 With your look around the Air Force, I'm technical sergeant Eric Mann. Pacific Air Force's Airmen, along with Partner Nation Airmen, brought some holiday cheer to people in some of the most isolated areas of Micronesia and Palau. Operation Christmas Drop is an annual U.S. Air Force tradition working with Partner Nations to package and deliver donated supplies like food, fishing equipment, schoolbooks, and clothing to more than 20,000 people across 56 remote islands. It's the 71st year of the operation. Community volunteers work for months beforehand collecting and packaging up donations. Christmas Drop works under the Denton Program, allowing private citizens and organizations to use space available on U.S. military cargo planes to transport humanitarian goods. The drops are low-cost, low-altitude, and they bring Partner Nations together with U.S. Airmen to practice skills. We worked with four Partner Nations this year. We worked with Korea, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand, and it was the first time all of us have come together was this year for this operation. This year, more than 200 packages were delivered in a total of 70 air drops. It was amazing to see. I did get to go out and do some ramp surfing on the C-130, got to see them drop, and it was just so amazing getting to wave to those islander people and just see the happiness and joy on their face. Pacific Air Forces says the international effort brought airmen from Yakota, Japan, Anderson Air Force Base Guam, and Joint Base Pearl Harbor, Hickam, Hawaii, enabling air crews to develop and maintain combat readiness, all while delivering humanitarian assistance to remote islands in an area roughly the size of the continental United States. And that's your look around the Air Force.