F-22 Raptors fly near Kadena Air Base to support U.S. Pacific Command's security obligations in the western Pacific. Short-term tours are part of the job for tens of thousands of airmen assigned to the three Air Force-operated bases in Japan.Japan tour often leads to war zoneBy Bruce Rolfsen - Staff writer
Posted : Saturday Aug 14, 2010 12:44:12 EDT
KADENA AIR BASE, Japan — You move your family halfway around the world to Japan, then you get new orders — a six-month deployment to the desert.
A decade ago, few airmen based in the Land of the Rising Sun deployed outside the Pacific region. Today, short-term tours are a fact of life for the tens of thousands of airmen and their families assigned to the three Air Force-operated bases — Kadena, Yokota and Misawa.“Folks come out here, mostly from the U.S., and they are living a long way from their family and their friends, and their loved ones get deployed ... That’s a big deal,” said Brig Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach, commander of 18th Wing here. “They can’t just jump on a plane, easily and inexpensively, and go see mom, dad, brother, sister.”
At any given time, more than 1,000 airmen in Japan are deployed elsewhere in the world.Kadena’s HH-60G Pave Hawk aircrews and maintainers, for example, fly medical and rescue missions in Afghanistan. Yokota’s C-130H Hercules crews fly Central Command missions. Misawa’s pilots and maintainers for F-16 Fighting Falcons spend four months in South Korea. And Kadena pararescue teams rotate into the Horn of Africa.