For Space Force Tech. Sgt. Alaowei W. Monibidor, the
call to deploy came with little warning. In just two weeks, he would
leave his home in Maryland for a six-month tour in a location he could
not be told over the phone. Yet his answer was an immediate "yes."
Job:
Mission Readiness Section Chief
Stationed:
Fort Meade, Md.
Unit:
Detachment 2, 53rd Space Operations Squadron, Space Delta 8
This rapid departure and the high-stakes mission that followed
underscore the agility and commitment of Space Force guardians and the
families who support them.
As the mission readiness section chief for Detachment 2, 53rd Space
Operations Squadron, Space Delta 8, Monibidor's job isn't on the front
lines of satellite control.
"Instead, my primary focus is proactive: ensuring the squadron's
personnel are flawlessly trained and ready to perform their mission
24/7," Monibidor explained.
His deployment, however, would take him to the tactical edge of space
operations, supporting joint and coalition partners across Europe,
Africa and the Middle East.
Family Resilience
The decision to volunteer for a short-notice deployment was made
possible by a crucial conversation he and his wife had months earlier.
"I sought her support to accept a future deployment opportunity, and
despite the anticipated challenges, she affirmed her understanding of
the demands of my career path," Monibidor shared. "Her agreement was
vital, as I believe deeply in confronting these professional realities
as a united front."
That unity was tested by the pace of his departure.
"This deployment came with unexpected swiftness," Monibidor said.
"This meant immediate cancellations and an abrupt shift for everyone.
The final two weeks of preparation were mentally draining, but seeing my
family's resilience made all the difference."
The untold story of military families, Monibidor emphasized, is one
of unseen resilience. "The family runs its own parallel mission at home.
Their strength is the silent, uncelebrated foundation of our own."
Critical Missions
His deployment saw him providing critical space electronic warfare
command and control to four combatant commands, a role that shifted
dramatically depending on the region. Supporting NATO
and U.S. European Command involved collective defense within a formal
alliance, a stark contrast to missions in the more volatile U.S. Central
Command area of responsibility.
"It was a fundamental pivot from deterring a peer adversary to
actively countering violent extremist organizations and state-sponsored
aggression," Monibidor noted.
A highlight of his time supporting NATO-Eucom was his involvement in a
special operations forces exercise, the highest level of strategic
military simulation.
"My role was to provide the commanders and their staff with missile
threat warning[s] and options for space electronic warfare command and
control against a near-peer adversary," Monibidor said.
This experience was vital in preparing for the real-world crises he
would face in Centcom's area of operations. In the Middle East, his
space electronic warfare command and control, or SEW C2, support was
paramount.
"My support for SEW C2 revolved around maintaining friendly access to
and superiority in the space domain, while denying or degrading the
adversary's ability to use space for their operations," he explained.
This became critically important during Operation Midnight Hammer, a
complex joint operation aimed at degrading Iran's nuclear enrichment
capabilities.
"I coordinated directly with [U.S. Space Forces – Central] to
synchronize the electronic warfare effects of 11 joint units, delivering
unified effects for the commander of U.S. Central Command, directly
enabling the strike force to penetrate Iran's contested airspace,
precisely destroy its targets and return safely," Monibidor recounted.
"Trust was built when leaders saw a consistent pattern. I learned to
provide them with precisely what they needed to make difficult
decisions."
A Strategic Expert
Guardians like Monibidor are a decisive advantage, said Space Force
Master Sgt. Austin Adams, 53rd Space Operations Squadron training
superintendent and Monibidor's frontline supervisor. "Space is a
complex, technical domain, and he excels in the bridge between joint and
coalition partners. His strategic thinking allows him to translate our
sophisticated space capabilities into understandable, synchronized
effects for our partners. Having an expert like him on the front lines
is mission-essential for modern, integrated warfare."
Reflecting on his deployment, Monibidor is proud of both his
professional and personal accomplishments. Professionally, he is proud
of "using our capabilities to directly protect the U.S and its coalition
partners from a real-world threat, proving our worth at the tactical
edge."
But his greatest pride lies with his family. "Their stability at home
is the bedrock that allows me to do my job, and that is my greatest
accomplishment," he said.
This deployment served as a powerful reminder of the Space Force's integral role in modern warfare.
"This deployment proves that space isn't a separate or future
battlefield; it's integral to every joint operation happening right
now," Monibidor asserted.
Being a guardian at the tactical edge, Monibidor concluded, "means
being the final link, translating our nation's strategic space assets
into tangible combat effects for soldiers, pilots and sailors on the
ground. At the edge, space superiority isn't a concept; it's the daily,
hands-on mission of ensuring our joint and coalition partners can fight
and win."