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5 OUA:
Indonesia
Compiled
by Asia-Pacific Defense FORUM Staff
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In Sumatra, Indonesia, tsunami victims
pose with their relief supplies unloaded from the U.S. Navy MH-60S
Knighthawk helicopter in the background.
Photo by PH1 Alan D. Monyelle, USN |
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Destroyed homes
and debris litter a neighborhood in Banda Aceh, Indonesia.
Photo by PH3 Tyler J. Clements, USN |
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On the flight
deck of USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72), U.S. sailors fill jugs
with fresh water for loading onto the ship’s helicopters
and distribution to the tsunami victims.
Photo by PHAN Jordon R. Beesley, USN |
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U.S. Marines load
boxes of humanitarian aid supplies on a CH-46 helicopter in Medan
for delivery to the tsunami victims..
Photo by LCpl. Scott L. Eberle, USMC |
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The USS Abraham
Lincoln (CVN 72) operates near the coast of Banda Aceh. Its helicopters
transported supplies to disaster relief teams on shore and supported
humanitarian airlifts to tsunami-stricken coastal regions.
Official U.S. Navy photo |
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Australian soldiers
and U.S. sailors load an Australian Army UH-1 Iroquois helicopter
with relief supplies at the Sultan Iskandar Muda Air Force Base.
Photo by PHAN Robert Kelley, USN |
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Indonesian Air
Force personnel and U.S. sailors transport food, clothing, and
relief supplies from a warehouse to U.S. Navy helicopters at Sultan
Iskandar Muda Air Force Base.
Photo by PH3 Travis M. Burns,
USN |
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Debris fills the
streets and waterways of downtown Banda Aceh.
Photo by PH3 Benjamin D. Glass, USN |
The U.S. Military . . . has been the backbone of the logistical operations
providing assistance to all afflicted after the [tsunami] disaster.
We’d like to pay tribute to the soldiers, sailors, Marines, and
airmen
of the U.S. forces deployed in Aceh
throughout the relief effort.
Juwono Sudarsono
Indonesia
Minister of Defense
Distribution of relief supplies to tsunami victims was the primary
requirement for the Combined Support Group (CSG) in hardest-hit Indonesia.
There, the CSG supported the United Nation’s Interagency Rapid
Health Assessment Team; evacuated injured victims; provided engineering
assessments on airfields, ports, landing zones, infrastructure, and
damaged structures; built a warehouse; and repaired generators, hospital
equipment, and critical facilities.
USS Abraham Lincoln:
The “Gray Angel”
Almost immediately after the tsunami struck, the USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72)
Carrier Strike Group began making its way from Hong Kong to the west coast
of Sumatra, Indonesia, where the ships, in coordination with the Indonesian
government, would focus on relief efforts with Indonesian forces, other countries’ forces,
and international agencies in the Banda Aceh region. The ships associated with
the carrier strike group – the cruiser USS Shiloh (CG 67), destroyers
USS Benfold (DDG 65) and USS Shoup (DDG 86), and the fast combat support ship
USNS Rainier (T-AOE 7) – took positions off the island of Sumatra with
their helicopters that became critical to the relief effort. The carrier group
also housed and transported international relief workers.
Upon arriving off the coast of Sumatra on 1 January 2005, sailors
from the USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group began working around
the clock to deliver relief supplies ashore to the tsunami victims.
The strike group’s
Commander, U.S. Navy Rear Adm. William Douglas Crowder, said the volunteer
spirit aboard the ship was hard to deny. Earlier he told reporters, “I’ve
got about 6,500 sailors in the strike group, and as I was walking around the
ship, they were tugging at my sleeves and saying, ‘Admiral, I want to
volunteer to help.’”
Lincoln sailors designed a potable water manifold to help bring fresh
water to tsunami-stricken villages in Sumatra. They constructed a pipe
with multiple spigots and connections to the ship’s water-main system. Once the crew
turned on the faucets and manned the assembly line, the water-supply line was
ready to transfer. The system began shipping the much-needed freshwater by
4 January 2005. “We’ve sent 5,068 gallons [19,184 liters] of water
in two days,” said U.S. Navy Ens. Marcus Machart. “As long as there
is any room on any helicopter going ashore, that space will have a water container
in it. It took our Reactor Department volunteers around 45 minutes to fill
and stack 800 five-gallon [19-liter] containers. We’re only limited by
the number of containers we have and the weight limit the helicopter can carry.”
Helicopter Missions
Using the 17 helicopters on board the Lincoln carrier group ships, U.S. Navy
aircrews flew 1,747 relief missions. The crews loaded the helicopters with
food, medicine, and water to take to the victims. The helicopters also flew
more than 3,000 passengers, including international relief workers who stayed
aboard ship, to remote villages.
“We’ve been averaging 60 hours of flight
time a day, which is an exorbitant amount of time compared
to what we usually fly,” said U.S. Navy Aviation
Warfare Systems Operator First Class (AW1) Joseph Sabia. “We
modified our aircraft by taking out our sonobuoy launchers
and all of our seats except one to get more room,” he
added.
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