by Master Sgt. Todd Wivell
62nd Airlift Wing Public Affairs
8/3/2013 - JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. -- Sixteen
Airmen from the 62nd Airlift Wing recently returned from their
participation in a coalition exercise between the U.S. military and the
Australian Defense Force. That exercise is known as Talisman Saber 2013
and was executed in eastern Australia from July 15th through July 29th.
Joining more than 28,000 of their fellow Airmen, Soldiers, Sailors and
Australian counterparts, the Airmen from McChord were part of an
exercise that trained forces from both nations to operate as a combined
joint task force.
"Talisman Saber is a critical show of coalition interoperability and
Theater Security Cooperation between the United States and Australian
militaries," said Col. Andrew Hird, 62nd Operation Group commander and
Talisman Saber Air Force mission commander. "The strategic airborne
insertion was part of a much larger exercise including the certification
of the U.S. 7th Fleet in a high end war fight."
Exercises are meant to prepare, train, evaluate, identify issues and
further the understanding of how and why things work, this exercise was
no different.
"The most obvious difference between this exercise and our local
training missions is the amount of interest garnered at the highest
levels of military and civilian leadership," said Capt. Dan Edelstein,
10th Airlift Squadron instructor pilot and Talisman Saber aircraft
commander for the lead C-17 Globemaster III aircraft. "It was also a
great opportunity for us to plan and train with C-17s from Hickam and
Charleston.
"We even had a chance to fly a local training mission with the
Australian C-17s a few days later. Even though we were dropping in a
foreign country, our procedures didn't change. In the end, the way we
train at home station is not so different from the way we executed at
Talisman Saber."
Five C-17A aircraft, loaded with more than 400 members of the 4th
Brigade, 25th Infantry Division departed Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, July 19th, enroute to drop zone Kapyong on
the east coast of Australia.
In what is likely a first ever event, a 5-ship of KC-10's refueled a
5-ship of C-17s in a single formation alleviating the need to split the
formations into smaller groups requiring multiple airspace reservations
and formation rejoins. The KC-10 aircrews affected a perfect rendezvous
and excellent air refueling formation passing possibly a record amount
of fuel to the C-17's. This massive formation passed nearly 750,000
pounds of fuel is also a potential first in a single C-17 formation.
"The air refueling likely set records," said Hird. "For a C-17 formation
passing 750,000 pounds of fuel in one element is amazing.
"Conducting the large formation air refueling was an objective that was
proved feasible by the exercise and provides additional flexibility when
time and airspace limits factor into a strategic employment mission
such as this one. I'm confident that this is the first 5-v-5
accomplished by the C-17."
McChord played a significant role in the execution of this exercise and ensured the mission was successful.
"McChord teammates planned multiple layers of contingencies and aided
with Army, Australian Air Forces and joint base support in Alaska and
Hawaii," said Hird. "McChord fielded two of the five C-17's as well as
provided aircrew in partnership with Joint Base Charleston and Hickam
AFB aircrews.
"The phenomenal support and leadership and motivation of the Army and
Air Forces units enabled a last minute successful tail swap and an on
time departure. The planning by all players ensured this mission
success."
"Maj. Wes Skenfield was the key performer for this event," stated
Edelstein. "As the lead planner he did most of the leg work for this
exercise for several months before any of the other crew members became
involved. His experience and continuity were the keys to success for the
mission."
Not only is it important to conduct local and national exercises but
international exercises with our allies are just as equally important.
"This exercise of partnership with our regional ally demonstrated our
ability to successfully operate as a coalition," said Hird. "For the
C-17 community, working together with a foreign military practicing
tactical airdrop employment demonstrated to aircrews from all commands
that we can learn from each other and work together to successfully
execute tactical objectives.
"The positive second order effect is that the captains and staff
sergeants executing the mission last week will be the commanders and
senior noncommissioned officers who are charged to build future
relationships with partner nations. This very successful exercise will
give each of them a positive experience to build from."
Tuesday, August 06, 2013
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