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Staff Sgt. Joe Barkhurst gets a hug from his 6-year-old son, Josh, as he prepares to deploy Tuesday from Cherry Point. Barkhurst was one of about 70 Marines leaving for the Horn of Africa.

Hammerheads go on first deployment

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Havelock News

The Hammerheads are headed for the Horn.

About 70 Marines from Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 366 left Cherry Point Tuesday morning in route to the Horn of Africa.

It is the first full-term, seven-month deployment for HMH-366, called the Hammerheads, since it was reactivated in September 2008, according to the commanding officer, Lt. Col. Jim Harp.

The Marines boarded two buses and headed for Norfolk, Va., where they will fly on a chartered jet to the small African nation of Djibouti, located at the juncture of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, and bordered by Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia. Yemen is about 20 miles across the Strait of Bab el Mandeb from Djibouti.

Harp said the personnel would be providing heavy-lift capability for contingency operations in the region as part of a mission that has been ongoing for some time there.

HMH-366 has CH-53E Super Stallion helicopters based at Hangar 250 at Cherry Point, but the detachment is not taking any of the choppers there. There are four Super Stallions already at the base in Djibouti.

"Once we fall in on them, the helicopters that are there will become ours," Harp said.

Harp said that since the standup of the squadron, the Marines have been working hard to attain full operational capability. A small group of Marines from the HMH-366 started a short, three-month deployment in Iraq in November.

The duties around the Horn of Africa will be varied, he said.

"There are a whole slew of different missions they could do over there. Humanitarian assistance may be one of them," Harp said.

Capt. Doug Given, a CH-53E pilot, said that there would be two basic types of personnel on the mission, air crew and maintainers.

"Aircrews break the birds and the maintainers fix them," Given said.

Though their exact role has not been determined, Given said the heavy-lifting capabilities of the Super Stallions will likely be used to transport supplies and aid if needed and to support operations by the Navy SeaBees, who are constructing buildings and drilling water wells in remote villages.

"Driving there just takes days and days and days where we can get there in an hour or two," Given said of flying the helicopters.

Given will be leaving behind a wife and 3-month-old baby boy during the deployment.

"It’s not fun. It was tough to leave this morning," Given said.

Staff Sgt. Joe Barkhurst, the crew chief for the flightline shop, was leaving his 6-year-old son Josh and wife Lisa Tuesday morning. It is Barkhurst’s first deployment in his 13-year Marine career.

"It’s going to be tough, especially since it’s the first time," he said.

Josh clung to his dad in the minutes leading up to the departure.

"We spend a lot of time together," Barkhurst said. "The communication lines are already open, so we should be able to e-mail and talk on the phone."


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