| An Introduction |
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In recent years the frequency and severity of global natural disasters has grown. Most often, the largest airlift responder to these devastated areas is the United States military, chiefly the Air Force. This sudden, unscheduled marshaling of military assets is not the primary mission of the military and can cause operational conflicts for the Department of Defense. In addition, interaction between military lift providers and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) at the disaster site’s point of presence is often unsynchronized and can result in distribution delays of critically needed relief supplies. According to this 2005 Congressional Research Service report on Hurricane Katrina, humanitarian relief flights are not the primary mission of the military:
"[W]ith regard to the DoD particularly, the fundamental principle that it is almost always a supporting agency and the resource of last resort may serve to encourage a reactive rather than proactive mode of operation. This principle exists because, for DoD, disaster relief is secondary to its primary mission of national defense, and there has been a traditional concern that any greater emphasis on essentially civilian or non-military operations would detract from its preparedness for its primary mission. Nevertheless, absent the development of greater civilian capabilities in disaster response, the expectation will remain the DoD will provide substantial, if not massive assistance in instances of catastrophic disasters" (CRS report at page 13)
Humanitarian Air Logistics is a non-profit organization that will provide a differentiated solution to that dilemma by providing immediate heavy-lift first-responsiveness to anywhere in the world that falls victim to disaster. The company has completed early-stage development and is positioned for rapid growth.
Humanitarian Air Logistics is currently in discussions with several different cities and states to determine where we will locate our operations within the United States.
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