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Eielson airshow kicks off with salute to military’s women aviators

U.S. Air Force Maj. Kristin “BEO” Wolfe, the F-35 Lightning II Demonstration Team's lead pilot, prepares to buckle up during the Heritage Flight Training Course held in March at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz.
Vaughn Weber/U.S. Air Force
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DVIDS
U.S. Air Force Maj. Kristin “BEO” Wolfe, the F-35 Lightning II Demonstration Team's lead pilot, prepares to buckle up in an F-16 during the Heritage Flight Training Course held in March at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz.

Attractions include demonstration flights, displays of advanced jet fighters, helicopters, drone aircraft

Eielson Air Force Base will present its biennial airshow this weekend. And besides the usual attractions, the 2023 Arctic Lightning Airshow also will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the U.S. military expanding the role of women in military aviation.

Eielson will showcase the F-35 during Saturday and Sunday airshows, along with many other aircraft, including the venerable F-16.

The airshow will feature aerial demonstrations A triad of F-35A Lightning II fighters like those flown by Eielson's 354th Fighter Wing.
U.S. Air Force
The airshow will feature aerial demonstrations and displays of F-35A Lightning II fighters like these flown by Eielson's 354th Fighter Wing.

Among the events, “We are expecting the F-16 Pacific Air Forces Demo Team and the U.S. Special Operations Command paracommandos,” says Senior Airman Jose Tamondong, an Eielson spokesperson.

Some of the demonstrations will be performed after the airshow kicks off at noon, Tamondong said. But the main attraction will be presented near the conclusion of shows, which are scheduled to wind up at 4 p.m.

“At the end of the show,” he said, “we’re actually going to have the U.S. Air Force Air Combat Command F-35 Demo Team, which is led by Major Kristin “BEO” Wolfe.”

That’s not really her middle name. Tamondong says BEO is actually Major Wolfe’s call sign, a sort of nickname that’s given to pilots, often as a play on words to give their name a double meaning. In this case, perhaps as a reference to the medieval Scandanavian warrior.

Tribute to military women pilots

“The 2023 Arctic Lightning Airshow will include air and ground performances celebrating the 50-year anniversary of women in military air power,” he said.

Another Eielson spokesperson, Airman 1st Class Ricardo Sandoval, added: “We’re pretty much commemorating the fact that the Navy accepted its first eight women into their military aviation program.”

Capt. Erin Braswell, an aeromedical pilot with the 4th Infantry Division's Combat Aviation Brigade, prepares to take-off on a medical evacuation mission from Camp Taji, Iraq, in October 2008. Women pilots were limited to non-combat roles during during the first conflicts in Iraq, but distinguished themselves, even though "the edge between the front combat lines and the back combat support areas blurred."
Brent Hunt/U.S. Army
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Digital
Capt. Erin Braswell, an aeromedical pilot with the 4th Infantry Division's Combat Aviation Brigade, prepares to take-off on a medical evacuation mission from Camp Taji, Iraq, in October 2008. Women pilots were limited to non-combat roles during during the first conflict in Iraq, even though "the edge between the front combat lines and the back combat support areas blurred."

Sandoval says six of those trainees went on to earn their Naval Aviator Badge.

The Army opened its military aviation program to women in 1974, and the Air Force and Coast Guard both followed two years later.

Prior to that, the military restricted the types of aircraft and missions these women aviators could fly, according to a historical account by Marcelyn Atwood, a retired Air Force colonel.

“In the first two decades (1973-1993), women were flying test planes, becoming astronauts, serving on training carriers as ship crew, training pilots to fly, flying airborne surveillance and reconnaissance,” Atwood wrote.

“It wasn’t until the 1991 Persian Gulf War … that the edge between the front combat lines and the back combat support areas blurred in an undeniable way,” she wrote. “Women were in the fight if they were close enough to be shot out of the sky.

“In April 1993, after an exhaustive 2-year study on women in combat, the Department of Defense changed the policy allowing women aviators to fly combat missions,” Atwood wrote.

Aviation displays and other airshow attractions

Besides the acts of aerial derring-do, Air Force and Army aviators will jointly present a demonstration featuring fixed- and rotor-wing aircraft, including F-22 Raptors, and UH-64 Chinook and UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters.

The airshow's aircraft displays will include the Sentry, one of the UAF Alaska Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems Integration's remotely pilot drones.
Rob Boyce/UAF
The airshow's aircraft displays will include the Sentry, one of the UAF Alaska Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems Integration's remotely pilot drones.

The airshow also will feature displays of aircraft parked along the flightline and elsewhere, along with hardware like three types of surface-to-air missile systems. Other presenters include the Civil Air Patrol and the University of Alaska Fairbanks. And the UAF Alaska Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems Integration will provide displays of its many drone aircraft. An Army MQ-1C Grey Eagle drone also will be on display.

The event is free and open to the public. Gates open at 10 a.m. on both Saturday and Sunday. And on Friday, military ID card-holders can come on base to watch servicemembers rehearse for the show.

Motorists who will be passing-by Eielson on those days should be prepared for brief stops, as traffic will be halted during some of the aerial performances, for safety.

Tim Ellis has been working as a KUAC reporter/producer since 2010. He has more than 30 years experience in broadcast, print and online journalism.