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    123rd Airlift Wing participates in multi-national combat exercise

    More than 30 KYANG members participate in Maple Flag

    Photo By Tech. Sgt. Joshua Horton | Airman 1st Class Alex Koehler, a loadmaster for the Kentucky Air National Guard’s...... read more read more

    EDMONTON, AB, CANADA

    06.02.2016

    Story by Airman Joshua Horton 

    123rd Airlift Wing

    EDMONTON, Canada — More than 30 Airmen from the 123rd Airlift wing and two Kentucky Air National Guard C-130s arrived here between May 26 and 28 to participate in Exercise Maple Flag, an aerial combat training simulation involving troops from multiple countries.

    The large-scale exercise is staged annually at Canadian Forces Base Cold Lake to allow junior aircrews to gain experience in a combat environment, said Lt. Col. Charlie Hans, chief of scheduling for the Kentucky Air Guard’s 165th Airlift Squadron and the unit’s mission commander for Maple Flag.

    “What we’ve found over many years is that when pilots enter combat, their highest chance of failure is within their first 10 sorties,” Hans said. “So if we can get them into a simulated combat environment and provide them with some experience, then they have a much higher chance of survival.”

    During the exercise, the Kentucky troops will be working with Airmen from Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia, along with military forces from Canada, Germany, France and Great Britain.

    Airman 1st Class Alex Koehler, a Kentucky Air Guard loadmaster who is participating in Maple Flag for the first time, said he hopes the experience will allow him to “coordinate more efficiently during wartime operations.”

    “I hope to receive the training necessary for me to aid the Kentucky Air National Guard in maintaining a high level of mission readiness,” Koehler said. “Hopefully, as a newer and younger member of the unit, this training will help me to become a more well-rounded crew member.”

    Hans notes that one of the goals is making sure aircrews are proficient at dealing with air-to-air and ground-to-air threats.

    “We can’t shoot back in a C-130,” Hans said. “Our only defense is to basically hide and survive, and then get our mission done and get out of there.

    “The other goal is to get proficient at mission planning,” Hans continued. “When we go out and fly, there’s a ton of stuff that goes on behind the scenes. This includes working together with the other countries and aircraft in order to achieve objectives and putting all that information together for a mission.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.02.2016
    Date Posted: 06.24.2016 12:40
    Story ID: 202384
    Location: EDMONTON, AB, CA

    Web Views: 19
    Downloads: 0

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