An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | March 29, 2018

The doctor is in - to fix Army helicopters in Iraq

By Staff Sgt. Leticia Samuels 449th Theater Aviation Brigade

TAJI MILITARY COMPLEX, Iraq – A torque wrench squeals as it secures the bolts of a forward support tube onto a UH-60 Black Hawk engine in a maintenance shop March 23.

U.S. Army 1st Battalion, 126 Aviation Regiment (General Support Aviation Battalion) aircraft powerplant repairer Spc. Kathleen Scanlon, works with her fellow Soldiers to troubleshoot and correct maintenance issues for Black Hawks and CH-47 Chinooks that provide the 449th Combat Aviation Brigade with aviation assets to support the Combined Joint Task Force - Operation Inherent Resolve mission.

"In a typical day, I might start out by helping a maintenance test pilot and another aircraft power-plant repairer conduct an engine wash on a Black Hawk," said Scanlon.

This ability of troubleshooting two very different aircraft contributes to just another day in the maintenance world for this Cleveland native. Aircraft power-plant repairers supervise, inspect and perform maintenance on aircraft turbine engines and components, ensuring airplanes and helicopters are safe and ready to fly.

"I joined hoping to become a pilot, but I chose to enlist as an aircraft power-plant repairer instead of an officer candidate to guarantee that I'd be able to contribute to the aviation mission even if I never got the opportunity to fly," said Scanlon. "I never had a chance to take auto shop courses in school, so taking the enlisted route was also a way to gain the practical mechanical experience I'd always wanted."

Scanlon explained that during the pursuit of her doctorate degree in geology at Brown University, she came across awards of Army officers at the university that sparked her interest in aviation.

"I have always wanted to be a military aviator," Scanlon said. "Halfway through my degree program, I came across [now retired] Lt. Col. Bruce Crandall's Medal of Honor citation, describing his and Maj. Ed Freeman's 16 hours of flights carrying supplies to wounded Soldiers from the Ia Drang Valley under heavy fire during the Vietnam War. That led me to reading more about medevac, and I learned that medevac was part of the aviation mission in the Rhode Island Army National Guard."

The Rhode Island National Guard is composed of the 56th Troop Command, 43rd Military Police Brigade, 143rd Airlift Wing, 281st Combat Communications Group, 102nd Information Warfare Squadron, Special Operations Detachment Global, and the RING Medical Command, that provide a broad range of military assets to the state.

The skies have always been the driving force for this Soldier. Scanlon is drawn to the intricate details that push the vessels of the sky but is also drawn to a much further force in her civilian career.

"Planetary geology is a very broad field of study, but my career so far has mostly focused on two things: glacio-volcanic landforms, which are landforms that resulted from lava coming into contact with ice on Mars and relating climate models for ancient Mars to the locations of ancient Martian lakes and rivers whose dried-out remnants we can observe today," said Scanlon.

She also said that she runs computer simulations that analyze weather on Mars four billion years ago, uses satellite photos to map lava flow and hikes across Western Australia to look for the oldest evidence of life on Earth, further strengthening her research for life on Mars.

While Scanlon is quickly approaching her two-year mark in her military career she has already been a positive role model sparking curiosity in her fellow Soldiers.

"My favorite thing about my job in the Army is the people I work with," Scanlon explained. "Soldiers in D Company cheer each other's successes, take care of each other when something's wrong and have the sense of humor to make anything fun."

She explains how her companions joke around by saying things like "Paging Dr. Scanlon" across the flight line, ask if she can build them a time machine to undo something their buddy just did, deciding that she must hero-worship Elon Musk, deciding that she must want to fistfight Elon Musk, or deciding that she is secretly Elon Musk.

She also said they ask her great, insightful planetary science questions they'd been wondering about. "Does Jupiter have a rocky surface in the same sense Earth or Mars does?"

Scanlon explained that she enjoys the different spectrums of both her jobs in and out of the Army.

"I grew up aspiring to be an astronaut," said Scanlon. "As far as I'm concerned, if I have a full-time job physically exploring remote places on Earth while exploring space with satellites and rovers, and a part-time job either maintaining or flying gorgeously complicated aircraft in the service of my country, I'm living the dream, whether I ever make it to space or not."

 

 

Related Articles
A UH-60M Black Hawk helicopter assigned to the New York National Guard's A Company, 3rd Battalion, 142nd Aviation, prepares to lift an M-119 howitzer belonging to the 1st Battalion, 258th Field Artillery during a training exercise at Fort Drum, New York, June 8, 2025. The 258th Field Artillery's C Battery will be part of a 246-Soldier New York Army National Guard contingent serving as the Opposing Force, or OPFOR, at the National Training Center from July 25 to August 3.
NY Army Guard Serves as Opposing Force at Training Center
By Eric Durr, | July 15, 2025
LATHAM, N.Y.  –  Two hundred forty-six New York Army National Guard Soldiers will go to Fort Irwin, California, the home of the Army’s National Training Center in the Mojave Desert, starting July 15.The Soldiers will serve...

Gen. Steven Nordhaus, chief of the National Guard Bureau, Senior Enlisted Advisor John Raines III, SEA to the chief of the National Guard Bureau, Maj. Gen. Janeen Birckhead, the Adjutant General of Maryland and Command Sgt. Maj. David C. Harry, senior enlisted leader of the Maryland Army National Guard, pose for a photo with competitors in the Army National Guard’s 2025 Best Warrior Competition on July 12, 2025, at Under Armour Headquarters in Baltimore, Maryland. The Army National Guard’s 2025 National Best Warrior Competition, hosted by the Maryland National Guard, is an annual event that unites Soldiers and Noncommissioned Officers from seven regions across the United States. Competitors face a demanding series of physical and mental challenges designed to test their military expertise, resilience, and dedication to the Warrior Ethos for the opportunity to advance to Best Squad Competition.
Army Guard’s 2025 National Best Warrior Competition Begins
By Sgt. 1st Class Brandon Ames, | July 15, 2025
BALTIMORE — The Army National Guard’s 2025 National Best Warrior Competition officially kicked off this week in Maryland, bringing together 14 elite Soldiers and noncommissioned officers from seven regions across the United...

An Oregon Army National Guard HH-60M Black Hawk helicopter, assigned to the 641st Aviation Regiment, conducts a search and rescue mission on July 13, 2025, in the caldera at Crater Lake National Park, Oregon. The same Black Hawk later in the day conducted a second rescue mission at Lake Harriett, Southeast of Crater Lake, when three hikers were injured from a falling tree limb.
Oregon Guard Responds to Multiple Search and Rescue Missions
By John Hughel, | July 15, 2025
SALEM, Ore. – The Oregon Army National Guard’s 641st Aviation Regiment worked with several agency partners to respond to multiple search and rescue operations in one day across the state during its scheduled Inactive Duty...