Marines

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U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Jasmin Moghbeli, a pilot assigned to Marine Test and Evaluation Squadron (VMX) 1, conducts her final flight in an AH-1 "Cobra" at Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Ariz., June 7, 2017. Maj. Moghbeli will report to the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, later this year to attend the NASA Astronaut Candidate Class of 2017. (U.S. Marine Corps photo taken by Lance Cpl. Christian Cachola)

Photo by Lance Cpl. Christian Oliver Cachola

Maj. Moghbeli's Final Flight

19 Dec 2017 | Story by Lance Cpl. Christian Cachola Marine Corps Air Station Yuma

MARINE CORPS AIR STATION YUMA, Ariz. (July 7, 2017) – Yuma’s own Maj. Jasmin Moghbeli is in the spotlight as one of the elite chosen for the NASA Astronaut Candidate Class of 2017. The famed Baldwin, New York native has flown over 500 missions, 150 of those being combat missions, and logged over 12,000 hours flying the AH-1 Cobra.
    Today marks her last flight in her favorite “skid” aircraft, but flying helicopters was not exactly part of her plan when she sought out to become an astronaut.
When Moghbeli first joined the Marine Corps, she wanted to fly jets. She always thought: Who would want to fly helicopters? She believed that becoming a fighter jet pilot would better her chances at becoming an astronaut.
    The young second lieutenant spent a few hours riding as a passenger in CH-53s during her time at The Basic School in Quantico, Va., but was unamused. However, just a single encounter with an attack helicopter changed her opinion.
    Moghbeli distinctly remembers the first time she witnessed a Cobra fly overhead and instantaneously said, “I want that one.”
    She began to admire the abilities of tiltrotor aircraft and eventually was selected to fly the Cobra. Years later, she had been through three deployments to Afghanistan with the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit.
    “My favorite thing about flying the Cobra,” Moghbeli began, “is being able to support the Marines on the ground. We’re not too high, we’re not too low; we have great situational awareness with a birds-eye view where we can see exactly what’s going on and pass it on to the guys on the ground.”
    Later, Moghbeli would go on to fly and test the Cobra’s operational capabilities with Marine Test and Evaluation Squadron 1, based out of MCAS Yuma.
Although she has finally made her dream come true, Moghbeli will miss flying helicopters.
    “It’s a little bittersweet,” she said. “I love flying helicopters; I love flying the Cobra and I know that this is potentially my last flight ever, or at least my last one for a long time, but I’m very excited about what I’m about to go do.”
    Moghbeli is scheduled to report to the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, to begin her two years of astronaut training.

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