505th Command and Control Wing
11/19/2012 - HURLBURT FIELD, Fla. -- After
years of need, discussion and planning, the future is here. On Nov. 5,
the 505th Training Squadron, part of the 505th Training Group, and 505th
Command and Control Wing, began teaching its first Air Operations
Center Integrated Air and Missile Initial Qualification Training Course.
The course addresses the challenges of planning and synchronizing
cross-combatant command IAMD operational command and control within an
AOC. Upon completion of the course, students are certified as basic
qualified in AOC weapon system IAMD planning and operations tasks and
will return to their respective AOC able to integrate with, and
articulate to, joint and coalition partners Air Force IAMD plans and
operations.
The 505th TRS recognized the world-wide need to train operational-level
integrated air and missile defense planners and operators, to include
joint partners, to function with and within the command and control
plans team and IAMD cell.
"As the air and missile threat from potential adversaries rapidly
increases, we need to stay ahead of emerging rival capabilities across
the globe," said David Connelly, IAMD course manager of 505th TRS. "With
the introduction of the IAMD course, our goal at the 505th is to train
warfighters at the operational level of war in countering these
dangerous weapons. Understanding the concept of integrating offensive
and defensive capabilities between military services and across
geographic areas of responsibility is a primary objective of the five
day IAMD course. I would not be surprised to see this curriculum expand
in depth and breadth over the coming months and years to keep pace with
the opposition."
The course has been in the making for almost a year, leveraging command
and control expertise at the 505th TRS, AOCs across the world, and joint
partners such as the Army's Air Defense Artillery and the Fires Center
of Excellence, the Navy's Air and Missile Defense Command, and the
Missile Defense Agency.
LTC Shana Peck, an Army Liaison Officer in the 505 TRS and one of the
courses' lead developers said, "Aggressive IAMD education and training
is crucial in order to prepare warfighters to meet the expanded
proliferation of potential adversary air and missile threats," said U.S.
Army Lt. Col. Shana Peck, an liaison officer IAMD is inherently joint
and interdependent, relying on synchronized planning and execution
processes amongst service components for global ballistic missile
defense, cross-area of responsibility operations, and Coalition/Allied
IAMD integration. This new rigorous five day Joint IAMD Course fosters
unity of command and effort in meeting this mission set."
The other lead developer, Chuck Charlton, an instructional systems
design expert said, "This was an interesting course to develop from the
ground up, especially with the limited documented joint tactics,
techniques, and procedures available for this emerging mission."
The commander of the 505 TRS, Lt. Col. Francisco Gallei, stated, "Nobody
does operational-level command and control like the Air Force. It is
one of the most critical functions we bring to the joint force, and
combatant commanders expect it without question. With increasing threats
and the complexity of air and missile defense, it was logical for us to
create a course to plan and execute the IAMD mission from an AOC. I
wish I would have had this training when I was assigned to an AOC."
The 505 TRS is the Air Operations Center Formal Training Unit for the
Air Force as well as joint and coalition partners. The unit teaches 15
initial qualification courses for the AOC weapon system, awarding nearly
1,400 graduates a basic qualification status. In addition, the squadron
teaches the joint certified Joint Air Operations Command and Control
Course (JAOC2C) to 400 students per year, ensuring complete transparency
in the theater air planning process. It is comprised of C2 experts from
across the Air Force, Army, Navy and Marine Corps active and reserve
forces and government service employees.
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