By Senior Airman Brittany A. Chase, 35 Fighter Wing Public
Affairs / Published December 23, 2015
MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan (AFNS) -- Aircraft and personnel from
Kadena Air Base, Misawa AB and the Japan Air Self-Defense Force participated in
Aviation Training Relocation Dec. 1-18 here.
The exercise gave all aircrew members involved the
opportunity to demonstrate interoperability between the Air Force and the
JASDF, fulfill training requirements, practice close air support and perform
basic fighter maneuvers along with counter-air and air-to-air training
scenarios.
The end goal was simple; all units involved hoped to create
a more integrated and proficient bilateral forces.
"We don't get many opportunities down in Kadena to fly
with the JASDF F-2s," said Capt. Brian Anderson, the 67th Fighter Squadron
weapons flight commander. "The JASDF's mission set, different platforms
and skills help to improve our training, as well as theirs; building
international interoperability."
Between the three forces, roughly 800 sorties were flown and
approximately 250 air refueling Ready Aircrew Program sorties were accomplished
providing Misawa's 13th and 14th Fighter Squadrons with valuable training
needed to fulfill monthly and annual requirements.
"The 18th (Operations Support Squadron), (909th Air
Refueling Squadron) is our main source for air refueling," said Staff Sgt.
Bennita Edwards, the 35th OSS host aviation resource NCO in charge. "This
is important to the fighter squadrons and their pilot training because with
each tanker sortie, the pilot attains an additional Ready Aircrew Program
sortie. Depending on the pilot's level of expertise, he or she is required to
reach a specific level of RAP sorties each month/fiscal year to be considered
'combat mission ready.'"
The wide array of aircraft made the exercise equally
beneficial to experienced and newer aircrew.
"The cornerstone of this ATR for us is being able to
participate in the Misawa (large force exercises) that have been
scheduled," Anderson said. "These large scale LFEs continue to help
strengthen bonds between Kadena, Misawa, JASDF and the Navy up here, as well as
give us the opportunity to fly with aircraft we don't normally get to fly
with."
The exercise has proved to be trying, but ultimately helped
communication barriers between both the JASDF and Kadena pilots.
"The language barrier will always be difficult,
however, it's just something we've learned to work through," Anderson
said. "During mission planning it's taken a little bit of give and take to
figure out what they mean and what that means to us so we can efficiently and
effectively accomplish the mission."
While the training has been deemed exceptional by all
involved, it was also an opportunity to continue to build relationships between
U.S. and Japanese allied force.
"Overall the ATR has been a great occasion for all
parties," Anderson said. "We don't get many opportunities to fly with
the F-16 (Fighting Falcons) and F-2s and the JASDF members don't have many
chances to fly with F-15's. So this exercise has given everyone mission
critical training that could help if we had to employ what we learned in a
real-life scenario."
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