By Chief Mass Communication Specialist (EXW) Larry Foos,
Navy Public Affairs Support Element West
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska (NNS) -- Calmly
soaring at 30,000 feet in the midst of nearly 100 fighters, bombers and
refueling tankers executing a battle scenario, an Air Force E-3G Airborne
Warning and Control System (AWACS) surveys every aircraft in a 300 mile radius,
calling out commands, verifying target hits and sending aircraft back home
safely.
Threat detection, improvisation, air battle management - it
was all part of a typical mission for the E-3G crew of the U.S. Air Force 964th
and 966th Airborne Air Control Squadron (AACS), Oklahoma City during Exercise
Northern Edge 2015 in the Joint Pacific Alaska Range Complex.
"We provide the command and control of the aircraft.
It's our job to oversee what's going on, and in real time, make changes in the
air," said U.S. Air Force Maj. Dan Sprunger, 964th AACS mission crew
commander. "We run the tanker plan so when guys need gas, we send them
there. If guys need to fall out, we shift aircraft around. We're like the chess
master of the game."
With as many as 24 weapons officers, surveillance officers,
radar and communication technicians, and flight deck crew on a single E-3G
Northern Edge mission, the AACS gained not only valuable, high-tempo warfare
experience, but also met specific testing goals. The E-3G aircraft carries an
upgraded computer platform for their weapons and surveillance scopes, known as
the 4045. It advances their old operating system by about 30 years. Northern
Edge enabled AWACS personnel to try the new system and they quickly learned the
value of the new features.
"It provides more situational awareness," said 1st
Lt. Breann Hermann, 964th AACS air weapons officer. "You can personalize
it and now you can build unlimited airspaces. It's more reliable and more
technologically advanced."
After each mission, the crew provides feedback on how the
4045 system worked and offer potential areas of improvement. Overall, it's been
a success.
"The system cuts down on (operator's) steps. The ease
of use is drastically higher, and the tracking process goes faster,"
Sprunger said.
By the end of the two-week, biannual Northern Edge exercise,
the AACS' squadrons will have completed approximately 15 command and control
missions using both old and new systems. Both AWACS aircraft effectively
brought dozens of aircraft in and out of the battle range safely and
successfully hitting their targets.
Alaska's premier joint training exercise, Northern Edge
combined approximately 200 military aircraft from all services to practice
operations, techniques and procedures while simultaneously enhancing
interoperability within the JPARC and the Navy's Temporary Maritime Activities
Area located in the Gulf of Alaska. Some 6,000 Airmen, Soldiers, Sailors,
Marines and Coast Guardsmen from active duty, Reserve and National Guard units
participated.
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