by Staff Sgt. Russ Jackson
62nd Airlift Wing Public Affairs
7/16/2014 - JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. -- Airmen
and Soldiers from Joint Base Lewis-McChord participated in a water
training exercise at American Lake here July 14 and 15, 2014.
Airmen from the 22nd Special Tactics Squadron's Red Team practiced
helocasting alternate insertion and extraction training with Soldiers
from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment.
Helocasting is an airborne technique used by special operations forces
units for amphibious insertion into a military area of operation. The
unit is flown in by an aircraft, in this case an MH-47 Chinook
helicopter, to an insertion point above the water where the STS members
jumped out of the helo and into the water.
The 160th SOAR was tasked with AIE training and called the STS in hopes
their Airmen would have the training requirement to take part in the
exercise. Red Team had not practiced AIEs in some time and agreed to
join in the two-day training.
During that span, the group conducted 10 daytime helocast iterations and
eight nighttime helocast iterations. Their operations included soft
duck insertions, which involved personnel pushing an inflated zodiac
boat out of the back of the helicopter into the water and jumping in
after it, ladder training and hoist training.
"As combat controllers, we can attach to Navy [special operations
forces], Operational Detachment Alpha, or Marine Corps Forces Special
Operations Command, so we have to be smart on every type of infil and exfil,"
said Staff Sgt. Dallas Stoll, 22nd STS combat controller. "This is why
we practice fast roping, helocast master, and repelling which are all
counted as AIEs."
As one of the most currently trained helocast masters available, Stoll
was chosen to be the STS team leader for the exercise to ensure the
members of Red Team could get the proper upgrade training.
To become a helocast master, an Airman must be an E-4 or above, signed
off by the unit commander and have two daytime iterations and two
nighttime iterations, one with non-combat equipment and one with combat
equipment each.
"As a helocast master, it's my responsibility to ensure my Airmen don't
jump from the aircraft unless we're 10 feet above the water and moving
no faster than 10 knots of airspeed," Stoll said. "Once we're in that
profile, I ensure my guys unhook, get out and get accounted for in the
water as safely as possible."
Soldiers from the 160th SOAR needed to accomplish the upgrade training
for helocasting special operations forces members out of their aircraft.
They used this opportunity to train for extracting members from the
water via a rope ladder and hoist methods as well.
The 22nd STS is a unit of the 24th Special Operations Wing based at
Hurlburt Field, Florida. The primary mission of the 24th SOW is to
provide special tactics forces for rapid global employment to enable
airpower success.
The 24th SOW is U.S. Special Operations Command's tactical air and
ground integration force and the Air Force's special operations ground
force to enable global access, precision strike and personnel recovery
operations
.
In addition to AIEs, STS members train in high altitude low opening and
static line parachute jumps, demolition, controlling landing zones and
helicopter landing zones.
Airmen from the STS can attach to numerous outside units across the
Department of Defense and must be proficient in just about everything.
This exercise proved, once again, that Soldiers and Airmen from Joint
Base Lewis-McChord can train together, fight together and run a base
together.
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
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