Senegalese Armed Forces Concludes Aeromedical Evacuation Training

29 January 2024

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Senegal armed forces medical staff tend to a wounded patient during AMET Phase V training scenario at Ouakam Air Base, Senegal, Jan. 24, 2024.
Image credit: U.S. Air Force photo by Dreshawn Murray

Senegalese armed forces personnel successfully concluded the final phase of the Aeromedical Evacuation Teams training (AMET) at Ouakam Air Base, Senegal.

The accomplishment caps a five-year journey for the Senegalese air force (SENAF), which has been actively involved in aerial patient movement since 2019 in collaboration with the U.S. Air Forces in Europe-Air Forces Africa Surgeon General Office and Defense Institute for Military Operations.

The completion of Phase V underscores Senegal’s commitment to maintain peace and stability in the region and positions Senegal as a valuable contributor in future UN missions.

The Phase V training, executed under the guidance of Defense Institute of Medical Operations, unfolded as a five-day exercise, challenging the team with diverse tactical and medical scenarios. Culminating in a final capstone event, the phase encapsulated the collective knowledge required through all five phases, offering invaluable hands-on experience in a real-world setting, priming SENAF for upcoming medical evacuation scenarios.

The AMET program, a vital component supporting United Nations Peacekeeping Operations, has undergone multiple phases, with Phase I initiated in 2019 under the former aerial patient movement program.  As the program evolved, SENAF completed Phase II in April 2023, Phase III in July 2023, and Phase IV in September 2023.  The culmination of these efforts leading up to Phase V marks a significant milestone for Senegal's military capabilities and their commitment to achieving UN validation.

“This demonstrates their ability to not only learn a critical function but the ability to sustain it through development of their own cadre that can teach and evaluate their ability to perform this mission,” said Col. Steven Lehr, USAFE-AFAFRICA command surgeon.

Lehr also added, “Aeromedical evacuation is a critical capability on a continent as vast as Africa. The SENAF are now poised to support United Nations and African Union missions that ultimately serve greater regional stability.”

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