[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Very interesting that the article makes it seem as if he was killed in the crash, when this is not the case. Somebody's CYA-ing.
Flight plans and flight following are great advice for general aviation flying, but the Marine pilot's flight lead knew almost instantly that he'd gone down when he ceased answering radio calls. What killed that guy was the Marine Corps' insistence that they (and ONLY they) do the searching for him until well into the next day, when it was too late. (To my knowledge, the Marines have no dedicated SAR capability, unlike the USAF.) Self-confidence is great, but when it leads to an almost institutional arrogance like it does with the Marines, it's only an impediment to good judgment--right up there with refusing to admit you're lost and asking someone
for directions. Too bad this guy had to pay such a high price for that.
<-- Not a big fan of the Marine Corps.
[/ QUOTE ]
Well I am sorry to hear that you are not a fan, but I am a Marine and if it was due to operational arrogance then heads should roll, I fully agree with you. We do have SAR capability as all MEU's are Special Operations Capable and we have dedicated SAR units as well. I am sure they could have pulled a unit out of Camp Pendelton. I am not assigned to that area and I work in intel so I can not speak on what was going on in that area of operations. The death of this pilot and any other is and would be tragic. Makes no difference if he was a Marine or any other branch. If the Marines were (and I do not know if they were the only ones) doing the search I am sure they had reasoning for it...if not I hope someone loses a general star for it but to place a blanket statement like only the Marines are bad or at fault is not appropriate. The Marines have done many great things and no one branch is exempt from making errors. Do not forget it was the Marines SAR capabilities that brought home Captain Scott O'Grady, USAF. He is lucky...the Yugoslavians would not have given him much hospitality.
In anycase, I am not trying to inflame an argument as I agree that if was an error that could have been prevented then lets court martial someone, but please do not spread blame Corps. wide as we work extremely hard to gurantee that the Marines do what we do best. Just my .02.
[/ QUOTE ]
I don't know if the addition of CAP itself would've made a difference or not, hindsight-wise. I do agree in using all available assets in an emergency.
In addition to this, every Marine Corps Air Station has a dedicated base rescue helo detachment. In the case of Yuma, they have dedicated HH-1N Hueys that do local base SAR as well as MAST (Miitary Assistance to Safety and Traffic) missions to assist civilian EMS units at vehicle accidents, etc. Air Stations will have a det of HH-1Ns or HH-46s. You'll notice them with the grey/orange paint jobs and the "RESCUE" markings on them.
USAF used to have base rescue helos (HH-43Fs), but got rid of them in the late 1970s. USAF has dedicated SAR units, but obviously not at every base like the Marines and Navy have.