RampFreeze said:
I'm guessing it was Tegucigalpa, Honduras. If it was, the part that was missing from the 757 pilot's description is that in order to fly into that airfield at night/IMC in his 757 he had to be specially certified by his airline and use special procedures that were tailored for the avionics in the 757. I've flown in there and wouldn't want to do it at night without the above equipment and procedures. (Without special, tailored procedures the wx mins are 2400-3 for a circling approach or 1700-3 for an RNAV straight-in approach . For the RNAV straight-in, a 3 degree glidepath VDP would be
behind the FAF.) As much as I think the USAF has gone ultra-conservative/risk averse in its decision making, this is one place where I think they've got it right. Short of being the only hope of saving the universe, I wouldn't want an unfamiliar C-130 crew to go in there at night either.
Here are some pictures that still don't do justice to that airfield:
http://www.airliners.net/open.file/0045647/M/
http://www.airliners.net/open.file/0141994/M/
http://www.airliners.net/open.file/0045648/M/
Unfortunately, your first 2 examples sound too familiar and I don't doubt them for a minute...
No, Quito. Again, a difficult place to fly in and out of. But my point was that the Marines were not flying a 757 in there, but a C-130 that was older, and probably poorly equipped when compared to the Air Force C-130. And this was a clear night. The Marine pilots were not based in that area, but did simulator training before they came down on the different airports. They were prepared to do the mission. It kind of fell into the whole Air Force mentality during this exercise. They only took easy missions, the first word out of their mouth was usually "No", and they had clearly forgotten that the purpose of the C-130 was to move stuff for the Army. There were several other missions they refused that the Marines either accepted, or accepted with modifications for safety. The Marines had a mission oriented attitude. They would try to find a way to accomplish each mission.
I think this might have been just after that C-130 went into the mountain in the NW US. The key to that accident, however, was poor training and not following the obstacle DP. Same thing when going into any mountainous terrain- follow the proceedures.
Just so I'm not only badmouthing your service, however, some good examples I recently saw:
1. Enlisted troops I saw in Iraq performed very well. I could always tell when the Air Force was running a hot-fuel site. Troops would come flying out to fuel us, and pass us ice cold water while fueling. It was 130+, no A/C in the aircraft and we were wearing chicken plates. We loved those guys.
2. SPs and other AF enlisted performing covoy escorts, taking fire, and driving on. Probably the LAST thing they thought they would be doing when they enlisted. These are the guys who deserved Bronze Stars, not some UAV pilot sitting in an air conditioned trailer in Missouri.
3. Air Force airfields over there were customer service oriented. What a novel idea to have a chow hall open 24/7, with drinks, sandwiches and ice cream after normal hours. When I suggested this at an Army post, I was told that bfast is 05:30-07:30, lunch 11:30-13:00 and dinner 17:30-19:00. All others can eat MREs. After all, if the chow hall was open 24/7, people might eat the food. Ahh, isn't that the point. Troops come back from combat missions, patrols and convoys, they would like something other than an MRE.
4. And let's not forget those A-10 pilots. I have never seen one operating in combat, but have heard enough stories and seen enough pictures of A-10 pilots putting their %$es on the line to help the grunts on the ground, then flying their shot to &%*# aircraft back home. Any A-10 pilot is okay by me.