An official website of the United States government
Here's how you know
Official websites use .mil
A
.mil
website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
Secure .mil websites use HTTPS
A
lock (
lock
)
or
https://
means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.
Skip to main content (Press Enter).
HOME
LEADERSHIP
Commander
Deputy Commander
Chief of Staff
Senior Enlisted Leader
Leadership
ABOUT USINDOPACOM
History
USINDOPACOM Area of Responsibility
USPACOM Previous Commanders
Organization Chart
Women, Peace and Security
Indo-Pacific Health Security Alliance - IPhsa
Counter-Lawfare: Tactical Aids & Legal Vigilance Products
About USINDOPACOM
MEDIA
NEWS
Press Releases and Readouts
Photos
Speeches / Testimony
Freedom of Information Act
FOIA - Reading Room
Submit FOIA Request
Request Status
FOIA FAQS
2024 Banner Photos
Media
RESOURCES
Travel Requirements
Useful Theater Information
ATFP FAQs
Useful Links
Newcomers
Resources
CONTACT
Directory
Media Inquiries
Industry Engagements
Contact
JTF-MICRONESIA
JTF-Micronesia Contact
JTF-Micronesia Leadership
JTF-Micronesia - news
JTF-Micronesia
JTF - RED HILL
Search
Home
Media
NEWS
Home
Media
NEWS
HOME
LEADERSHIP
Commander
Deputy Commander
Chief of Staff
Senior Enlisted Leader
ABOUT USINDOPACOM
History
USINDOPACOM Area of Responsibility
USPACOM Previous Commanders
Organization Chart
Women, Peace and Security
Indo-Pacific Health Security Alliance - IPhsa
Counter-Lawfare: Tactical Aids & Legal Vigilance Products
MEDIA
NEWS
Press Releases and Readouts
Photos
Speeches / Testimony
Freedom of Information Act
FOIA - Reading Room
Submit FOIA Request
Request Status
FOIA FAQS
2024 Banner Photos
RESOURCES
Travel Requirements
Useful Theater Information
ATFP FAQs
Useful Links
Newcomers
CONTACT
Directory
Media Inquiries
Industry Engagements
JTF-MICRONESIA
JTF-Micronesia Contact
JTF-Micronesia Leadership
JTF-Micronesia - news
JTF - RED HILL
Activated Reserve Marines Conduct CBRN Response Training with U.S. Army during Korea Viper 25.4
USS America (LHA 6) Conducts Flight Operations
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
Four Chaplains: Norwegian Foot March
U.S., Japan display interoperability during Friendship Jump 2025
FF25: Blaze of Friendship
Blue Ridge Arrives in Wellington, New Zealand for the First Time
Activated Reserve Marines Conduct MOUT Training during Korea Viper 25.4
U.S. Marines Execute Casualty Evacuation Training during Jungle Leaders Course
31st MEU Boat Company conducts Small Boat Skills during MEUEX
F-35B Lightning IIs fly over Wake Island
USS Minnesota (SSN 783) returns to Naval Base Guam
Balikatan 25: 3d LCT and 25th ID Conduct Counter Landing Live Fire Event with AFP
Respect the Past, Forge the Future: Air Power Days Returns to Osan
31st MEU conducts quick response force rehearsal for MEUEX
Nimitz Sailors Conduct a Refueling-at-Sea
BTF 25-2: Seventh Mission Operations
Balikatan 25: Counter Landing Live Fire Exercise
Balikatan 25: B Co. 3-25 exfils Gimlets
BH 25-2: Kadena demonstrates Indo-Pacific readiness with joint elephant walk
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
U.S. Air Force participates in Freedom Flag 25-1
Nimitz Conducts Search and Rescue Training
Staging
MQ-9 maintainers, planners integrate during Freedom Flag 25-1
MRF-D 25.3: Marines conduct on-off drills
Balikatan 25: 353rd SOW, Philippine Special Forces Regiment conduct static line jump training
Balikatan 25: MADIS initial live fire drill
MRF-D 25.3: Marines conduct on-off drills
Balikatan 25: Marines deploy NMESIS to Basco
Balikatan 25: JOTC Completes HELOCAST Insertion Training
Balikatan 25: MRF – D 25.3, ADF conduct air insert into Rizal
Night Shoot | Marines participate in a Combat Marksmanship Coaches Course
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
B-1B Lancers arrive at Japan for BTF 25-2 Deployment
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
ROK, US forces showcase airpower ahead of Freedom Flag 25-1
Balikatan 25: 317th AW delivers varsity airlift to the Indo-Pacific
31st MEU | Fast Rope Sustainment
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
31st MEU | Jungle Field Exercise
USS Blue Ridge (LCC 19) conducts flight operations in the Coral Sea
B-1s train with ROKAF, conduct flyover
Philippine and U.S. Soldiers Enhance Interoperability in Jungle Tracking Course
U.S., Indian joint forces conduct large-scale amphibious landing drill during Exercise Tiger Triumph 2025
Abraham Lincoln conducts flight operations
Yokota in full bloom
CFAS Hosts Sasebo Fleet Friendship Day
U.S. and Indian Armies strengthen alliances during Tiger Triumph
U.S. and Indian Armies enhance combat readiness during Tiger Triumph
USCGC Oliver Henry returns to Guam after successful transit post drydock
Joint Engineer Response team assess damage after a 7.7 magnitude earthquake
Joint Engineer Response team assess damage after a 7.7 magnitude earthquake
Salaknib 2025 - 2-11 Joint Sling Load Training
Nimitz Conducts Flight Operations
U.S. humanitarian disaster response
Pacific Air Forces F-16 Demonstration Team performs at Avalon Australian International Airshow 2025
Pacific Air Forces F-16 Demonstration Team performs at Avalon Australian International Airshow 2025
Joint Sling Load Operation Training between Philippine and US Army Soldier
>>>
Renaissance Guardsman: Aircrew Flight Equipment Keeps C-17 Aircrew Safe
27 February 2020
From David Bedard
Download
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska -- Alaska Air National Guard Staff Sgt. Joseph Rotar helps pilots see in the dark, he is the admiral of a fleet comprising dozens of life rafts, and the work he does could provide aircrew with the pathogen-proof suits and masks they would need to survive a theoretical zombie outbreak.
