Special Operations.Com
SOLL II
C-5 Galaxy
C-5 unit has unlikely special
ops mission
Released: 8 Dec 1999
by Staff Sgt. Pachari Lutke
Air Force Print News
WASHINGTON (AFPN) -- In the special operations
world, the element of surprise is paramount and darkness
is an advantage. This is especially true for the "Night
Riders" of the 436th Airlift Wing at Dov
er Air Force Base, Del., who perform their mission
in complete darkness.
An even bigger surprise is the aircraft the 436th
uses for their night missions. One hardly thinks of
the lumbering C-5, the largest aircraft in the Air
Force inventory, as sneaking into enemy territory.
You can hardly miss a plane almost as long as a football
field, and as high as a six-story building, dropping
in from overhead.
But the 436th says that it can and has been done.
As the only C-5 Special Operations Unit in the world,
their specialty is the Special Operations Low Level
II missions. The roman numerals denote use of night
vision goggles.
"Who would ever expect a C-5 to be doing this
type of mission?" said Lt. Col. Jim Mills, chief
of wing special capabilities at Dover. "I can't
go into details, but we have been involved in operations
in the past." In most cases, before an operation
is even given a name."
The generic answer to how long the C-5 special ops
program has been going on is since the mid-1980s.
However, it's not well-known around the Air Force
that the C-5 plays a part in special operations --
aircraft such as the C-130 and C-141 are more apt
to come to mind in that context. But it's the heavy
lift capability that makes the C-5 valuable in the
special ops world.
"The difference with the C-5 is you get the
range. With a C-5, fully loaded, you can still fly;
approximately a three-thousand mile mission,"
Mills said.
"Only the best and the brightest get into the
436th," he said. "And rightly so. When flying
blacked out missions at 500 feet, there's no room
for error."
The loadmaster is especially important on these flights.
"Everything we do depends on their loading,"
said Maj. David Appel, deputy chief of special capabilities
for the 436th AW. "The reason we're blacked out
is to get their load in and out of an airfield without
being seen. They can do a download and an upload in
a remarkably short period of time."
Everything is done through the artificial eyes of
the night vision goggles. The SOLL II crews are specially
trained in the use of NVGs and infrared lighting,
because when these missions get off the ground the
lights are down to a minimum or completely off.
With plenty of training flights and actual missions
under its belt, the C-5 has proven it can fly at low
altitude, in the dark and without any lights.
Tech. Sgt. Paul Fazzini was on the ground as an observer
during a SOLL II training mission. "It was unbelievable,"
he said. "You're standing there in the dark,
you can't even see the plane coming. Then all of a
sudden, whoosh -- there it is!"
Mills, a former C-130 navigator, said he can't believe
how quiet an aiplane as large as the C-5 is. "If
all the lights are blacked out and the cockpit lighting
is set properly, you would not acquire this aircraft
to maybe a half mile out without night vision goggles
on. So it's pretty much element of surprise right
there."
For a pilot, landing the aircraft under NVGs is the
most intense thing they do according to Appel. "It
takes you awhile to really understand what you're
seeing," he said. "Depth perception isn't
anywhere near what your normal vision is. You have
to count on your navigators giving you the altitudes
and the time until touchdown. With the SOLL II landings
under NVGs, you have to have a lot of trust in the
other crew positions."
It's because of the crew that these missions are
successful. Every crew position knows exactly what's
going to happen moment to moment on the flight before
it even takes off.
They are dedicated professionals -- from the maintainers
and the support side of the house to the communications
specialists and the pilots actually flying the planes.
However, because of the type of missions they fly,
they get little recognition according to Mills.
"All those hours of preparation go into it,
and the mission's a big success. But they can't come
back and talk about the mission and get the recognition
or awards," he said. "They are the unsung
heros. We give them the kudos -- saying thanks for
the hard work -- because we know what you do is in
the black world."