Enhancing Global Space Operations by U.S. Space Force Tech. Sgt. Luke Kitterman
July 14, 2022
Members from the Five Eyes (FVEY) alliance
collaborated during a Space Tacticians Course at Vandenberg Space Force Basee, June 21–30,
2022, aimed at enhancing current global space operations through
effective planning.
Hosted by Space Delta 5’s 55th Combat
Training Squadron (55 CTS), the 8-day course consisted of 39 total
personnel, 19 students and 20 instructors, from Australia, Canada,
New Zealand, U.K. and U.S.
Members of the Space Tacticians Course stand in front underneath a static display of a P-40 Warhawk aircraft after completion of their course at Vandenberg Space Force Base, California
on June 30, 2022. Hosted by Space Delta 5’s 55th Combat Training Squadron, the 8-day course consisted of 39 total personnel, 19 students and 20 instructors, from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, U.K. and U.S. with the intent of enhancing current global space operations through effective planning. (U.S. Space Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Luke Kitterman)
|
“The intent of the course is to
train Guardians and Airmen how to plan space operations at the
tactical and operational level,” said U.S. Space Force Capt. Richard
Davis, 55 CTS weapons and tactics flight commander. “As U.S. Space
Force's only command and control organization our people have to
understand how to bridge the planning divide between tactical and
operational.”
According to Davis, this was the first-ever
FVEY tactician course of its kind by incorporating multiple allied
nations. Previous venues typically focused 10 years into the future
staying at the strategic level where as this course maintained a
tactical level aimed specifically at identifying planning gaps
across the coalition.
“We normally run the Combined Space
Operations Center (CSpOC) Tacticians Course as a way of giving
younger Guardians and Airmen a crash course in planning,” explained
Lt. Col. Forrest Poole, 55 CTS commander. “For this iteration, we
invited our FVEY partners and focused on operational planning across
the allies. We want to bring allied space professionals together and
have them create a coalition space plan to support a terrestrial
operation.”
During the course, each nation provided insight
to its own sovereign capabilities and planning methodologies,
allowing for the meshing of ideas and concepts between one another.
“The mixture of knowledge and experience within the student
cohort benefitted a successful course delivery,” said Sqd Ldr Jim
Slevin, U.K. Space Operations Centre executive officer. “The
importance of individual nations corroborating on space matters
can’t be over emphasized towards supporting each other in the
international force, such as the UN.”
With each nation
providing a different perspective on the conduct of space
operations, the course will immediately benefit those handling
day-to-day operations by bringing awareness to each nations’
individual efforts to be responsible users of space.
“Our
legacy of fighting as an alliance provided the jump start to
coalition space operations and greatly enhances each nation’s space
capability just as it does in the terrestrial domains,” said
Australian Army Lt. Col. Jordan Norrish, member of the Australian
Defense Space Command. “Space operations prove the whole coalition
is greater than the sums of the individual national parts.”
U.S. Space Force |
U.S. Department
of Defense
Our Valiant Troops |
I Am The One |
Uncommon Valor
|
Veterans |
Citizens Like Us |
Spouses Serve Too
|
|