Rotar, a native of West Palm Beach, Florida, is a 176th Operations Support Squadron aircrew flight equipment technician responsible for the upkeep, inspection and repair of scores of different types of equipment necessary to keep C-17 Globemaster III pilots, loadmasters and passengers alive when all else fails.
Master Sgt. Sam Cooper, AFE Flight Chief, C-17 Section, says Rotar and every other AFE technician under his supervision are responsible for a dizzying array of devices aircrew may not think about until right up to the intense moment their lives depend on it.
“Everything, from the chemical-defense equipment to the parachutes to the emergency passenger-oxygen systems to life preservers to life rafts, the aircrew knows no matter what, the equipment is done properly and is going to work if they have to bail out of the aircraft and end up in the water,” Cooper said. “They will be taken care of until rescue can come and get them.”
Though Rotar provides C-17 air crew a contingency lifeline today, his path to the AFE work bench was a serpentine route of pursuing education followed by seeking service.
Studying accounting and finance at a local university while working full time quickly led to burnout, Rotar said, and he found himself looking to follow in the footsteps of his brother, Anthony, who enlisted as an airborne Ranger in the active Army.
After a look at the regular Air Force, Rotar joined the Army as an airborne radio operator maintainer. After Basic Combat Training and Advanced Individual Training, the newly minted Soldier thought he would be assigned to the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
His pinpoint assignment however was with 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska.
“When I got orders up here I thought it was a joke because I was born in Florida, did all of my training in Georgia — Fort Benning and Fort Gordon,” Rotar recalled. “I had never been west of the Mississippi (River) until I was stationed up here.”
Three months after signing into 4/25 with 1st Squadron (Airborne), 40th Cavalry Regiment, the paratrooper found himself Afghanistan bound for Khost province for a combat deployment. After seven years of service at JBER, Rotar said he decided to stay in the state that was once too cold and remote for the Floridian.
Landing a job as a loadmaster with a statewide aviation logistics carrier, Rotar said he fell in love with flying in the Last Frontier. That love would find him at the Alaska Air National Guard Recruiting office and a new job in AFE.
“This gives me time to still be hands on, still develop Airmen at a younger level,” Rotar said of his new enlisted specialty, comparing it to his Army job. “I still get to work with people and do meaningful work.”
Any time Rotar works on a piece of AFE, he pores over the technical order and ensures strict attention to the smallest of details.
“If I mess up on my end, it could cost someone’s life on the other end,” he said. “So I take extreme pride in knowing what I do could save somebody’s life.”
Working on everything from chemical-protective gear to quick-don masks to helmets, Rotar said he marvels at how many Army occupational specialties he would encompass with the knowledge he uses on a daily basis.
“We are the armorer,” he said. “We are the rigger, we are everything in one entity. The amount of equipment and the amount of detail in each specific task for each piece of equipment makes it that much more challenging as far as the knowledge base of this career field.”
During an inspection and repacking of a BA-22 Bailout Kit parachute, Rotar worked closely with Cooper to power through a particularly sticky performance step securing a nylon line.
Cooper doesn’t disparage Rotar for seeking help. He encourages it.
“It’s not about having all the right answers,” he said. “It’s about how to find the right answers.”
Still, that help often comes wrapped in a lesson of how to use ingenuity and adaptability to tackle any unforeseen technical problems.
“If all I’m doing is telling Airmen how to do a task a specific way, I’m setting them up for failure,” Cooper explained. “The most important thing for my NCOs is to teach their Airmen how to think critically, pay attention to detail, and if something doesn’t look right or you’re unfamiliar with it, start asking questions.”
Rotar said he looks at any new technical obstacles waiting for him among the dozens of life-saving equipment as opportunities to shine.
“My favorite part of this job is learning,” he said. “It’s a mental challenge, and I enjoy the challenge every day.”
News Archive
2025 (332)
2024 (956)
2023 (805)
2022 (1167)
2021 (1044)
2020 (1072)
2019 (1152)
2018 (1102)
2017 (1338)
2016 (1447)
2015 (1383)
2014 (892)
2013 (32)
2012 (4)
Guidance-Card-Icon
Dept-Exclusive-Card-Icon