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thedrifter
08-13-07, 08:30 AM
Corps: Gator will take Ospreys to Iraq
By Trista Talton - ttalton@militarytimes.com
Posted : August 20, 2007

JACKSONVILLE, N.C. — The MV-22 squadron heading out for the Osprey’s first combat deployment next month will get to Iraq the old-fashioned way — the Navy.

Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron 263 will sail aboard the amphibious assault ship Wasp, a II Marine Expeditionary Force spokesman confirmed Aug. 8.

“It’ll save wear and tear on the airplane,” Lt. Col. Curtis Hill said. “This will also allow time to do shipboard integration operations. That will help us down the road as we look to integrate them with the [Marine expeditionary units].”

A Navy spokesman could not confirm that the Norfolk, Va.-based Wasp is the ship that will take the Ospreys. The Navy typically waits for a ship to receive deployment orders before releasing information.

It’s unknown if the Osprey squadron will return with the Wasp. “The method for returning them has not yet been decided,” Hill said.

The Marine Corps Air Station New River, N.C.-based squadron will operate out of Al Asad Air Base during its seven-month deployment.

“The purpose of this is to take these Ospreys to where they can get into the fight,” Hill said. “They will go to a point from which they’ll deploy from the ship.”

VMM-263 includes 10 tilt-rotors and about 200 Marines and sailors. The squadron has been preparing for its combat deployment debut the past several months, doing everything from taking grunts on their first Osprey flights to integration training with other aircraft.

Ospreys will become the Corps’ new troop transport aircraft, flying faster and farther between refuelings than the CH-46 Sea Knight helicopters they’re replacing. There are three operational MV-22 squadrons — VMM-263, VMM-162 and VMM-266 — all based at New River. More squadrons will transition to Osprey units as the Sea Knights are phased out.

The Corps has an inventory of 52 tilt-rotors and should receive another five this year, said James Darcy, V-22 program office spokesman. Next year, 14 MV-22s are scheduled for delivery to the Corps.

Ellie