by Bo Joyner
AF Reserve Command Public Affairs
4/10/2013 - ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE, Ga. -- Fourteen
members of Air Force Reserve Command's 55th Combat Communications
Squadron here are in Morocco providing critical communications support
for African Lion 2013, an annually scheduled, bilateral U.S. and
Moroccan sponsored exercise designed to improve interoperability and
mutual understanding of each nation's tactics, techniques and
procedures.
The reservists and five pallets of computers, cables, switches,
satellite dishes, tents and other supplies left Robins on a KC-135 in
early April. After their arrival in Agadir, Morocco, the comm
specialists from the 55th set up the communications network that will
serve as the backbone for African Lion, which runs through the end of
April.
"We are providing SIPR (secure internet), NIPR (non-secure internet),
voice and some VTC (video teleconferencing) for this large-scale
exercise," said Senior Master Sgt. Bart Sawyer, 55th CBCS
superintendent.
"Our folks have been training hard," added Lt. Col. Lee Mumford, 55th
CBCS commander. "We finished an ORI in December of 2010 and a UCI in
August of 2012 and we're ready to put our training to the test and show
that we can provide comm to the war-fighter in an austere location."
Providing communications for Africa Lion is a challenging mission. More
than 1,400 U.S. military service members are joining more than 900
Moroccan soldiers in various regions of the country to take part in a
wide variety of training, including command post operations, life-fire
and maneuvering, peace-keeping operations, amphibious operations, and
aerial refueling and low-level flight training. In addition, exercise
participants will provide medical, dental, pediatric and optometry care
to thousands of Moroccans throughout the country.
"This is a great opportunity for our people to train in a joint
environment with people from the other services and other countries,"
Mumford said. "Providing comm to all of the participants who need it
will definitely put us to the test."
"This exercise is the real deal," Sawyer added. "Our mission is to
deliver tactical communications systems for dominant combat operations
anytime, anywhere and we're ready to prove we're up to the challenge."
Military representatives from close to 20 different nations are expected
to check out what African Lion is all about this year. "The embassy has
invited a host of nations this year to expand African Lion into a true
multi-lateral exercise," U.S. Army Maj. Barrett McNabb, U.S. Embassy
Rabat liaison officer, said in a recent Marine Corps Forces Africa news
article. "The intent is to invite our partner nations from Europe and
Africa to act as observers this year and expand to participation in the
years ahead."
Mumford said he is hoping that Reserve combat communications
participation might also expand in the years ahead. "We're hoping that
our participation in African Lion this year might open up some more
doors for us in the future," he said. "This training is a perfect fit
for us and we'd love to do more of this type of thing in the years
ahead."
The 55th CBCS is one of four Reserve combat communications squadrons
that fall under AFRC's 960th Cyberspace Operations Group. The combat
comm squadrons provide theater-deployable communications during wartime
and contingency operations or humanitarian missions in austere
locations.
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