Expeditionary Fire Support System Exercise

03/16/2014

03/16/2014: U.S. Marines with Battalion Landing Team 1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU), conduct live fire training with the M327 120 mm Expeditionary Fire Support System at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C., Dec. 16, 2013.

 The MEU recently completed the Composite Training Unit Exercise in preparation for its scheduled 2014 deployment to the U.S. 5th and 6th Fleet areas of responsibility with the Bataan Amphibious Ready Group.

 Credit:22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit:12/16/13

LCAC Landing at Onslow Beach

03/14/2014

03/14/2014: A U.S. Navy landing craft, air cushion with the Amphibious Assault Unit 4 brings U.S. Marines and equipment with the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) to the beach during a beach assault at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C., Dec. 4, 2013.

 The MEU recently completed the Composite Training Unit Exercise in preparation for its scheduled 2014 deployment to the U.S. 5th and 6th Fleet areas of responsibility with the Bataan Amphibious Ready Group.

 Credit:22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit:12/14/13

C-17 Loaded for Rapid Raptor Exercise

03/12/2014

03/12/2014: A C-17 was loaded up with equipment, by airmen on JBER, to set up a mobile F-22 launch site as part of a Rapid Raptor Exercise.

This exercise was used to determine weight restrictions and time limits.

Video by Staff Sgt. Aaron Johnson | Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson Public Affairs 

01.23.2014 

According to PACAF Commander General “Hawk” Cariisle:

The idea is to take four Raptors and deploy them with a C-17 and to rotate across the Pacific to go to the point of need for implementing missions.

This provided both a tool for enhanced survival and an enhanced capability to apply the force associated with a fifth-generation aircraft as well.

http://breakingdefense.com/2013/11/the-re-shaping-of-pacific-defense-an-interview-with-general-hawk-carlisle/


 Credit: Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson Public Affairs:1/23/14

Visiting the 33rd Squadron, RAAF, Amberly Air Base, Australia

03/08/2014

03/04/2014: Second Line of Defense is visiting Australia and discussing with the Australian Air Force some of their modernizations in shaping new capabilities for Australian and Pacific defense.

Clearly, one such new capability is the 5-ship squadron of A330MRTT tankers, or the KC-30A.

The host for the visit to Amberly was Squadron Leader Chetan Takalkar, Executive Officer of the No. 33 Squadron. 

We will publish our interview with the Squadron Leader in due course.

Two of the five planes were at Amberly during the visit.

Three of the Aussie five tanker aircraft are currently involved in upgrade, testing, and residual acquisition activities in Madrid and Australia. The squadron fleet should be at full strength in 2015.

Last year, in combination with the C-17, the KC-30A squadron supported several F-18 deployments to Guam and to Darwin and Tindal, which demonstrated the ability to move an air wing and support it at extended range with tanker and lift support.

This year the squadron has supported movement of Aussie F-18s from the United States across the Pacific and back to Australia.   

Both operations underscore capabilities which are part of shaping a 21st century Australian force for Pacific defense.

 Credit Photos: Second Line of Defense

  • The first photo shows one of the two tankers at the base inside its hangar.
  • The second and third photos show the other tanker outside on theTarmac after transporting some American pilots for an exercise in the area.
  • The fourth photo shows a crew rest area on the plane.  One of the benefits of a refuelable tanker is that with crew rest areas it can operate for a significant period of time in support of operations.
  • The fifth and sixth photos show the inside of the cockpit.  
  • The eighth photo shows the front of the tanker and two C-17s just in front of the tanker.  The Squadron Commander made the point that the C-17s had brought a significant change in the RAAF with the speed, range and capacity of the new lifter.  The tanker was bringing a similar change to the RAAF as well, and the two working together was going to have a significant impact as part of RAAF modernization.
  • The final photo shows the squadron symbol as seen on the hanger.  The Dragons are working to extend the reach and range of the Aussie forces in the region and worldwide.

 

 

Visiting the Wedgetail Squadron at Williamtown RAAF Base, Australia

03/06/2014

03/06/2014: Second Line of Defense visited the Wedgetail squadron on March 6, 2014 and discussed the standup of the Wedgetail squadron and its initial roll out and path towards changes in the RAAF capabilities over time.

A report on the discussion along with the key themes generated from that discussion will be published in due course.

The Wedgetail is a new capability for Australia.  It is an air battle management system, which provides the AWACS functions for Aussie forces as well.

As an article Frank Colucci put it in 2011:

Highly automated, multi-sensor integration and decision support systems combine multiple tracks for the same target to show Air Combat Officers a de-cluttered battlespace on workstation displays.

