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    Keeping the Battlefield Connected

    Alabama Air National Guard Supports Northern Strike

    Photo By Staff Sgt. Sean Moriarty | U.S. Air National Guardsman with the 232nd Combat Communications Squadron, Montgomery,...... read more read more

    ALPENA, MI, UNITED STATES

    08.17.2023

    Story by Staff Sgt. Sean Moriarty 

    Michigan National Guard

    ALPENA, Mich. - A team of Alabama Air National Guard Airmen kept the communications lines open during Northern Strike 2023 - one of the nation’s country’s largest annual National Guard training exercises.

    Members of the 232nd Combat Communications Squadron, which is based in Montgomery, Alabama, traveled to the Alpena Combat Readiness Training Center in northern Michigan to support Exercise Northern Strike for two weeks in August. The Airmen came with two missions; train their members in an environment that emulates reality, and showcase their skills as an essential component to the new direction of field combat.

    “Comms”, short for “Communications,” is critical to success in combat and is therefore an integral part of military exercises such as Northern Strike. The U.S Air Force has always required communications squadrons, such as the 232nd, to be present at the installation of forward operating bases or long term encampments.

    “Units like ours are responsible for opening air bases,” said Senior Master Sgt. Brett Weir, section chief of the 232nd’s flexible communications team. “We’re the first ones there after TACPs clear the area and we’re one of the last groups out when bases leave.”

    Part of what what makes an event like NS23 so valuable is the opportunity to practice and implement Agile Combat Employment (ACE) skills, a new operational scheme that the Air Force has been standing up to contend with an ever- changing environment. ACE uses the concept of Air Force units beinig fast and mobile in order to disrupt adversary planning while also veiling the capability of friendly forces. The purpose of ACE is to forego construction of large permanent installations in favor of assets that are portable and just as effective.

    “The old ways of setting up a big base, big package, lots of people in an area. That’s not the way anymore,” said Master Sgt. William Proffitt, section chief of the 232nd’s small combat communications team. “Now it’s small, fast, moveable, lightweight and tactical. So, we have to get used to it.”

    The 232nd provided critical communication services during the exercise, implementing an ACE communications package designed by the unit. During the landing of a KC-135 Stratotanker and hot refuel, where the aircraft remains running, a three-Airman man crew of communication specialists removed 350 pounds of equipment through a bottom hatch in the aircraft and lowered it 12 feet to the ground. The team then transported the equipment toward the nose of the plane and carriedied it to a safe distance. Once the equipment was moved, the team set up an antenna, dish, switches, and routers to be able to contact servers via satellite. Although the small team had practiced with this equipment, they had never done the demonstration out of a running aircraft prior to Northern Strike. During the exercise, the team achieved connectivity and established communication within 25 minutes of opening the hatch.

    “Unprecedented,” said Major Jeremy Cushen, 232nd director of operations. “No one had ever done this before and this is the fastest we’ve been able to do it.”

    The effect of this maneuver is the ability for aircraft to quickly have communications with higher headquarters or other friendly forces wherever and whenever they land. Furthermore, NS23 was a proving ground to show that this kind of package can be used between services to support joint assets outside the Air Force. With the introduction of ACE, the 232nd proved a key mission capability.

    Weir attributed the 232nd’s mission success to the comraderie of the unit’s Airmen.

    “We have one of the closest, tight-knit units I’ve seen,” says Weir said. “If you ever meet someone from the 232two-three-two, you’ll see they’re always together, and they’re always making the job happen.”

    Exercise Northern Strike 2023 is a premier reserve component training event that integrates both U.S. and partner nation readiness training to building interoperability and strengthen partnerships in an all-domain environment.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 08.17.2023
    Date Posted: 08.18.2023 10:33
    Story ID: 451604
    Location: ALPENA, MI, US

    Web Views: 109
    Downloads: 1

    PUBLIC DOMAIN