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Caribbean-Latin America
U.S. Air Force drops 55,000 pounds of food, water into Haiti
2010-01-19
About time, but it's a drop in the bucket. More and faster, please. The effort for Berlin puts this to shame.
How long did it take to get the Berlin effort up and running? The professionals think logistics, and they're still setting that up at Port-au-Prince.
Bypassing the gridlock of Haiti's main airport and congestion of roadways in the earthquake-ravaged country, the U.S. military delivered badly needed food and water on Monday by parachute.

A C-17 cargo plane left Pope Air Force Base in North Carolina shortly after noon, and three hours later dropped 40 pallets -- or "bundles" as the Air Force refers to them as -- holding bottled water and Meals, Ready-to-Eat, or MREs, on a field just north of the Port-au-Prince airport in Haiti.

It was the first airdrop of humanitarian supplies by the U.S. military into Haiti since the deadly earthquake there nearly a week ago.

"There are so many relief agencies funneling through the airport that it has kind of created a bottleneck," U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Leon Strickland told CNN en route to the drop point. "We're going to put things directly out of the air onto the ground and open up another distribution point north of the [Port-au-Prince] airfield."

The mission came just three days after Defense Secretary Robert Gates told reporters at the Pentagon that he thought such airdrops would pose serious problems, especially with crowd control.

"It seems to me that, without having any structure on the ground in terms of distribution, that an airdrop is simply going to lead to riots as people try and go after that stuff. So without any structure for distribution or to provide security when things become available, then it seems to me that's a formula for contributing to chaos rather than -- rather than preventing it," Gates said.
The chaos due to impending starvation is worse. You already have riots. Drop the food and be done with it. Once they develop some confidence, they will stop climbing over each other to get at the supplies.
Strickland, commander of the airdrop mission, said safety of the Haitians was still a consideration, but the military had taken steps to insure control over the distribution.
Drop the food. Now.
"We are obviously concerned about the welfare of the people on the ground," he said, adding, "I'm confident that our members on the ground have created a secure environment for us to conduct airdrop operations."
Drop. The. Food.
This first flight carried a total of 9,600 bottles of water and 42,000 MRE packets. One MRE is usually considered one meal for a U.S. soldier in combat, but there is enough food in an MRE packet to make a small meal for two people.

Most of the food in an MRE can be eaten straight from the plastic vacuum-packed pouch. But if water is added to a chemical heater, a hot meal results.

Each pallet was rigged with a large parachute as well as special corrugated cardboard padding that would minimize damage to the water and food when the load hit the ground.
And any potential Darwin Award recipients who may happen to be standing under it.
One of the supervisors on the rigging crew at the Army's Fort Bragg, which is adjacent to Pope Air Force Base, said they wanted to make sure as much of the aid, especially the water, survived the airdrop, but they predicted as many as 1-in-10 of the bottles would break on impact. The MREs are much less susceptible to damage during airdrops.
Boo hoo hoo. Drop the food. They will eat it. Given how much pork is in the budget these days, who cares about some understandable fallout.
As the C-17 approached Haiti, the pilot dropped to 600 feet above the ground and opened the huge rear ramp. When a computer in the cockpit calculated that the plane was over the drop zone, a signal was given, the pilot pitched the plane upward and the huge straps and gate that held the cargo in place were released. Within seconds, gravity pulled all 40 pallets out of the plane and the parachutes automatically deployed.

In less than a minute the food and water was on the ground, ready to be unpacked and distributed.

Maj. Jeff "Ratdog" Daniels, the pilot of the C-17, said the U.S. military teams waiting for the airdrop on the ground reported all 40 parachutes opened properly and all the bundles landed on target in the planned drop zone.
Oh my, I was so worried one of the parachutes wouldn't open.
While this airdrop is a first for the military effort in Haiti, the Air Force is well-practiced in this type of mission. Almost daily, Air Force cargo planes drop food and water into remote areas of Afghanistan for U.S. troops fighting there.

Several of the young military personnel CNN spoke to were pleased to be taking part this part of the huge humanitarian mission.

Even though she joined the military while the United States was embroiled in two wars, Pvt. Caitlyn Lopez of the 18th Airborne Corps said "this is what I joined the Army for." She was among dozens of soldiers at Fort Bragg who hand-packed and rigged the bundles of humanitarian aid that were dropped Monday.

The military planned to use Monday's flight as a test to see if airdrops would be a practical and effective way to continue to deliver aid. The decision on whether to do more airdrops not immediately made, but just after returning to Pope AFB, Strickland said of the mission, "It was a success."
Boggle.
Posted by:gorb

#11  The airport is only vital until ships come in. The first are arriving now. Anyway, 180 aircraft a day are unloading vs 30 pre-earthquake.
Posted by: ed   2010-01-19 22:15  

#10  I understand that the single airport is the big bottleneck right now. During WWII our military built functional airstrips in a few days using Marston Matting. Why aren't we doing something similar now? Use helicopters to drop bulldozers, workers and materials where help is most needed and build an emergency landing strip for aid planes. It doesn't have to last forever, just until ports and roads are back up and functioning.
Posted by: Cromert   2010-01-19 21:58  

#9  I can't find the video but there is one of a UN truck giving out energy biscuits to "starving" hatians. One of them mistakes the packing date for an expiration date so they all through them to the ground in disgust. For most of my childhood we ate bread from the day-old store and I managed to survive. IMHO if they are throwing away even expired biscuits they aren't starving. Not trying to be cruel but did all the food get destroyed in the earthquake? You don't go from earthquake to no food immediately and do they not know how to boil water to drink? If not we will be doing airdrop for a LONG time.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge    2010-01-19 15:20  

#8  drop bushels of wheat, at $4.08 it is expendable.
Posted by: bman   2010-01-19 11:24  

#7  Couple years ago it would have been how booosh was attempting a diabetic catastrophe with his cluster bar munitions.

Need to control the drop zone or disperse the drops, else ya might end up with a somalia type situation where the gangs control the food, IMHO.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2010-01-19 11:06  

#6  A Sigh of Relief - humanitarian aid air drops in Afghanistan
Once the specialized delivery containers are slid out the back, the air blast pulls the TRIADS apart, and the humanitarian daily rations "flutter down," said Col. James B. Roberts Jr., the group commander.
Posted by: ed   2010-01-19 11:01  

#5  The C-17 dropped loose MREs and Humanitarian Rations over Afghanistan. I think they where enclosed in a big net and the end opened in the air stream.
Posted by: ed   2010-01-19 10:56  

#4  former spook has a good post on the other side of the food drop issue. It seems as if it might be worth while to figure out a way to drop smaller loads than a full pallet, if we're going to have to feed everyone after every natural disaster.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2010-01-19 10:50  

#3  just remember who wrote this

Indeed. I think we need to give the CNN reporter some credit for correctly identifying a C-17 as an 'aeroplane' and not blaming anything on George Bush.
Posted by: SteveS   2010-01-19 10:09  

#2  U.S. military teams waiting for the airdrop on the ground . . .

That's the most important line in the story. It will assure orderly handling throughout the process.

Now, it will be interesting to see if cigarettes become currency, if they're not already.
Posted by: Halliburton - Mysterious Conspiracy Division   2010-01-19 10:09  

#1  ...just remember who wrote this to understand the lack of understanding and all the 'dire' caveats.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2010-01-19 08:19  

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