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Air Postal Squadron delivers across largest AOR despite COVID-19 disruptions
Airmen with 730th Air Mobility Squadron load pallets of mail on a C-130J Super Hercules, assigned to the 36th Airlift Squadron, on the flight line at Yokota Air Base, Japan, April 18, 2020. Due to COVID-19, planes that would normally take the mail, bound for Misawa Air Base, Japan, from Haneda or Narita Airport, have been reduced to one flight per day, requiring the mail to be processed and flown through Yokota. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Gabrielle Spalding)
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Air Postal Squadron delivers across largest AOR despite COVID-19 disruptions
Airman 1st Class Coral Fontanez, Pacific Air Forces Air Postal Squadron mail processing clerk (right), and Airman 1st Class Natalie Shafor (center right), PACAF AIRPS mail processing clerk, load mail onto a pallet at Yokota Air Base, Japan, April 17, 2020. The mail, bound for Misawa Air Base, Japan, was part of a backlog of more than 600 pieces of mail processed through PACAF AIRPS over the past week. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Gabrielle Spalding)
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Air Postal Squadron delivers across largest AOR despite COVID-19 disruptions
Airmen with the 730th Air Mobility Squadron, the 36th Airlift Squadron and Pacific Air Forces Air Postal Squadron work together to build pallets of processed mail at Yokota Air Base, Japan, April 17, 2020. Due to COVID-19, planes that would normally take the mail bound for Misawa Air Base, Japan, from Haneda or Narita Airport, have been reduced to one flight per day, requiring the mail to be processed and flown through Yokota. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Gabrielle Spalding)
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Indo-Pacific partners join PACAF for 68th year delivering humanitarian aid to 20,000 people across 56 islands
Royal Australian Air Force SGT Karl Penny, 37th Squadron C-130J Super Hercules loadmaster out of RAAF Base Richmond, Australia, looks out as the parachute for a Low-Cost, Low-Altitude bundle carries humanitarian aid down to the atoll of Kapingamarangi, Federated States of Micronesia (FSM), during Operation Christmas Drop 2018, Dec. 13, 2018. Every December U.S. Air Force crews from Yokota Air Base, Japan team up with the Japan Air Self-Defense Force (Koku Jietai) and RAAF to airdrop supplies to the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas, FSM, and the Republic of Palau. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Matthew Gilmore)
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181116-F-IY918-0052
Members of the 36th Airlift Squadron gather inside a C-130J Super Hercules to review low-cost, low-altitude bundle rigging procedures in preparation of Operation Christmas Drop at Yokota Air Base, Japan Nov, 16, 2018.The success of OCD means an expansion of existing capabilities to provide tactical airlift in accordance with national strategic objectives and in collaboration with our partners. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Michael Smith)
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181116-F-IY918-0012
36th Airlift Squadron loadmasters discuss low-cost, low-altitude bundle rigging procedures in preparation for Operation Christmas Drop at Yokota Air Base, Japan Nov, 16, 2018. OCD is the longest running Department of Defense humanitarian airlift training operation and will provide nearly 25 tons of critical supplies to 56 Micronesian Islands this year impacting about 20,000 people. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Michael Smith)
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