Air Guard takes steps to retain seasoned combat controllers.In response to shortages of Air Force special operators, the Air National Guard is setting up a squadron designed to help retain highly specialized troops when they leave active duty. The Oregon Air National Guard's 125th Special Tactics Squadron is scheduled to become operational in 2007. The unit previously was the 244th Combat Communications Squadron. Located at the Portland Air National Guard Base, the 125th has 47 slots for combat controllers and, so far, has filled about 10. Finding those extra controllers won't be easy. The Air Force Special Operations Command Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) was established 22 May, 1990,with headquarters at Hurlburt Field, Fla. AFSOC is a United States Air Force (USAF) major command and is the air component to the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM), a unified command is supposed to have about 384 combat controllers in its 10 active-duty and Guard special tactics squadrons, but currently it only has about 200, said Air Force Lt. Col. Terry Maki, a special tactics officer. The sole Air National Guard special operations Operations conducted in hostile, denied, or politically sensitive environments to achieve military, diplomatic, informational, and/or economic objectives employing military capabilities for which there is no broad conventional force requirement. squadron is the 123rd Special Tactics Squadron, in Kentucky. This leaves few options for special operators leaving active duty who may want to serve in the Guard, but don't want to have to move to Kentucky. "Talk to any combat controller," Maki said. "They'll tell you that they're tired of moving, but they want to contribute." Activating a Guard Special Tactics Squadron on the West Coast will offer geographic flexibility. Based in Portland, the 125th is an ideal location to scoop up Verb 1. scoop up - take out or up with or as if with a scoop; "scoop the sugar out of the container" lift out, scoop, scoop out, take up remove, take away, withdraw, take - remove something concrete, as by lifting, pushing, or taking off, or remove something controllers leaving the 22nd Special Tactics Squadron at McChord Air Force Base McChord Air Force Base (IATA: TCM, ICAO: KTCM) is a United States Air Force base in Pierce County, Washington. As of the 2000 census, it had a total population of 4,096. , Washington, Maki said. These operators are FAA-certified air traffic controllers. While that might conjure an image of a safe job in control towers, combat controllers have more in common with the elite ground forces they support. Trained in numerous forms of infiltration, from high-altitude parachuting to combat diving, Air Force combat controllers accompany Army Special Forces, Rangers and Navy SEALs during missions. "There's no movies made about us," said Sgt. Jim Hotaling, a decorated detachment commander with the 125th Special Tactics Squadron, reflecting a common attitude among controllers that their work often goes unacknowledged. When seizing airfields, the controllers immediately begin directing the influx of warplanes and supply aircraft, no matter what the dangers or conditions. "We'll do the mano a mano ma·no a ma·no n. pl. ma·nos a ma·nos 1. A bullfight in which two rival matadors take turns fighting several bulls each. 2. combat action, take the control tower down, and control the initial flow of aircraft," said Hotaling. "What that means is the full gamut--airborne operations, seizing airfields, providing close air support capabilities and controlling that initial 72 hours of air operations until the situation is stabilized, and we can bring in regular air traffic controllers." In addition to calling in air strikes, combat controllers in Iraq and Afghanistan operated navigational aids, conducted bomb damage assessment Bomb damage assessment, often referred to as BDA, is the practice of assessing damage inflicted on a target by an air campaign. It is part of the larger discipline of combat assessment (CA), also referred to as battle damage assessment (BA). and collected intelligence with unmanned aircraft Unmanned Aircraft (UA) is a term used in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) definition of Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS). UA refers to the aircraft portion of the system required to operate it, also known as Unmanned Aerial Vehicle. , Hotaling said. Each of the 125th controllers is a combat veteran of Afghanistan or Iraq, and many served in both theaters. Hotaling, a former Washington state trooper, estimated that the members of the unit average about 12 years of combat experience. Hotaling noted that combat controllers' jobs have evolved over time. In Operation Anaconda Operation Anaconda is the code name for an operation in early March 2002 in which the United States military, along with allied Afghan military forces, attempted to destroy al-Qaeda and Taliban forces in the Shahi-Kot Valley and Arma Mountains southeast of Zormat. , in Afghanistan, Hotaling directed aircraft using old Soviet maps--which he found to be surprisingly accurate--and a grease pencil grease pencil n. A pencil of hard grease mixed with colorings, used especially for marking on glossy or glazed surfaces. . He ,also had to haul a 143-pound rucksack over 10,000-foot-high mountains and won a Distinguished Flying Cross for the attempted rescue of a downed F-15 pilot in Iraq. A year later, during the Iraq invasion, the rucksacks weight had been reduced by 25 percent. Using wireless equipment has saved controllers from carrying eight pounds of cable. They now have laptops to receive satellite imagery. Instead of having to call in a Predator unmanned reconnaissance aircraft, controllers have their own portable drones. Some special tactics squadrons are proficient in pararescue and combat weather work. The 320th Special Tactics Squadron in Japan and the 321st in England have multiple capabilities. The Kentucky Air National Guard's 123rd Special Tactics Squadron focuses on pararescue and combat control missions. Oregon's 125th is one of three squadrons that specializes in combat control. It varies from other units in that it is funded entirely by the Air Force, and does not get financial support from the U.S. Special Operations Command A subordinate unified or other joint command established by a joint force commander to plan, coordinate, conduct, and support joint special operations within the joint force commander's assigned operational area. Also called SOC. See also special operations. , according to Maki. It will only report to the Air Force Special Operations Command, unlike other special tactics squadrons, which report to U.S. SOCOM SOCOM Special Operations Command (US DoD) . This move was intended to enhance the Air Force's combat control capabilities, said Hotaling. "The problem is that so many of our guys are off doing classified missions with special operations forces Those Active and Reserve Component forces of the Military Services designated by the Secretary of Defense and specifically organized, trained, and equipped to conduct and support special operations. Also called SOF. , that the Air Force has lost a bit of its ability to control (combat controller) forces." Hotaling emphasized that the new Air Force unit is very much aimed at joint-service operations. A series of miscues during Operation Anaconda served as valuable lessons, said Hotaling. He recalled coordination problems, for example, between special operators and conventional forces. While special operations units had combat controllers squadrons, the conventional forces had "tactical air control parties," said Hotaling. "Up until Anaconda Anaconda, city, United States Anaconda (ănəkŏn`də), city (1990 pop. 10,278), seat of Deer Lodge co., SW Mont.; inc. 1887. , we [special operators and the combat controllers] were the only guys in town. Then the conventional guys came in, and you have this clashing of SOF SOF abbr. sound on film assets with conventional assets, who have their own close air support guys [TAC-P]. "So it ended up being a juggling match between all the terminal attack controllers over who was going to get the priorities," he continued. "Troops in contact have the highest priority for close-air support. The problem, as in Anaconda, is when you have multiple troops in contact. Who's deciding who is getting the aircraft?" Calls for close-air support today are executed by joint terminal attack controllers, and they are supposed to follow a common doctrine, regardless of service. Air Force combat controllers are learning how to intemperate in·tem·per·ate adj. Not temperate or moderate; excessive, especially in the use of alcoholic beverages. in·tem per·ate·ly adv. with
the Army and Marines, Hotaling said. "Most team-level operators are
more comfortable talking and being with the other services than being
with the Air Force," he noted. "It's not like you go to
school to speak Army. It's just osmosis osmosis (ŏzmō`sĭs), transfer of a liquid solvent through a semipermeable membrane that does not allow dissolved solids (solutes) to pass. Osmosis refers only to transfer of solvent; transfer of solute is called dialysis. ."
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