From Military.com:
“Operation Christmas Drop
Delivers 75,000 Pounds of Humanitarian Supplies to the Pacific”
(U.S. Air Force Capt. Maddie
Atkinson and Capt. Eichard Armfield, 36th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron C-130J
pilots, fly over Saipan, Dec. 1, 2022, during Operation Christmas Drop 2022.)
This year, the Air Force,
alongside four other countries' militaries, parachuted more than 200 bundles of
humanitarian supplies to 57 locations in the Federated States of Micronesia and
Republic of Palau as part of its annual Operation Christmas Drop mission. Between
Dec. 4 and Dec. 13, aircrews from the Republic of Korea Air Force, Japan Air
Self-Defense Force, Royal Australian Air Force and the Royal New Zealand Air
Force helped the U.S. deliver more than 75,000 pounds of supplies in the west
Pacific, according to a news release from last week. "It was truly
exciting to come together as an international team of Airmen for such a good
cause," Capt. Andrew Zaldivar, the Operation Christmas Drop mission
commander, said in the release. "Being able to be part of this mission is
truly humbling, and I'm happy our team was able to work together with our
partner nation aircrews to deliver aid to people living on these isolated
islands."
This month's operations marks the
71st time Operation Christmas Drop has been activated. It first started in
1952, making it one of the longest-running humanitarian and training operations
in the history of the Department of Defense. Items contained in the air-dropped
bundles include clothes, food, medical gear, school supplies, fishing equipment
and other humanitarian items. Aircrews use the mission to not only deliver
needed supplies to the remote islands, but also use it as a training opportunity
to prepare dropping cargo at lower altitudes in war zones. Airmen solicit
donations for months and then organize volunteers to assemble the boxes and
fill them with the supplies, before the packages are parachuted onto the
islands in the Pacific.
Operation Christmas Drop has also
become a cultural staple of the holiday season, inspiring a 2020 Netflix
holiday film of the same name. That same year, due to the COVID-19 pandemic,
Operation Christmas Drop was scaled back with some partner countries choosing
not to assist with the drop and Micronesia choosing not to receive packages. But
this year, Operation Christmas Drop had returned to pre-COVID-19 levels.
Aircrews from New Zealand, which hadn't been involved since 2019, were happy to
be a part of the mission again. "I've enjoyed meeting with other nations
and sharing the common experience of delivering aid here in the Pacific,"
Royal New Zealand Air Force flight Lt. Campbell Wilson said in the news
release. "This aid is delivered with goodwill and with pride and love from
all the agencies involved. We've really enjoyed being part of it, and we're
honored to take part."
^ This is a nice tradition that
both trains and helps. ^
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