by Airman 1st Class Sahara L. Fales
Minot Air Force Base Public Affairs
12/3/2014 - MINOT AIR FORCE BASE, N.D. -- Battling
harsh winds and temperatures 20 degrees and below for several days,
operations and maintenance Airmen joined together to successfully fly 40
out of 40 sorties during Prairie Warrior surge week, Nov. 17-20, on
Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota.
The purpose of the exercise was to demonstrate conventional capabilities in a realistic training environment to simulate combat.
"Prairie Warrior provided us with some outstanding visibility, because
we were able to exercise realistic and challenging scenarios that we
don't normally encounter," said Col. Kieran Denehan, 5th Operations
Group commander. "This is where we put our training to the biggest
possible test outside of a combat environment."
Air crew members were issued weapons, met with a chaplain, received a
weather intel brief and a pre-takeoff brief just as if they were
preparing for war, said Capt. Michael Devita, 5th Operations Support
Squadron conventional plans flight commander.
With only 16 jets available and 12 scheduled to fly on the first day,
the maintainers' skills were put to the test to have 10 jets prepared
for takeoff first thing the next day.
"A B-52's normal flying rhythm is every other day," said Senior Master
Sgt. Paul Crisostomo, 69th Aircraft Maintenance Unit lead project
supervisor. "Our ability to be able to fly a jet one day and turn around
and fly it twelve hours later speaks volumes of the good work that our
Airmen are doing out there."
In addition to the 22 sorties in the first two days, they also flew 10
on the third day and eight more on the fourth to conclude the exercise,
Crisostomo said.
The demanding mission of Prairie Warrior had Airmen working 12 hour
shifts the entire week to provide full-spectrum deterrence and
maintenance on the B-52H Stratofortresses. Day shift focused primarily
on getting the bombers loaded and up in the air, while night shift was
responsible for recovery, refueling, service and pre-flight checks.
"I only had so many load crews and maintainers," Crisostomo said. "They
were all hopping from jet to jet just getting the job done!"
Because of their hard work throughout the week, the base was able to fly
40 out of 40 sorties with 33 on-time takeoffs and successfully dropped
119 munitions.
Crisostomo attributes the most successful surge MAFB has had in about
five years to the outstanding teamwork among all of the squadrons.
"Prairie Warrior was a huge success for us," said Col. Jason Armagost,
5th Bomb Wing commander. "Just weeks after coming out of succeeding in a
large-scale nuclear exercise, we accomplished our base's largest
conventional exercise of the year -- and we crushed it."
Wednesday, December 03, 2014
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