Ten identical workstations connected on a Local Area Network enable cabin operators to share workload and can be programmed to accommodate mixed specialists for specific missions.

The cockpit crew, meanwhile, has a filterable, scalable tactical monitor that shows the big picture and relevant threat warnings from the aircraft self-protection suite.

The key to the system is its Multi-role Electronically Scanned Array (MESA) radar  which is a whole different animal from the legacy AWACS radar system.

It is part of the evolving 21st century air systems 360-degree area coverage in a rapidly evolving combat environment.

As the designer of the system, Northrop Grumman, has put it about the MESA radar:

Legacy AEW systems have higher drag antenna configurations and are limited by mechanical scan rates of 10 to 12 seconds. In contrast, the MESA radar has variable scan rates and instantaneous target revisit rates to satisfy diverse mission priorities. Battle managers can assign multiple emphasis sectors with extended range and update rates while maintaining a 360-degree background surveillance picture.

MESA’s radar/IFF system is powered by 288 high-power T/R (transmit/receive) modules driving two side arrays and a “top hat” array. Each array has a large aperture for high gain and directivity of the radar and IFF beams. The “top hat” provides fore/aft coverage for full 360-degree surveillance coverage. This configuration provides radar target tracks through aircraft turns and maneuvers.

MESA is designed to operate with graceful degradation, extending available operating hours for both radar and IFF. MESA’s reliability is higher than AEW systems with separate IFF and radar systems due to fewer parts and shared system hardware between functions.

Operating at L-band enables long-range air and maritime search/track and IFF — all in one multifunction aperture system. IFF responses can exceed radar detections, providing cooperative target detections and situational assessments before targets penetrate radar surveillance coverage. Additionally, L-band provides better detection in rain than higher frequency AEW radars as well as longer range detection of smaller targets.

MESA provides wide area surveillance of greater than 340,000 square miles at rates exceeding 30,000 square miles per second for a typical 10-second scan rate. Since scan rates are variable and sectors selectable, other coverage rates, ranges and priorities are programmable by mission commanders.  Four-dimensional processing, with monopulse angle processing, provides accurate range, azimuth and elevation locations. Doppler processing resolves closely spaced targets in formations.

MESA Radar

Wedgetail is operating now and is in the words of its squadron commander during the interview “on the books and ready to go.”

It has just returned from a Red Flag Nellis exercise where it played a major C2 airborne role at both day and night as a key element for the coalition forces.

According to PACAF Commander, “Hawk” Carlisle, “I have been on the aircraft and it has just recently participated in Red Flag 2014  It is a very capable aircraft, but when it first showed up at an allied exercise in 2010 it has serious challenges with regard to interoperability.  There have been huge strides with regard to its capable to be interoperable.”

There are two dynamics at work with regard to the shift.

The first was “the working relationship between the Australian Air Force (RAAF) and the USAF in focusing upon better integration of our various air battle management systems.”

The second is simply that the Wedgetail is a new generation of software upgradeable aircraft.

The ability to evolve the capability of a software upgradeable aircraft (the F-35 is one as well) was highlighted during the interview in the following terms: “There will never be a final operational capability for the aircraft until it is retired.”

The ability to translate Aussie working relationships with allies into software code is part of the process of enhancing capability over time.

The No. 2 Squadron for the RAAF, which operates the Wedgetail, is a highly decorated squadron with a distinguished combat history.

The Wedgetail in the hands of warfighters with such a distinguished heritage will be a key contributor to providing for Aussie and Pacific defense.

The second squadron of the Australian Flying Corps (AFC) was formed, as 68 (Australian) Squadron, Royal Flying Corps (RFC), at Kantara in Egypt on 20 Sep 1916. Its initial personnel were soon supplemented by volunteers from the light horse regiments and extra mechanics from Australia. The squadron was deployed to the Western Front in Sep 1917.

Equipped initially with DH-5 aircraft, the squadron was a ‘scout’ unit, mainly escorting larger, slower aircraft, and seeking out and destroying enemy aircraft, as well as providing support for ground troops. In France, notable engagements were the third battle of Ypres, and the battle of Cambrai (20 Nov – 7 Dec 1917).

 On the first day of the battle the squadron lost seven of its eighteen aircraft either destroyed or badly damaged; on each day of the battle, losses among the ground attack squadrons averaged 30 per cent. Six Military Crosses were awarded to 67 Squadron personnel for their actions above the Cambrai battlefield. In Dec 1917, 67 Squadron was re-equipped with SE-5 aircraft but its operations throughout the winter of 1917–18 were hampered by bad weather.

The squadron was re-designated 2 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps, on 4 Jan 1918. 0n 21 Jun 1918, 2 Squadron along with 4 Squadron, AFC, and 46 and 103 Squadrons of the RAF, became part of the newly formed 80th Wing. 2 Squadron was active throughout the Allied counter-offensive. 

It was almost as mobile on the ground as it was in the air, relocating on several occasions to ensure it was best placed to support the Allied advance. The squadron’s last major operation of the war was flown on 9 Nov 1918, finally disbanded with disembarkation of last members in Sydney on 18 Jun 1919.

World War I decorations: 6 x Military Cross (1 bar) ; 7 x Distinguished Flying Cross (2 bars) ; 4 x Military Medal ; 1 x Meritorious Service Medal.World War II . 2 Squadron was reformed at Laverton, Victoria on 10 Jan 1937. At the outbreak of the Second World War the unit searched for enemy vessels in Australian waters using Anson aircraft. After being re-equipped with Hudson aircraft, the squadron moved to Darwin in April 1941 to perform anti-submarine activities and general reconnaissance.

A detachment of four aircraft was sent to Koepang on 7 Dec 1941 and then to Penfoei on 11 Dec 1941. The detachment provided cover to Australian troops moving within the islands and attacked Japanese shipping at Menado and Kema early the following year. A Japanese bombing raid on the Koepang base on 16 Jan 1942 damaged a number of planes.

Further losses of aircraft, equipment, and men saw the detachment withdrawn to Darwin on 20 Jan 1942 and to Daly Waters on 18 Feb. A total of 13 crew members were lost during 1942, the squadron’s most active period of operations. Between May and October 2 Squadron attacked Japanese positions and shipping at Ambon, Timor, Koepang, and other islands in the Banda Sea. For this work the Squadron was awarded the US Presidential Unit Citation for ‘outstanding performance of duty in action’.

In 1943, as the Allies gained control of the sky, 2 Squadron made daily attacks on Koepang, Lautem, Penfoei, and Dili. Training on Beaufort bombers commenced late in the year. Working in concert with other units, the squadron opened the new year with attacks on enemy shipping and villages in Timor used by the Japanese and native informers.

A combined attack on a Japanese convoy on 6 Apr saw a cruiser and several other vessels seriously damaged. Between May and June 1944 the squadron was withdrawn from operations and re-equipped with Mitchell aircraft, commencing its first operations on targets in Lautem West on Timor Island on 27 Jun 1944. The end of 1944 was spent targeting enemy barges and freighters, now relied upon to supply their outer garrisons.

In early 1945 these tasks were continued in conjunction with 18 Squadron. 2 Squadron moved to Borneo shortly after the end of the war and played an important role in locating prisoner-of-war camps and dropping supplies to camps in the Celebes. The squadron assumed transport operations until it moved to Laverton in December, when it was reduced to a cadre basis and eventually disbanded on 15 May 1946. Over the period of the war the squadron suffered 176 casualties.

World War II decorations: US Presidential Unit Citation ; 2 x Order of the British Empire ; 21 x Distinguished Flying Cross (1 bar) ; 7 x Distinguished Flying Medal ; 1 x Air Force Medal ; 2 x Mentioned In Dispatches ; 2 x British Empire Medal.

Vietnam

When eight Canberra jet bombers of 2 Squadron landed at Phan Rang Air Base in South Vietnam in Apr 1967, the squadron had already been serving in south-east Asia for nine years. In Jul 1958 it had been sent to Butterworth, Malaya, to relive 1 Squadron, as part of the Far East Strategic Reserve. The squadron remained at Butterworth during the Indonesian Confrontation. Phan Rang Air Base was home to the United States Air Force’s 35th Tactical Fighter Wing, which 2 squadron integrated into. The first of the squadron’s Canberra bombers landed at Phan Rang on 19 Apr and flew their first mission on 23 Apr 1967. For the next four years the squadron flew an average of eight missions a day, seven days a week.

 For the first few months the squadron mostly few ‘combat sky spot’ missions, where aircraft were guided by ground radar to a target and told when to drop their bombs. Most of the flights were flown at night and tended to be routine and boring. In September the squadron began low-level daylight bombing, hitting targets from low altitude, between 370 and 915 metres. The squadron had conducted similar bombing missions in Malaya but refined its accuracy in Vietnam to such an extent it consistently out-performed all other units of the 35th Tactical Fighter Wing.

