by Airman 1st Class Marianique Santos
36th Wing Public Affairs
7/25/2013 - WILLIAMSON AIR FIELD, Australia -- U.S.
Air Force 36th Contingency Response Group (CRG) Airmen from Andersen
Air Force Base, Guam, worked hand in hand with the Royal Australian Air
Force (RAAF) 382nd Expeditionary Combat Support Squadron (ECSS) from
RAAF Base Amberley on an airbase opening and sustainment mission during
Talisman Saber 2013.
The 36th CRG's key mission was to open up the initial airhead for the
surge that would bring in the remaining ground forces for Talisman
Saber. Airhead is a military term used for an area secured in hostile
territory used as a base for the supply and evacuation of troops and
equipment by air.
"We sent an advanced echelon team to Amberley to finalize coordination
that has been going on for almost a year," said Lt. Col. Bill Percival,
36th CRG mission commander for Talisman Saber 2013 and 36th Mobility
Response Squadron commander. "From Amberley, we boarded Australian
C-130Js and infiltrated Williamson Airfield."
The 36th CRG assumed command and control of the airfield from the 1st
Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team,
25th Infantry Division (Airborne), who seized the airfield shortly after
their airdrop July 20.
"In this phase, we are focused on pushing out enemy forces so that we
can quickly transition to the next phase," said Percival. "We just
received the main body of the 382nd ECSS, led by Wing Commander Andrew
Lancaster. Their task is to make the airfield more robust for
sustainment and move toward the humanitarian support phase of the
exercise."
Though the airfield transitioned to Royal Australian Air Force Command
on July 22, Airmen from the 36th CRG continue to perform integrated
airfield functions with the RAAF.
"One of the interesting things about this exercise is we're totally
integrated, which shows our great partnership with the Royal Australian
Air Force," Percival said. "Our guys are manning the entry control point
and defensive fighting positions with RAAF security forces, providing
scenario-based and real-world security. The RAAF air load team is
working side by side with our aerial porters. Our engineers are working
with their engineers to maintain the camp. Every function that we do for
airfield management -- from intelligence to command and control -- is
seamlessly integrated with our allied partners."
Participating in Talisman Saber 2013 provided the Airmen the opportunity
to communicate with their Australian counterparts, allowing them to
learn different aspects of their job and skills for working in a
combined environment. The units learned about each other's
organizational processes, acronyms and equipment.
"Working with the Australian Defence Force, particularly the RAAF 382nd
ECSS, has been simply outstanding," said Staff Sgt. Sydney Okagu, 36th
mobile command and control (C-2) controller. "Not only do we work well
together, both teams have learned a lot from our interaction in the
field."
Percival said that 382nd ECSS and the 36th CRG create a complementary
team. The key differences in how each team deploys their airbase opening
elements allow the units to build on each other's strengths and
mitigate weaknesses.
"Both units are separately very good, but together, unbeatable," he
said. "In a lot of other ways - functions, mentality, mission set -
we're still the same. It's remarkable to see everyone work together.
We're all one team."
Despite donning different uniforms and conversational vocabulary,
members of the Royal Australian Air Force and U.S. Air Force continue to
move forward together in Talisman Saber 2013 to improve combined force
integration for future operations in the Pacific area of responsibility.
"We have gained an operational and tactical understanding of a key skill
set and expanded the operational capabilities of U.S. Pacific Air
Forces CRG," Okagu said. "Working side by side with our Australian
partners will enable future coalition operations in a critical region."
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment