There was no "strangeness" involved. As to WHY well just like the press release says. It was for the Hickam airshow. There isn't a lot of warbirds to choose from in Hawaii and even less that are interested in flying across the pacific to get there. In this case, the Air Force wanted a T-6 for their show. The owner is a local guy and they asked if he'd be interested in being in the airshow. He said yes but the plane was in Nevada. Other civilian acts , including the Red Bull helicopter, were sought but for whatever reason they never came to fruition.
I did all the certifications and planning that were required to make sure the T-6 could be prepped and loaded with as much ease as possible. The Air Force called and said they would have a plane with space reserved for the airshow planes at Travis AFB on a certain date. It was up to the owner to get it there, get it prepped and certified in time. The reason it wound up being a C-5 instead of a C-17 is they found one that was going to Hickam anyhow to pick up a load of cargo. As I said in the first post, I would have been there to take care of all that but it ended up happening when I was headed to the races at Reno. So I had to leave it to other people that didn't know me or the airplane. This resulted in phone calls back and forth between me and the guys at Travis while I was in the airport.
This has nothing to do with the museum at Pearl Harbor. There was nothing sneaky, underhanded or illeagle done by anybody. Because the owner knows me he had a little bit of an inside track as far as the process goes and I was able to make things a little easier, but not much. Everywhere we turned, we were met with the Air Force's favorite answer "That's not my job."
The bottom line is that the Air Force doesn't ship privately owned stuff unless there is something in it for them. It has to be done on a space available basis and can't result in costing the Air Force anything. Empty airplanes fly all over the world all the time but we can't just put whatever we want in them. I certainly wish we could though!
In the past, this has been done with a Stearman and a Corsair that I'm aware of. I've recently been asked to look into working up loading instructions for other warbirds in the future.