by Airman 1st Class Ryan Conroy
31st Fighter Wing Public Affairs
3/17/2014 - LASK AIR BASE, Poland -- At
the invitation of the government of Poland, twelve 555th Fighter
Squadron F-16 Fighting Falcons and approximately 200 personnel assigned
to the 31st Fighter Wing at Aviano Air Base, Italy, arrived at the U.S.
Air Force Aviation Detachment here, March 14-15.
Over the next several days, U.S. Air Forces in Europe and the Polish Air
Force will be conducting an off site bi-lateral training event that
demonstrates the U.S.'s commitment to collective defense
responsibilities under NATO's objectives.
"One of our objectives is to develop bonds so if something happens, and
we have to take action in a real-world environment, you want to have
trained together in advance," said Lt. Col. John Peterson, 555th Fighter
Squadron commander. "You want to develop those tactics, techniques and
procedures before you're in a combat environment."
Peterson explains that without a consistent training platform, the U.S.
risks reducing its interoperability and its capability to develop and
analyze strengths and weaknesses with partnering countries.
"The devil is in the details," said Peterson. "Unless you figure out how
to work together at a tactical level--from the squadron commander to
the junior Airman turning wrenches--you lose out on the opportunity to
know each other's strengths and develop your weaknesses."
The objectives for the off site training are in line with the aviation
detachment's original intent, which is to remain ready to operate across
the range of military operations with precise, full-spectrum
capability, according to Maj. Matthew Spears, U.S. Air Force Aviation
Detachment commander.
"The aviation detachment consists of a small team of U.S. Airmen, in
country, on a prolonged basis to act as a coordinating element for joint
training between the U.S. and Poland," said Spears. "This is why the
AvDet is in place and this is why we are an active detachment."
The detachment was activated in November 2012, and marked the first
enduring presence of U.S. military members on Polish soil. The Aviation
Detachment's presence in Poland makes it possible to host multiple
allied Air Force elements and serve as a regional hub for air training
and multi-national exercises. They also facilitate and enable combined
U.S. and Polish training and exercises to increase air support to NATO.
The recent arrival of common assets augmenting the detachment marks
another milestone in the rotational deployment of U.S. military
resources since 2012.
"With the arrival of the F-16 Fighting Falcon and the C-130 Hercules in
Poland we have seen a strengthening in our partnership between the U.S.
and Poland, which is in line with making us interoperable," said Spears.
Monday, March 17, 2014
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