About 100 people bid farewell to an OC-135B aircraft on Friday, closing the curtain on a pact that was one of the last vestiges of post-Cold War military cooperation between
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Airmen say goodbye to troubled but beloved jets
STEVE LIEWER, Omaha World-Herald
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OMAHA, Neb. (AP) Farewell, hangar queen.
Offutt Air Force Base’s 45th Reconnaissance Squadron said goodbye last week to one of its most trouble-prone jets, an OC-135B that logged 36,064 flight hours and 6,135 takeoffs and landings in nearly 60 years of military use.
“Jets get old, people get old,” said Lt. Col. Andrew “Tripper” Maus, the squadron’s commander. “Bittersweet’s probably the best word for it.”
The Omaha World-Herald reports the aircraft, tail number 61-2672, spent the last 20 years flying aerial photography missions primarily over Russia in carrying out the international Open Skies Treaty. It was no longer needed after the Trump administration pulled out of the 34-nation pact last November.
OMAHA, Neb. Farewell, hangar queen. Offutt Air Force Base’s 45th Reconnaissance Squadron said goodbye last week to one of its most trouble-prone jets, an OC-135B that logged 36,064 flight hours and 6,135 takeoffs and landings in nearly 60 years of military use. “Jets get old, people get old,” said Lt. Col. Andrew “Tripper” Maus, the squadron’s commander. “Bittersweet’s probably the best word for it.” The Omaha World-Herald reports the aircraft, tail number 61-2672, spent the last 20 years flying aerial photography missions primarily over Russia in carrying out the international Open Skies Treaty. It was no longer needed after the Trump administration pulled out of the 34-nation pact last November.