The NATO Command Structure In Transition

04/15/2013
04/15/2013: During the Lisbon Summit in 2010, Alliance leaders agreed they wanted a leaner NATO Command Structure that is more affordable and more deployable on operations.

The new structure represents a significant reduction in the number of military headquarters and a manpower savings of about 30 percent.

 Credit:NATO Channel:1/31/13

Eielson AFB Operations

04/11/2013

04/11/2013: Various footage of Eielson AFB, Alaska.

 Credit:354th Fighter Wing:2/1/13

http://www.eielson.af.mil

Eielson Air Force Base (AFB) (IATA: EIL, ICAO: PAEI, FAA LID: EIL) is a United States Air Force base located approximately 26 miles (42 km) southeast of Fairbanks, Alaska and just southeast of Moose Creek, Alaska.

The host unit at Eielson is the 354th Fighter Wing (354 FW) assigned to the Pacific Air Forces Eleventh Air Force. The 354 FW primary mission is to support Red Flag – Alaska, a series of Pacific Air Forces commander–directed field training exercises for U.S. Forces, provides joint offensive counter-air, interdiction, close-air support, and large force employment training in a simulated combat environment. Eielson AFB was established in 1943 as Mile 26 Satellite Field. It is named in honor of polar pilot Carl Ben Eielson. The 354 FW is currently commanded by Brigadier General Mark D. Kelly.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eielson_Air_Force_Base

At the center of the U.S. contribution to Pacific defense is the ability to provide strategic depth for our allies. Much of this depends on the contribution of Alaska.

As retired Lt. Gen. Charles Heflebower, former 7th Air Force Commander, put it in a recent interview:

The ability to surge in force is crucial. When I was there (in South Korea), I calculated that if we could remain viable through the first 20 days of combat, forces could be surged to the area and turn the tide.In this sense, Alaska is a crucial asset to any American Pacific strategy.

 http://defense.aol.com/2012/10/05/obama-pacific-pivot-turns-on-alaska/

 

 

 

 

 

F-35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter

04/10/2013

04/10/2013: Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 121 conducted its first F-35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter Short Take Off, Vertical Landing operations aboard Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Ariz. at approximately 8:45 a.m. March 21. This was also the first dual flight of VMFA-121 F-35B aircraft. 

F-35 test pilot Maj. Richard Rusnok flew BF-19 and conducted the STOVL operations while VMFA-121 commanding officer.

Lt. Col. Jeffrey Scott flew BF-20 as a chase aircraft.

This occasion marked an important milestone for the F-35 program showing the ability to perform a vertical landing outside of a testing environment.

 Credit:Marine Corps Air Station Yuma:4/3/13

F-22s Exercise During Polar Training

04/10/2013: F-22s on JBER preparing for take off during the exercise Polar Force 13-3.

Credit:Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson Public Affairs:4/7/13

Joint Base Elmendorf–Richardson conducted an F-22 deployment exercise during Polar Force 13-3.

The deployment exercise put airman in a situation where jets needed to be deployed and received as quickly as possible.

Air Force personnel assigned to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson are participating in Exercise Polar Force 13-3, an operational readiness exercise designed to test JBERs short notice deployment capabilities, April 1 through 8.

The weeklong ORE validates and evaluates the wing’s ability to integrate, mobilize, and prepare assigned personnel, aircraft and equipment for their wartime mission and to employ forces and weapons systems to perform missions at a the drop of a hat.

In phase one of the two-phase exercise, base personnel were called upon to be prepared and ready to deploy within hours of being notified.

The process is designed to provide operational training in every aspect of a  deployment situation.

These scenarios include in-processing newly arrived overseas personnel from a Non-combative Evacuation Operation and also include briefing, coordinating and out-processing deploying Airmen through the Joint Mobility Center.”

It’s important for the mission because it’s a way of having us ready at all times, in case it happens in the real world,” Staff Sgt. Eduardo Peguero, 673rd Force Support Squadron, Noncommissioned officer in charge of the Personnel Deployment Function line.

During the NEO phase, base personnel organize and assist with the arrival of displaced personnel who have been affected by the scenario presented during the exercise.

It included the participation of volunteers portraying in-bound arrivals waiting to be escorted. Airmen in civilian attire are used in these situations to help increase accuracy and realism throughout the exercise.

The rest of phase one is dedicated to planning and preparing for an impending mock deployment when personnel are notified if they will be deploying and told when to report to the JMC where they will be processed through the Personnel Deployment Function line, a series of stations that process people deploying.

“The line is there to make sure that people meet the requirements to deploy,” said Peguero.

“For the most part a lot of the things can be taken care of in the line but members are given an Area of Responsibility check list that they must complete before they come here.”

The PDF line is a final check to ensure that deployers have met all the training requirements to deploy. Phase two of the ORE is designed to demonstrate Airmen’s ability to survive and operate under simulated combat conditions. The training during this phase will to provide an experience similar to a deployed environment, without leaving the duty station.

http://www.jber.af.mil/news/story_print.asp?id=123342958 

 

 

 

USS Arlington LPD24 Commissioning

04/10/2013: USS Arlington LPD24 Commissioning was held in early April 2013.

Credit:Defense Media Activity – Navy:4/8/13

According to Scott McCaffrey of The Sun Gazette:

A crowd of 6,000 gathered April 6 at Naval Station Norfolk for the commissioning of the USS Arlington in a colorful ceremony whose roots date to the year before the Declaration of Independence was signed.

 “We are a warship, and we are prepared to do our nation’s bidding,” said U.S. Navy Cmdr. Darren Nelson, commander of the landing platform dock, as the ship was placed into commission.

 The mission of the ship, its 28 officers and 332 enlisted personnel will be to support the movement of up to 800 Marines and their equipment to world hot-spots.

 The name “Arlington” was selected to honor the 184 victims of the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon, and to salute the first-responders whose actions prevented further loss of life and saved the building. In the crowd were about 50 people who lost family members in the attack.

 “I want you to know what an outstanding ship you’re getting,” Nelson told the assembled crowd on a pier usually reserved for aircraft carriers. “I couldn’t have picked a finer crew. We will be the bearer of freedom wherever we go in the world.”

 http://www.sungazette.net/arlington/news/uss-arlington-commissioned-as-symbol-of-nation-s-might-resolve/article_f885650e-9f80-11e2-aaf7-0019bb2963f4.html

 Scenes include several shots of the ship.

 Second Line of Defense attended the christening of the ship in 2011.

 http://sldinfo.wpstage.net/building-the-lpd-17/

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

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

 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/the-uss-arlington-the-latest-ldp-17-adding-capability-to-the-arg/