
wing
also
is
assisting
earthquake
relief
efforts
in
Chile.
U.S.
Air
Force
photo
by
Master
Sgt.
Shannon
Bond
(Click
photo
for
screen-resolution
image);high-resolution
image
available. |
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The 139th
Airlift Wing
sent the two
aircraft,
crews and
maintenance
support
personnel from
Puerto Rico
– where they
had been
supporting
U.S. Southern
Command – to
Santiago,
Chile,
yesterday,
Missouri Gov.
Jay Nixon
announced in a
news release.
The wing,
which is
scheduled to
send
additional
aircraft and
crews to
Santiago in
the coming
weeks, also
has supported
earthquake
relief efforts
in Haiti,
flying
personnel and
supplies to
Port-au-Prince,
Missouri Guard
officials
said.
“The men and
women of the
Missouri Air
Guard are
uniquely
qualified to
provide
emergency
response,
relief and
recovery
services, both
at home and
abroad,”
Nixon said.
“I am
especially
proud of the
skill and
professionalism
of our Air
Guard units,
and I know
they will
provide
invaluable
service to the
people of
Chile during
this time of
need.”
C-130 aircraft
can airlift
people and
cargo long
distances in
all weather
conditions day
and night from
low to high
altitudes and
can land in
austere areas.
“The 139th
Airlift Wing
is again at
the tip of the
spear in
supporting
humanitarian
relief
efforts,”
said Air Force
Col. Michael
McEnulty, the
wing
commander.
“We are
always leaning
forward to
come to the
aid of those
who have been
affected by
disasters,
whether at
home or
abroad.”
Missouri is
one state that
is acutely
aware of the
need for
earthquake
preparedness.
It sits on the
New Madrid
fault, named
for the
Missouri town
hit in 1811
and 1812 by
some of the
strongest
earthquakes in
North American
history. The
Missouri
National Guard
routinely
trains for
earthquake
response and
hosts national
earthquake
planning
workshops. At
the most
recent, in
September,
more than 200
Guard
officials and
representatives
of civilian
agencies from
eight states
discussed
emergency
response to a
catastrophic
earthquake in
the New Madrid
Seismic Zone.
The National
Guard is
uniquely
qualified to
respond, a
Missouri
University of
Science and
Technology
geological
engineer told
the workshop.
“That’s
because the
National Guard
has combat
engineering
familiarity
and background
and in a
combat
situation you
don’t
control the
cards you are
dealt,”
David Rogers
said. “The
response in an
emergency
situation has
to be fluid
and capable of
changing.
There is no
manual for
disaster
response.”
The National
Guard has a
history of
responding to
earthquakes
that goes back
at least 100
years. And the
Guard has
decades of
experience
supporting
disaster
relief
operations in
Central and
South America.
In 1906, after
a 7.8
magnitude
earthquake hit
San Francisco,
California
National Guard
members
didn’t even
bother waiting
for orders –
they just
started
showing up at
their armories
ready to
assist, which
the Guard did
in support of
civilian
agencies
throughout the
aftermath.
“The work
done and still
being done by
the National
Guard … will
be long and
gratefully
remembered,”
a newspaper
editorial
stated. “Our
present
National Guard
is descended
in direct
official line
from those
citizen
soldiers that
stood,
yielding not,
at Saratoga,
Ticonderoga,
Stony Point
and Yorktown,
and have
proved
themselves
worthy of
their
ancestors.”
Earthquakes
are
notoriously
unpredictable.
Scientists
debate whether
even trying to
predict them
is a
worthwhile
exercise, and
the U.S.
Geological
Survey’s
National
Earthquake
Information
Center flatly
states that
they cannot be
predicted,
while also
noting that
there is a 100
percent chance
that one will
strike
somewhere on
the planet
today.
In 1990, a New
Mexico
climatological
consultant
predicted
devastation
coming to New
Madrid, Mo.,
on Dec. 3 that
year. The
prediction was
enough to
spark state
planning, but
the day came
and went
without
incident.
As scientists
try to predict
where the next
big earthquake
is likely to
strike in the
United States,
the National
Guard stands
ready to
respond, Guard
officials
said.
“The
National Guard
has the
trained
personnel, the
equipment and
the command
and control
capabilities
in order to
execute this
mission to
help provide
food, water,
electricity
– anything
the citizens
would be in
need of during
a major
disaster such
as an
earthquake,”
said Army
Brig. Gen.
Stephen
Danner,
Missouri’s
adjutant
general.
(Army Staff
Sgt. Jim
Greenhill
serves at the
National Guard
Bureau.)
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Related Sites:
Missouri
National Guard |
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