by Chrissy Cuttita
96th Test Wing Public Affairs
9/26/2013 - EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. -- To
provide Air Combat Command the best assessment of Maritime Strike
Operations, the 53rd Wing partnered with other members of the Team Eglin
test community to deliver increased combat capability for the
warfighter.
The final phase of the two-year evaluation was a month-long test over the Gulf of Mexico that ended Sept. 6.
"Team Eglin successfully conducted the largest scale of DOD weapons test
against small boats in recent history," said Chris Nixon, 96th Range
Support Squadron director who oversees Eglin's Gulf Range of 120,000
square miles of overwater airspace and 724 square miles of overland
space.
The 53rd Wing, headquartered here, tested the combat capabilities of 42
fighter and bomber sorties expending a total of 53 munitions last month
in a maritime environment about 15 nautical miles south of Destin's
coastline. Results from nine aircraft test missions will help the Air
Force and its sister services develop joint platform-specific weapons
loadouts, tactics, techniques and procedures.
The wing's 28th Test and Evaluation Squadron oversaw the unique test
they said ranked fourth in priority in a list of more than 300 Air
Combat Command test missions.
"There are difficulties in finding, tracking and successfully engaging
these threats because they provide challenges unique to the maritime
environment," said Lt. Col. Ben Wysack, the 28th TES's project manager
responsible for the test. "High speed, unconstrained maneuvering and sea
surface conditions present difficult circumstances for successful
target engagement."
The 53rd Wing is ACC's operational test and evaluation organization
responsible for the management, execution and reporting of operational
test and evaluation activities such as Force Development Evaluations,
Operational Utility Evaluations and Tactics Development for all fighters
and bombers in the Combat Air Force inventory.
Aircraft charged with the maritime challenge included the A-10, B-1,
B-52, F-15 and F-16 from the 53rd Wing which manages units in 17 U.S.
locations. Depending on their platform, fighters and bombers were armed
with Sniper and Litening Advanced Targeting pods and various
combinations of munitions such as laser-guided bombs, Joint Direct
Attack Munitions, Maverick air-to-ground missiles, cluster bombs and
20mm and 300mm high-explosive incendiary ammunition.
"The 85th Test and Evaluation Squadron's highly experienced F-16 and
F-15E crews successfully led 36 of the 42 sorties, expending more than
80 percent of the available munitions," said Wysack about the 53rd
unit that participated in all nine maritime test missions. "Access to
their well-maintained aircraft and vast pilot expertise was critical to
effective and efficient test execution. Without the hard work and
dedication of so many at Eglin, this test could not have been conducted
as quickly as it was."
The 96th Test Wing's operations, range, civil engineering and
maintenance groups' personnel and contracted partners provided a wide
variety of distinctive support to ensure the success of this test
program.
"The 96th RANSS and its operation and maintenance contractor, InDyne,
acquired and prepared 56 marine target boats for static testing (boats
with identification numbers, 3D mannequins and radar reflectors at
anchor) and 12 remote control targets," said Nixon. "Our personnel
modified, pre-tested, deployed and remotely operated the remote control
boat targets for the mission."
The 53rd Wing destroyed or damaged 51 of the 56 static target boats and 11 of the 12 remote control boats during the test.
Team Eglin personnel spent more than a year and a half planning test
operations, procuring maritime targets and equipment, completing
environmental reviews and permits, contracting local boat support,
determined mission safety requirements and hazard areas, scheduling
missions, and providing weapon and aircraft support, according to the
96th Operations Group.
"This evaluation solidifies what our crew members have already known,
'We can strike surface targets,'" said Lt. Col. Alejandro Gomez, 337th
Test and Evaluation Squadron special projects officer. "The knowledge we
gain from these events gives combatant commanders assurance we can be
called upon to complete the mission."
The 337th TES, another 53rd unit, tested the capabilities of a B-1B
Lancer launched from Dyess AFB, Texas. During the evaluations, the B-1
dropped a total of six munitions to include a laser guided 500-pound
bomb GBU-54, as well as 500 and 2,000-pound joint direct attack
munitions.
Other 53rd Wing aircrews who took part in the Team Eglin maritime strike
test missions included B-52s from the 49th Test and Evaluation
Squadron, Barksdale AFB, La.; A-10s from the 422nd Test and Evaluation
Squadron, Nellis AFB, Nev., and F-16s from the Air National Guard Air
Force Reserve Test Center, Tucson, Ariz.
In the Gulf, 96th Test Wing units positioned an instrumentation barge
with cameras and remote control relays, placed boat targets for each
mission, piloted remote controlled high speed target boats. They also
provided eight vessels for support. Prior to and after each mission
environmental surveys were conducted. The test hazard area was also
monitored and kept clear with the aid of 19 boats from the local
communities' charter fleet, lessening the burden of the 950 square mile
safety cordon placed on the local fisherman.
During flight operations, the 96th TW provided aircraft traffic control,
central mission control, radar tracking of aircraft and weapons and
unexplosive ordnance disposal when needed. After each mission, target
boats were retrieved for data analysis, and floating debris in the water
was cleaned up by local boats contracted by Jackson Guard.
The 28th TES is responsible for evaluating the large volume of data
collected from flight tests. Once completed, various operational experts
will examine data from the maritime strike missions to determine how
efficiently they tracked, engaged and destroyed the target.
Then operational testers will develop future joint military tactics,
techniques and procedures manuals -- something of significant interest
from the Office of the Secretary of Defense and Navy counterparts,
according to the 53rd Wing.
"Success in these sorts of tests gives our sister services confidence
the B-1 can get the effects they need to meet combatant commander
requirements both over land and sea," Gomez said.
"The 28th TES, in cooperation with other 53rd Wing units located in
Northwest Florida, maximized resource efficiencies and leveraged our
COMBAT HAMMER air-to-ground weapons expertise not only for this test,
but for weapons evaluation opportunities in the future," said Wysack.
"Maritime strike is just one of a variety of operations our military
tests annually here on Eglin's land and Gulf ranges," said Lt. Col.
Peter Vitt, 96th Operations Support Squadron commander. "Each mission is
unique and complex so our team of engineers and operators are crucial
to ensuring the right support for the operations tested here."
The 96th TW, in partnership with its associate units like the 53rd, is
the heart of the team that covers the complete weapon-system life-cycle
from concept through development, acquisition, experimental testing,
procurement, operational testing and final employment in combat. This
synergy is called, "Team Eglin."
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