YOKOTA AIR BASE, Japan --
Eastern Army Helicopter recently invited members of the 459th
Airlift Squadron to attend the 2nd Tachikawa Helicopter Conference
July 26, 2016 at Camp Tachikawa, Japan.
The conference gathered approximately 50 representatives
from a variety of U.S. and Japanese military aviation professionals, including
the U.S. Army Aviation Battalion and members of Japan Ground Self-Defense
Force, the Japan Marine Self-Defense Forces and the Japan Air Self-Defense
Forces. There were also Japanese civilian police and fire departments and
helicopter manufacturers.
“We worked on aligning
our tactics, techniques and procedures for large-area natural disasters,” said Lt.
Col. Trenton Alexander, 459 AS director of operations “It enhanced our
connection with our civil and military host partners. That is building a bridge
towards better interoperability.”
The conference began a dialogue to establish new disaster-response
procedures for helicopters. U.S. forces have supported Japan in disaster-relief
efforts for more than 70 years, such as during operations Tomodachi and Damayan.
Eastern Army Helicopter invited the 459 AS to attend as friends and allies.
Disaster response often relies heavily on helicopter
support for the ability to perform search and rescue and to land in places less
accessible to fixed-wing aircraft. During response to the most recent
Nankai-trough Earthquake, many aircraft from different organizations acted independently
and without coordination. Conference attendees hope to vastly improve
coordination and communication between all airborne disaster-relief personnel
involved.
“It was an opportune
and beneficial learning environment for both Japanese and U.S. civil and
military forces,” Alexander said.
At the heart of the coordination measures discussed is the
JASDF Central Direction Center. Presenters discussed how, in the event of a
disaster, the CDC is basically a hub for gathering weather and flight
information from affected areas and disseminating it appropriately. For
example, aircraft performing search and rescue outside their normal flight
paths would relay their location to the CDC, which would direct the aircraft to
the proper air traffic control tower.
During the conference, participants had the opportunity to
view and learn about a JASDF P-20, a rapidly deployable weather and aircraft
control system. The P-20 assists with coordinating aircraft during a disaster.
The P-20 functions as a portable ATC tower and consists of
three air-deployable boxes that can be transported via truck. One box is
mounted with a dish and performs radar detection, one contains a radar display
and control station and one is a hub for communicating with aircraft. The P-20
takes two hours and six personnel to set up, making it efficient where rapid
response is critical.
After the conference, the 459 AS presented and
explained the forest penetrator, which is used during rescue operations to
penetrate forest canopy and for retrieving rescuers and victims. The 459 AS
also conducted a rescue operations familiarization with an UH-1N Iroquois
helicopter.