By Airman 1st Class Rachel Loftis, 99th Air Base Wing Public
Affairs / Published January 21, 2016
NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE, Nev. (AFNS) -- Air Force senior leaders,
industry executives, joint and coalition warfighters converged for the 2016
Weapons and Tactics Conference, hosted by the Air Combat Command at Nellis Air
Force Base Jan. 3-16.
"WEPTAC is where wars are won," said Lt. Col.
Kendrick Carroll, the ACC's WEPTAC chairman. "There is no other venue on
this planet where you can get the best and brightest subject matter experts
throughout all the domains in one location to work on solving today's biggest
warfighting challenges."
Weapons officers from across the Air Force capitalized on
this year's theme, "Integrating multi-domain effects into next
generation's warfighting," alongside their joint and coalition
counterparts, Carroll said.
"What that means is we're taking all of our
capabilities: air, space, cyber, land, sea, and electromagnetic, and
integrating those into a combined effect so that we can continue to be the
world's greatest Air Force," he said. "We're taking the world's most
complex problems, what we call major combat operations, and we are essentially
planning to engage if and when an MCO is required, so that we can bring all
those domains to bear."
The conference, divided into two parts, includes a mission
area working group portion where hand-selected teams of weapons officers gather
to troubleshoot current air, space and cyberspace challenges. During the second
week, participants transition into the Tactics Review Board, where tactics,
techniques and procedures are improved upon using creative, cost-effective
solutions.
For the first time, WEPTAC involved coalition partners this
year.
"We are a much smaller fighting force than what we used
to be five to 10 years ago," Carroll said. "What the coalition allows
us to do is leverage upon their additional capacity in capability because we
won't fight another MCO with just the U.S. Air Force. It will be the U.S. Air
Force, Army, Navy and coalition partners. In order for us to levy on joint and
coalition capability and capacity we have to integrate them in the planning
process, so there is no lag or gap in capability, and that's what we're doing
here."
According to Carroll, there have been cases where solutions
developed at WEPTAC were implemented into real-world operations in a matter of
30 days or less.
Gen. Frank Gorenc, the commander of U.S. Air Forces in
Europe-Air Forces Africa, provided this year's keynote address, where he
commended the participant's fiscal and technical innovation, along with their
ability to force multiply with partner services and nations.
"I am so excited to be here," said Gorenc, who's
served in the Air Force for 37 years." To hear what you all came up with
... I rely on the captains, majors and subject matter experts in this room to
inform me.
"Since I have been in, these new capabilities have been
incredible; we turned short range into long range, long range into unlimited.
We've turned unguided bombs into precision-guided or GPS weapons. We've turned
line-of-sight into beyond line-of-sight, we've given legacy equipment
modifications and it works side by side with the new," Gorenc continued.
"I've seen a lot and know what we're capable of and I'm counting on all of
you to keep the world's greatest power strong."
WEPTAC aligns with ACC's priorities, including delivering
the greatest amount of combat capability to meet national security objectives
and win the nation's wars.
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