This high proficiency was not limited to just aircrew, but applied to the ground crew as well. The maintenance staff worked 24 hours a day on a two-shift roster, achieving the noteworthy rate of 97 per cent serviceability. The squadron hit targets from the demilitarised zone in the north, the border between North and South Vietnam, and the Mekong Delta in the south. This included enemy concentrations around Hue, the siege of Khe Sanh in 1968, and the South Vietnamese attack into Laos in 1971. In total, the squadron flew over 11 900 combat missions. It also lost only two aircraft during the conflict. After serving four years and two months in Vietnam, 2 Squadron returned to Australia in Jun 1971.

Vietnam War decorations: The Cross of Gallantry with Palm, from the Republic of Vietnam; United States Air Force Outstanding Unit Award ; 3 x Distinguished Service Order ; 2 x Member of the British Empire ; 8 x Distinguished Flying Cross (1 bar) ; 1 x Military Medal ; 1 x British Empire Medal ; 35 x Mentioned in Dispatches.

https://www.airforce.gov.au/About-us/Structure-of-the-RAAF/Air-Command/Surveillance-and-Response-Group/No.-42-Wing/No.-2-Squadron/?RAAF-eGx4r/C9zgNsT580V9SD8Qn1fR0ukOs4

[slidepress gallery=’visiting-the-wedgetail-squadron-at-williamtown-raaf-base-australia’]

The photos were shot during the visit on February 6, 2014 and show a Wedgetail being worked on in a maintenance hanger. 

The engines have proven so reliable that there is an old F-111 engine in the hanger to give the new engine maintainers enough work for their qualifications.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Opening a New US Transit Point in Romania to Support Afghan Ops

03/05/2014

03/05/2014: According to a Stars and Stripes piece written by John Vandiver published 2/5/14:

Afghanistan-bound U.S. troops departed from the military’s new transit hub in Romania this week, marking a first for the new facility, which will play a key role as the United States draws down in Afghanistan in the year ahead.

On Monday, about 300 soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division took off for a nine-month rotation from Mihail Kogalniceanu Air Base, which the military refers to as the MK Passenger Transit Center.

The center was established as a replacement for the Manas Transit Center in Kyrgyzstan, which is slated to close in July.

The new MK Passenger Transit Center was built by soldiers from the 902nd Engineer Company (Vertical), which operates under the umbrella of the Germany-based 21st Theater Sustainment Command.

In June, the Kyrgyz parliament voted not to extend the U.S. military’s lease at Manas, which has served as a main transit point for troops moving into and out of Afghanistan over the years.

In October, the U.S. Defense Department announced it would shift the mission of transiting troops and cargo to a facility in Romania.

The MK Transit Center provides “essential logistical, transportation, reintegration and morale and welfare services,” according to the 21st TSC.

This is one of several transportation hubs that will ensure our war fighters get into and out of theater quickly, safely and efficiently, ready to execute missions or reintegrate into their Families, units and communities as the case may be,” said Lt. Col. Wayne Marotto, spokesman for the 21st TSC, in a news release.

The base, near Romania’s Black Sea port town of Constanta, can accommodate about 2,000 transiting personnel at a time and maintains a contingent of roughly 350 servicemembers and civilians to operate the transit center…..

http://www.stripes.com/news/first-troops-move-through-new-us-transit-point-in-romania-1.265698

 Video Credit: American Forces Network Ramstein-Regional News Bureau:3/1/14

USS Somerset Christening: The Latest LPD-17

03/05/2014: LPD-25 is a San Antonio-classamphibious transport dock, is the fifth ship of the United States Navy of that name; in this case in honor of Somerset County, Pennsylvania.The name honors the passengers of United Airlines Flight 93 whose actions prevented terrorist hijackers from reaching their intended target, forcing the airplane to crash in Stonycreek Township in Somerset County, PA, on 11 September 2001.

In the words of Secretary of the Navy Gordon R. England, “The courage and heroism of the people aboard the flight will never be forgotten and USS Somerset will leave a legacy that will never be forgotten by those wishing to do harm to this country.” Some 22 tons of steel from a crane that stood near Flight 93’s crash site have been used to construct Somerset’s stemhold.The contract to build Somerset was awarded on 21 December 2007, to Northrop Grumman Ship Systems of Pascagoula, Mississippi.

Mrs. Mary Jo Myers, the wife of General Richard Myers, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is the ship’s sponsor. Somerset’s keel was laid down on 11 December 2009, at Northrop Grumman’s Avondale shipyard in New Orleans, Louisiana. She was launched on 14 April 2012, and was christened three months later, on 28 July.

