at a time. The situation should improve
as more personnel are trained in the
relatively new role of crewmaster, swelling
the unit’s sta ng numbers.
When Burks was assigned to VMGR-252
in 2013, the squadron was taking part
in three separate deployments. ‘We had
Operation ‘Enduring Freedom’ [OEF] in
Afghanistan, another was supporting a
Marine expeditionary unit [MEU] and the
other was the SP-MAGTF. We started to
shut down the OEF deployments with
the drawdown and then we merged the
MEU and SP-MAGTF [deployments]. I
took the SP-MAGTF detachment in 2014
where we had four aircraft supporting
both the MEU and the SP-MAGTF for the
rst time. We were all over north, east and
west Africa and were doing everything
from battle eld illumination and aerial
delivery to aerial refueling.’ The squadron
also performed aviation-delivered ground
refueling (ADGR) sorties, essentially
involving the KC-130 being used as a
portable gas station. It would land at a
forward operating base, and other aircraft
and helicopters could take fuel from it
via hoses.
African deployment
SP-MAGTF-CR Africa was established after
the 2012 attack on the US consulate in
Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans
including the ambassador. The US Marine
Corps deployed the rst detachment of
the task force to Morón, Spain, in April
- It is tasked with rapidly reinforcing
US diplomatic sites in Africa and Europe
should they come under attack, as well
as supporting marine operations in the
Mediterranean region. The combination
of KC-130s and MV-22B Ospreys allows
the marines to arrive at hard-to-reach
locations all over Africa, at short notice.
To land where necessary across the
continent, the SP-MAGTF maintains
several austere co-operative security
locations that give it the ability to pre-
stage equipment if it anticipates having to
respond to a crisis far from Morón.
Originally the SP-MAGTF operated with
a dozen MV-22s and six Hercules, but this
was reduced to six Ospreys and three
KC-130s, which helped reduce the burden
on participating squadrons. Maj Chuck
Casey, 252’s operations o cer, explained,
‘We maintain a three-plane detachment
to SP-MAGTF-CR Africa and they are
Below: This
head-on shot
neatly illustrates
the difference
between a
standard KC-130J
and a Harvest
HAWK-confi gured
example. The
latter features
a station for the
AGM-114 Hellfi res
in place of the
port refueling pod.
Left: Lt Col
Brendan
‘Cletus’ Burks
is VMGR-252’s
commander.
USMC
UNIT REPORT // VMGR-252
104 September 2018 //^ http://www.combataircraft.net
102-109 VMGR-252 C.indd 104 20/07/2018 12:27