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Mon, Oct 25, 2004

Air Force Team Prepares for Sudan Airlift

Mission Of Mercy

About 30 US Air Force members from US European Command arrived in Kigali, Rwanda, Thursday to begin preparations to support a two-week airlift mission of Rwandan peacekeepers as part of the African Union expanded mission in the Darfur region of Sudan.

Two US Air Forces in Europe C-130 Hercules transport aircraft and about 120 airmen from Ramstein's 86th Airlift Wing and 435th Air Base Wing are expected to arrive in Kigali to begin the airlift in the next several days.

Members of this advance team represent various specialties such as logistics, contracting, airfield management, security forces, communications and other functions necessary to facilitate the airlift operation. The majority of team members deployed from Mildenhall, England, and from Ramstein.

The arrival of the USAFE advance team coincides with an Oct. 20 decision by the African Union Peace and Security Council to expand the security force for monitors by sending additional African peacekeepers to the Darfur region.

"This is an extremely important mission, and as members of the US Air Force and US military, we're looking forward to supporting the AU in its effort to mitigate the humanitarian crisis that's taking place in the Darfur region," said Col. Robert Baine, the deployed US commander for this mission. "My advance team and I will put together a platform of operations so that when the C-130s arrive, we're ready to hit the ground running."

On Oct. 18, the president directed the secretary of defense to make the two US military aircraft available for two weeks to support a portion of the deployment of the expanded AU mission in Sudan. According to a statement from the White House, the United States is working with other international partners -- including Australia, Belgium, Canada, France, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the European Union -- to support the AU expansion of the mission to about 3,500 personnel.

FMI: www.af.mil

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