These CEs Jump: Working and parajumping at Manas AB, Afghanistan, are three airmen who are part of USAF’s new Airborne RED HORSE element. The Air Force has trained these new jump-certified civil engineers to create bases in austere settings—hostile or not—often dropping them into an area with first line ground troops. (Read more about RED HORSE here.) Writing in the Ganci Gazette, Air Force journalist SSgt. Lara Gale says the service now has about 90 airborne-qualified airmen in three RED HORSE units.
The Air Force rolled out new interim height standards for Career Enlisted Aviators aimed at improving aircrew diversity and “safely meeting accession demands,” as the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center works to update a 1967 anthropometric study used to establish USAF flight requirements for more than half a century.…