Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Airmen, F-16s arrive in Colombia for bilateral engagement



8/12/2014 - RIONEGRO, Colombia  --  Airmen from the South Carolina Air National Guard landed in Rionegro, Colombia, near the city of Medellin over the weekend to participate in a bilateral engagement with airmen from the Colombian air force.

One hundred Airmen and six F-16s will participate in the combined air operation engagement, which is the first major joint-air engagement opportunity under the auspices of the South Carolina's State Partnership Program with Colombia.

"This is the first time Colombian air force and South Carolina Air National Guard airmen have had the opportunity to work side-by-side, share tactics, techniques, procedures, and engage their counterparts in an operational environment," said South Carolina Air National Guard State Partnership Program Director, Lt. Col. Andrew Thorne.

The primary purpose for the exercise, dubbed "Relampago 2014" by the Colombian air force, is to prepare the two Air Force units to work together in the future, thus strengthening military-to-military relationships at all levels of command. Whether they join to provide natural disaster relief or humanitarian support, practicing together now will strengthen their ability to work as a team when needed.

"We are maintaining our different levels of training, exchanging experiences with each other to improve our international capabilities with other countries, additional experience for our KFIR pilots adds to our interoperability capability," said Colombian air force General Guillermo Leon Leon (sic), General of Air for the Colombian air force.

The exercise will allow the U.S. and Colombian airmen to share tactics, techniques, and procedures on many subjects including defensive air operations, operations coordination and scheduling, and best maintenance practices; all of which can be applied to maritime, littoral waters, over-land areas of operations, and defense of national territory. Additionally, working side-by-side with their Colombian counterparts provides a chance to build camaraderie and fellowship amongst the two Air Forces.

"They really want to work with us, and we really want to work with them," said Senior Master Sgt. Martina Borg, maintenance supervisor for this event. "For instance they needed to borrow a piece of equipment to get oil out of their aircraft for testing, which caused us to stay late. Because we missed our ride back to where we're staying, the Colombian pilots were able to give us a ride home."

The engagement builds upon a strong tradition of the Colombian air force successfully participating in joint-engagement together with the U.S. Air Force and other allied countries.

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