She completed acceptance trials in September 2013. On February 3, 2014 the USS Somerset was recorded as the last Navy ship to depart from the Avondale Ship Yard.The ship was commissioned on March 1, 2014 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

 Wikipedia

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Somerset_(LPD-25)


Credit Video: The Pentagon Channel

For our look at the LPD Class see the following:

http://sldinfo.wpstage.net/re-visiting-the-uss-arlington/

http://sldinfo.wpstage.net/uss-arlington-lpd24-commissioning/

http://sldinfo.wpstage.net/remembering-september-11th-the-usn-usmc-way/

http://sldinfo.wpstage.net/a-missed-opportunity/

http://sldinfo.wpstage.net/the-lpd-17-enhances-the-usn-usmc-capabilities-the-prospective-commander-of-lpd-24-discuss-the-future/

http://sldinfo.wpstage.net/remembering-911-christening-the-uss-arlington/

http://sldinfo.wpstage.net/at-the-christening-of-the-uss-arlington/

 

 

The Evolving Contribution of the Army Missile Defense Force

03/02/2014

03/02/2014: In this video prepared by the 94th Army Air and Missile Defense Command located at Fort Shafter near Honolulu, the evolving role of ARMY missile defense is highlighted.

The video played during 94th AAMDC Brig. Gen. Daniel Karbler’s 2013 AUSA LANPAC Panel discussion that he hosted.

(From left) U.S. Air Force Brig. Gen. Paul McGillicuddy, Pacific Air Forces chief of staff, Japan Air Self-Defense Force Maj. Gen. Yutaka Masuko, Director of Defense Operations, Plans and Communications Directorate at the Air Defense Command Headquarters, Maj. Gen. Kevin Pottinger, Individual Mobility Augmentee to the Pacific Air Forces vice commander, and Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force Rear Adm. Ryo Sakai, Commander of Escort Flotilla 1 at Self-Defense Fleet, and U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Daniel Karbler, 94th Army Air Missile Defense commanding general, plan together during Integrated Air and Missile Defense Wargame V on Feb. 14, 2014, in the 613th Air Operations Center at Joint Base Pearl Harbor Hickam, Hawaii. The exercise provided opportunities to simulate integrated engagements between joint U.S. forces and Japan Self-Defense Forces, while aiming to promote missile defense interoperability. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Nathan Allen)
(From left) U.S. Air Force Major Gen. Paul McGillicuddy, Pacific Air Forces chief of staff, Japan Air Self-Defense Force Maj. Gen. Yutaka Masuko, Director of Defense Operations, Plans and Communications Directorate at the Air Defense Command Headquarters, Maj. Gen. Kevin Pottinger, Individual Mobility Augmentee to the Pacific Air Forces vice commander, and Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force Rear Adm. Ryo Sakai, Commander of Escort Flotilla 1 at Self-Defense Fleet, and U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Daniel Karbler, 94th Army Air Missile Defense commanding general, plan together during Integrated Air and Missile Defense Wargame V on Feb. 14, 2014, in the 613th Air Operations Center at Joint Base Pearl Harbor Hickam, Hawaii. Credit Photo: USAF 

The 94th has theater-wide responsibility for an ADA Brigade, 3 PATRIOT Battalions, 1 THAAD Battery on Guam, and currently one mobile radar detachment (the AN/TPY2 Radar) in Japan with an additional radar coming soon to Japan as well based on an announced agreement last Fall.

This function is the 21t century version of the old Air Defense Artillery role for the US Army, and unlike the significant questioning of the future of the Army after Iraq and Afghanistan, this part of the Army is in high demand from the joint forces and has no need to question its role and significance in the Pacific (or of their compatriots in the Middle East for that matter).

We have an upcoming interview with BG Karbler and his joint partners, an interview conducted in Hawaii in late February 2014.

It should be noted that the 94th is moving closer to PACAF:

The 94th Army Air and Missile Defense Command is slated to move to Joint Base Pearl Harbor Hickam in FY2014.

Early 2013, the Pacific Air Force Commander laid out a vision for an Integrated Air and Missile Defense Center of Excellence, which will enhance cooperation between the 613th Air and Space Operations Center, Pacific Air Forces and the 94th AAMDC.

In response, PACAF and the 94TH AAMDC, requested the relocation and permanent bed down of the 94th at JBPHH to fully help realize commander’s integrated vision.

 Credit Video: 94th AAMDC: 4/11/13