by Staff Sgt. Siuta B. Ika
99th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
1/15/2015 - NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE, Nev. -- A
new era began at the U.S. Air Force Weapons School when its first F-35A
Lightning II touched-down on the flightline here Jan. 15, flown
straight from the Lockheed Martin plant in Fort Worth, Texas.
Working in conjunction with the U.S. Air Force Warfare Center and 422nd
Test and Evaluation Squadron, Col. Adrian Spain, USAFWS commandant, said
the Weapons School's first F-35 will be used to drive tactics
development and that the Weapons School's immediate goal is to create
the curriculum for the first F-35 course.
"That's going to be the initial focus over the next year," Spain said.
"Certainly in the next year-and-a-half or so, we will be far enough
along in continuing [tactics development] to develop a weapons school
syllabus for the F-35 ... in the next two years, we'll be transitioning
pilots in the short term to get F-35 experience, but we'll also be
developing the [combat air forces] syllabus."
The arrival and integration of the F-35 into the Weapons School is a
natural evolution toward the Air Force's desired force mixture and will
have far-reaching effects, explained Spain.
"The addition of the F-35 is something that is unquestionable in terms
of its impact on the rest of the Air Force and our ability to wage war
in a modern battle space," Spain said. "Because it's the latest fighter
we have in our inventory, those capabilities need to be integrated as
quickly as possible and as efficiently as possible, so the rest of the
field knows how to go to war with it, if it's ever called upon."
While the first and subsequent USAFWS-assigned F-35s will initially
operate under the umbrella of the 16th Weapons Squadron, the school's
F-16 squadron, Lt. Col. David Epperson, 16th WPS commander, said it's
important not to template any of the current legacy aircraft - and how
they execute missions - onto the F-35.
"We're going to build the F-35 weapons school cadre out of people from
every MDS, [or] mission design series," Epperson said. "We're going to
continue to take instructors and experts from all the MDSs and combine
them together, so that we can leverage all of their knowledge from their
own MDS as we move forward to the mission sets of the F-35 ... so it's
going to be incumbent upon the [weapons instructor course] instructors,
along with all the operational test and evaluation cadre that develop
the tactics, to think outside of the container, and to look into the
future and develop brand new tactics using their expertise."
Epperson also said the school will take a 'building-block approach' with the F-35.
"U.S. Air Force Weapons School programs, as they are currently set up,
leverage all of the capabilities that the Air Force has to offer,
especially as we get into more of the integrated scenarios toward the
end of the course," he said. "The last three weeks of the course we do
different types of integration and the F-35 will start to integrate as
part of those, even before it stands up as a weapons school course ...
as we learn more through the tactics development of the F-35, we'll see
where it will blend into the current capabilities of the assets we have
at the weapons school and we will make that part of the syllabus, so we
expose the weapons school graduate to the capabilities that the F-35
has."
Maj. Gen. Jay Silveria, USAFWC commander, said the future of the F-35 at the Weapons School and at Nellis AFB is bright.
"We take our role in preparing the F-35 for its initial operational
capability seriously. Nellis is out in front of this -- Nellis is
leading the way in preparing the F-35 and developing the tactics and
testing it operationally," Silveria said. "[Flying the F-35] is like
getting a glimpse into the future. It's pretty amazing to see what the
Air Force is going to be like in the future and that future is pretty
incredible."
The first F-35A USAFWS student course is tentatively scheduled for January 2018.
Friday, January 16, 2015
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