by Senior Airman Cody H. Ramirez
374th Airlift Wing Public Affairs
1/24/2013 - YOKOTA AIR BASE, Japan -- The
Air Force Air Advisor Academy instructed cultural preparation and
engagement to a team of professional airlifters at Yokota Air Base,
Japan, Jan. 14 - 18, making it the first time the academy has sent a
mobility training team to train in the Pacific Command since the school
began in May 2012.
The five-day course began with an overview of the vast and diverse PACOM
mission and focused into a more Yokota-specific mission as the class
progressed. The 36th Airlift Squadron hosted the class and provided the
instructors with upcoming Yokota engagement opportunities -- Indonesia
and Thailand.
The U.S. is moving forward by building partnerships since President
Barack Obama outlined the need for alliances in the 2012 National
Security Strategy. Because of this need, the AAA is continuing to grow
and spread support throughout the Air Force.
According to Maj. Alex Richburg, U.S. Air Force AAA Division chief of
Language, Region and Culture Studies, the U.S. focus shifted to the
Pacific recently and has added extra weight to conducting these
exercises and building partnerships. He said squadrons like the 36th AS
are trying to do more in order to meet the requirements the president
put emphasis on, and the AAA instructors came to Yokota to help the
airlifters be more effective at what they do.
"We can strive to be the best airlifters in the world, but if we don't
know how to effectively communicate and build relationships with our
partner nations in the Pacific, then our airlift skills are being
squandered," said Capt. Olin Johnson, 36th AS C-130 Hercules pilot.
Johnson said he and his squadron train to fly. They practice day-to-day
to be professional airlifters, but lack training in cross-cultural
affairs, and that is exactly where the course came into play.
"The Air Advisor course taught us essential skills for building
partnerships and knowledge of cultural norms and how to effectively
communicate with individuals from other cultures," Johnson added. "We
may have the best intentions, but if we don't know how to communicate
those intentions in a culturally-appropriate context, then we set
ourselves up for embarrassment at best and failure at worst."
Air adviser skills are invaluable for anyone working hand-in-hand with
partner nations, and according to Johnson, the course gave students the
tools needed to communicate effectively.
"The training gave our mission commanders and key players both the
skills and confidence to build relationships with our partners," he
added. "Each class was useful and tailored to the specific needs of
Yokota's role in PACOM."
The course taught Yokota members what their legal limits are as air
adviser along with tactical skills. Richburg said his instruction taught
the airlifters to be more effective in exercises they are already
doing. Lessons included mission planning, execution and after action
analysis; behavior in host countries; using embassy resources; surviving
if things go bad and understanding culture.
The U.S. has advisers in 135 countries, which requires many Airmen to fill those roles.
"We try to take someone with knowledge of being an adviser and teach
them exactly how to be effective," Richburg said. "It is not teaching
aviation, but it is teaching aviation-related professionals how to
interact and work with a foreign culture in an advisory role."
The AAA and its mobility course takes general-purpose forces -- people
who are mature, experienced Airmen, typically between staff sergeant and
colonel, who are tasked to work with foreign governments or militaries,
usually at the host nation's request -- and train them to function as
air advisers when collaborating with host nations. The instructors
educate Airmen who are already proficient at their jobs to apply their
job skills in a foreign country, government, military and other
cultures.
"These Airmen are not traditionally advisers, but have exercise
opportunities to be in an adviser role with host nations, and we are
giving them some skills or tools to make them more effective at working
with allies and influencing the region," Richburg said. "When we partner
with nations, we are less likely to get into armed conflict, and it
allows our partner nations to help us help them secure the region.
"We see people going to Afghanistan, Morocco and Egypt and they are
applying this knowledge every day," he added. "Now we can see the same
knowledge applied to the Pacific region."
When the course returns to Yokota to train more airlifters in the art of
cultural engagement depends on the demand, Richburg said. He added that
the 36th AS has already requested another course this year, so there is
a great chance for more professional airlifters to train as air
advisers.
"We are still growing and our primary concern is our in-residence class,
but we put together small teams of instructors to go on the road and
teach when needed," added Richburg.
Thursday, January 24, 2013
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