Air Force maintainers at Manas AB, Kyrgyzstan, like their counterparts at other USAF tanker bases, have the never-ending job of keeping KC-135 aerial refueling aircraft flyable. The ones at Manas are vital to the daily war on terror operations. The maintainers don’t stop for rain, sleet, snow, or heat. The base generally has more KC-135s on hand than fly a day’s sorties, but the maintainers can’t let up because they never know when emergency operations, like last year in Afghanistan, will require almost every aircraft. Air Force journalist SSgt. Lara Gale writes in the Ganci Gazette, “The maintainers’ philosophy is always the same—one disabled jet is one too many.”
The Air Force displayed all the firepower it has amassed on Okinawa in an unusually diverse show of force this week. IIn a May 6 “Elephant Walk,” Kadena Air Base showcased 24 F-35A Lightning II stealth fighters, eight F-15E Strike Eagles; two U.S. Army Patriot anti-missile batteries near the runway; and…