Anonymous ID: 468277 May 29, 2021, 7:12 p.m. No.58145   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8152 >>8163

>>58093

SAM544 USAF G5 departed Green Bay Int'l after a ground stop

Heading to JBA

This AC departed JBA on Thursday and did some fly bys at Rochester Int'l, NY then on to ato a ground stop at Yeager Airport, W.Va

Arrival at Peterson AFB after 'dat

Departed nw for Anchorage yesterday

 

High level AC.

Went to Quito, Ecuador for about an hour last Sunday then to Panama Pacifico Airport.

New President innagurated on Monday

Tuesday it departed to Quito for a 2 hour stop then returned to JBA

Anonymous ID: 468277 May 29, 2021, 8:04 p.m. No.58153   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8155 >>8163

Sgt. Sheep over Central CA

Both returning to home base after long day.

BLEAT72 US Navy E-6B Mercury headin nw along CA/NV border back to Travis AFB, CA after some time in the Gulf 'o Mex

 

Bleat: to make the natural cry of a sheep or goat also : to utter a similar sound

This AC wuz AGONY22 on 0521-cap 3 over LA Basin

 

SARGE70 Mercury sw back to March AFB, CA after some extensive western state werk

Anonymous ID: 468277 May 29, 2021, 8:25 p.m. No.58161   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8163

German AF GAF608 on final for Berlin-Brandenburg Airport

Dis AC returning from Johannesburg, South Africa-cap 2 is arrival tail # visible

 

Vaccine makers want to help South Africa — Germany's health minister

 

South Africa is struggling to vaccinate its population — less than 2% of its 60 million people have so far received even one dose of a coronavirus vaccine. During a joint visit to the African country, France's President Emmanuel Macron and Germany's Health Minister Jens Spahn promised to help South Africa develop its own vaccine production capabilities, with Spahn saying Germany would invest €50 million ($61 million) in the initiative. In an interview with DW, Spahn acknowledged that boosting vaccine production would take months. However, Germany's health minister said vaccine producers in the West were ready to share their knowledge and technology with their South African counterparts. "And that is why we actually count on voluntary partnership between patent holders, companies like BioNTech, CureVac from Germany, others that are actually willing," Spahn said. "And we do have companies here in South Africa like Espin or Biotech, that actually do already meet the world standards."

moar

https://www.dw.com/en/vaccine-makers-want-to-help-south-africa-germanys-health-minister/a-57715373