US Northern Command has dispatched personnel from various bases to Texas and Louisiana to prepare for possible landfall by Hurricane Dean, a major storm that appeared to be gaining even more strength. NORTHCOM sent a 17-person team from its Standing Joint Force Headquarters-North at Peterson AFB, Colo., and an eight-person Joint Patient Movement Team from Scott AFB, Ill., headed to Texas. A Joint Interagency Air-Ground Coordination Team from Tyndall AFB, Fla., is in Austin to help FEMA with aeromedical evacuation and search and rescue efforts. And, the 43rd Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron at Pope AFB, N.C., sent 40 airmen to Brownsville, Tex., via a C-17 flying out of Charleston AFB, S.C., to set up a Mobile Aeromedical Staging Facility. As for tracking Dean: airmen of Air Force Reserve Command’s 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron—the “Hurricane Hunters”—flew a WC-130J into the storm to support the National Hurricane Center, and recorded sustained winds increasing to 125 miles per hour.
Less than a day after arriving in the Middle East, F-15E Strike Eagles from Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, N.C. defended Israel from an Iranian attack in April 2024. DUDE flight, four F-15Es from the 335th Fighter Squadron, downed two dozen Iranian drones in roughly 45 minutes.