by Airman 1st Class Benjamin Raughton
2nd Bomb Wing Public Affairs
7/30/2013 - BARKSDALE AIR FORCE BASE, La. (AFNS) -- There's a
single point on base where Airmen perform a critical part of the
mission here to fuel, maintain, load and test missiles -- all under one
roof.
The Airmen assigned to the 2nd Munitions Squadron Cruise Missile Flight
at Barksdale Air Force Base, La., sustain Air Force Global Strike
Command's only Conventional Air Launch Cruise Missile stockpile.
"Our number one goal is deterrence," said Master Sgt. Scottie Cantrell,
the NCO in charge of launcher maintenance. "We work on a fascinating
weapons system that is guaranteed to work."
"One can think of a cruise missile as a small aircraft that doesn't come
back," said 2nd Lt. Dayna Grant, the 2nd MUNS assistant cruise missile
flight commander. "It is one of the smartest weapons in our inventory
and provides a long-range strike capability."
However, cruise missiles boast more than just a longer range over conventional munitions.
"The cruise missile has a jet engine, flight control surfaces and
internal navigation controls which act like a pilot to steer the
missile," said Capt. Andrew Cooper, the 2nd MUNS cruise missile flight
commander. "It can change altitude or direction and make multiple passes
over its target."
Cruise missile technology allows B-52H Stratofortress aircrews to launch them far from harm.
"The B-52 can fly into a region and the missile will cover the rest of
the distance while the B-52 flies home without being in danger," Cooper
said.
Due to the missile's highly technical construction, Airmen who work on
them require diverse training that begins at Vandenberg AFB, Calif.
"This career field is one of the most versatile career fields in the Air
Force," Grant said. "It encompasses a variety of different skill sets,
to include technical expertise in fuels, structures, weapons loading,
electric maintenance, avionics and handling."
In pursuit of excellence, cruise missile flight Airmen work hard to accomplish the deterrence mission.
"The world doesn't know where our nuclear-capable submarines are, and
they don't know the status of our intercontinental ballistic missiles,"
Cooper said. "But they can see Barksdale (AFB Airmen) generating B-52s
on the flightline which can be enough to quell conflict in a region
because they know America's capability. The rest of the world can see
the B-52 fleet and its arsenal of weapons and know that we can reach out
and touch them."
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