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Pan Am Flight 799

1968 in AlaskaAccidents and incidents involving the Boeing 707Airliner accidents and incidents in AlaskaAviation accidents and incidents in the United States in 1968December 1968 events in the United States
History of Anchorage, AlaskaPan Am accidents and incidentsUse American English from July 2019Use mdy dates from July 2019
Boeing 707 321C, Pan Am JP6922271
Boeing 707 321C, Pan Am JP6922271

Pan Am Flight 799 was an international cargo flight from Los Angeles International Airport to Cam Ranh Airport in South Vietnam that crashed on December 26, 1968, near Anchorage, Alaska. The aircraft involved was a Boeing 707-321C aircraft operated by Pan American World Airways. All three crew members died in the crash.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Pan Am Flight 799 (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Pan Am Flight 799
Fairchild Avenue, Anchorage

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Wikipedia: Pan Am Flight 799Continue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 61.266666666667 ° E -149.83333333333 °
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Fairchild Avenue

Fairchild Avenue
88591 Anchorage
Alaska, United States
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Boeing 707 321C, Pan Am JP6922271
Boeing 707 321C, Pan Am JP6922271
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Joint Task Force-Alaska

The Joint Task Force Alaska (JTF-AK), headquartered at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska is a multi-service command composed of approximately 80 soldiers, sailors, airmen, coast guardsmen and civilian specialists. The task force is a homeland defense component of U.S. Northern Command that coordinates the land defense of Alaska and also coordinates military assistance to civil authorities. The JTF-AK's goals are stated as "detect, deter, prevent and defeat terrorist threats within the Alaskan joint area of operations". The task force also states that is conducts civil support as directed. JTF-AK plans and integrates the full spectrum of DoD support to homeland defense and civil support to lead federal agencies, such as the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Prevention, crisis response and consequence management are capabilities included within the spectrum of support. In coordination with other federal, state and local agencies, JTF-AK constantly evaluates events and locations throughout Alaska for their potential vulnerability as targets for aggression, such as terrorism. JTF-AK provides situational awareness to military commands and civilian agencies throughout the state of Alaska and the continental U.S. to aid in homeland security awareness and planning. JTF-AK's civil support mission includes domestic disaster relief operations that occur during fires, hurricanes, floods and earthquakes. Support also includes managing the consequences of a terrorist event employing a weapon of mass destruction. The task force provides assistance to a lead federal agency when tasked by the DoD. Per the Posse Comitatus Act, military forces can provide civil support in order to save lives, prevent injuries and provide temporary critical life support, but cannot become directly involved in law enforcement. The U.S. military has a long history of providing assistance to civil authorities during emergencies and other instances of national concern. An emergency must exceed the management capabilities of local, state and federal agencies before JTF-AK becomes involved. In most cases, support will be limited, localized and specific. When the scope if the disaster is reduced to the point that the lead federal agency can again assume full control and management without military assistance, JTF-AK will exit, leaving the on-scene experts to finish the job. On February 11, 2002, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff directed USNORTHCOM to establish and USPACOM to source JTF-AK.

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