by Air Force Staff Sgt. N. Alicia Halla
176th Wing Public Affairs
6/17/2014 - JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska -- The
office bustled with olive green jumpsuits, the smell of pizza, and a
dozen conversations dropping terms such as "sorties" and "objective." At
the white board near a high table covered in maps, a 6-foot-plus
commander in a flight suit bearing the 144th Airlift Squadron patch
scribbled information and directed various personnel.
Ring, ring. "Mission planning cell," a serious face answered one of the uniformly black office phones.
The mission planning cell was the eyes and ears of the air and ground
forces commanders, assigned to the task of command-and-control for the
Joint Forcible Entry Exercise's many moving parts.
More than 1,500 service members drawn from Alaska, Oregon and Guam came
together for a large joint-force exercise at Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson and at Fort Greely, near Delta Junction, last week.
The Joint Forcible Entry Exercise - a sizable undertaking by the Alaska
Air National Guard's 176th Operations Group, U.S. Army Alaska's 4th
Infantry Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, the
Oregon Air National Guard's 125th Special Tactics Squadron, and the Air
Force's Guam-based 36th Contingency Response Group - demonstrated close
cooperation and the ability to project combat power.
The six-day event involved a mock airfield seizure from enemy forces,
multiple airdrops, and airlift transport of more than 500 tons of cargo
and more than 650 Soldiers and Airmen. It included a jump with more than
400 paratroopers, intelligence and reconnaissance operations, simulated
firefights, a medical evacuation exercise, air traffic control and
more.
Exercise organizers attributed its success to the flexibility and positive attitudes of the entire team.
"Sometimes people focus on why we can't," said Army Col. Matt McFarlane,
the JFEX ground forces and 4-25th IBCT commander. "We focused on how we
can."
Planning began in October 2013 and required considerable cooperation
between participants and critical support from other agencies such as
the 3rd Operation Group; the 176th, 773rd and 673d logistics readiness
squadrons; and the 176th Maintenance Group.
The Alaska Air National Guard's 176th Wing, with its wide range of
missions, was able to furnish support normally requiring several wings.
For example, the original plans called for preparing only 12 aircraft,
wing maintainers were able to provide 16 mission-ready aircraft -
including the C-17 Globemaster III, C-130 Hercules, HH-60 Pave Hawk
helicopter and HC-130 King aircraft - for more than 70 flying missions
during the exercise. They were able to repair aircraft in 45 minutes -
work that usually takes four days, according to Air National Guard Lt.
Col. Michael Griesbaum, the 176th Operations Group deputy commander, who
served as deputy air forces commander for the exercise.
Unforeseen factors required speedy cooperation by support agencies.
Changes included moving the original drop zone for the paratroopers from
Allen Army Airfield at Fort Greely to Malemute Drop Zone on JBER due to
unsafe wind conditions.
The organizations achieved interoperability - working together to
achieve service-specific training, learning each other's terminology,
and building stronger relationships.
"The intention is to continue these mutually-beneficial large force
exercises in the future," said Air National Guard Col. Blake Gettys, the
176th Operations Group commander, who served as the exercise's air
forces commander.
Tuesday, June 17, 2014
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