by Master Sgt. Phil Speck
123rd Airlift Wing Public Affairs
5/29/2014 - JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska -- More
than 100 Airmen from the Kentucky Air National Guard completed 10 days
of intense combat training here May 23 airlifting 35,000 pounds of
essential cargo and airdropping 280 Army paratroopers into enemy
territory while facing attacks from hostile aircraft and surface-to-air
missiles.
The training, part of a regular Pacific Command exercise called Red Flag
- Alaska, exposed Kentucky's C-130 aircrews to a "hyper-realistic
training environment" that will strengthen their preparation for combat
missions in any setting, said Col. Robert Hamm, commander of Kentucky's
Louisville-based 123rd Operations Group.
"The fast pace and high tension of the exercise required our Airmen to
maintain constant focus despite being mentally and physically fatigued
throughout," Hamm said. "It was as close as it gets to the stress
they'll have to endure in actual combat.
"Our guys accomplished every one of their learning objectives, and I
think it opened up a lot of their eyes about how serious this is --
about how different (combat) is from the way we train locally because we
can't create the same conditions back home."
Among those differences were the ability to train alongside escort and
strike aircraft while facing threats from aggressors in the air and on
the ground. Kentucky's three C-130s were escorted into and out of
hostile territory by F-15 and F-22 fighters, whose mission was to
eliminate enemy aircraft and surface-to-air missile batteries, Hamm
said.
The Kentucky Airmen also had the opportunity to navigate challenging
mountain terrain in the Pacific-Alaska Range Complex where the exercise
was staged, and to interoperate with a full spectrum of assets from
AWACS to A-10s, working with each of these units to plan and execute
every mission.
Lt. Col. Matthew Quenichet, director of operations for the 165th Airlift
Squadron, was pleased with Kentucky's performance in such an intense
environment.
"It was a big accomplishment just to survive the sortie, hit your
time-on-target, make your landing, pick up your cargo, and get it to the
end of the vulnerability zone," he said.
That vulnerability zone is where the simulated war took place. Aircraft
from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson and Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska,
would meet there to begin the conflict. Units took turns being allied
forces or aggressors, while C-130 crews executed various scenarios in
which they had to fly through treacherous terrain, land on dirt-strip
runways, pick up cargo, and airdrop cargo or Army paratroopers.
This exercise marked the first time that Army forces were integrated
into the training, and the Kentucky Air Guard became the first Air Force
unit ever to drop paratroopers into an airfield for a simulated seizure
during Red Flag - Alaska.
"There was a lot of apprehension going into this," Quenichet said.
"People were not sure what to expect, but they were excited. It was a
lot for people to take in. The idea was to throw more challenges at the
aircrews than they would ever see in actual combat."
Two groups of Kentucky Airmen participated in the exercise, Quenichet
added: Highly experienced aircrews with extensive combat exposure in
Afghanistan; and brand-new co-pilots, engineers and loadmasters who had
never seen anything like it before.
"It may have taken the new aircrews an entire career to get this kind of
experience, but they got it in their first couple of months in the
airplane here," Quenichet said. "We worked together as a team to get a
game plan and accomplish this mission. Once we were en route, it wasn't a
simulator. It was real airplanes flying through incredibly challenging
terrain, facing actual threat systems. The only difference between the
scenarios here and real combat was that there weren't pieces of metal
flying at you.
"By the end of the exercise, all our aircrews were right where they needed to be."
Lt. Col. Kevin Allred, commander of Detachment 1, 353rd Combat Training
Squadron, said the event was one of the smoothest Red Flags he's seen.
"I'm very impressed all the way around," Allred said. "From the
deployment to getting in to town, they were all over everything. All of
your crews were fired up to be here -- that's really fun to watch. I
think everyone got really good training out of it, because they wanted
to be here."
Allred also said he was pleased by how smoothly the Army integration
went, adding that officials plan to build on the airfield-seizure
scenario in future exercises.
Hamm credited the 353rd with providing excellent support throughout Red
Flag -- a factor that helped the Kentucky Airmen maximize their training
opportunities.
"The 353rd Combat Training Squadron provided outstanding support for a
phenomenal exercise," Hamm said. "There was no tension, and we got
everything we asked for. We couldn't ask for better support from those
guys."
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