Team Kadena Aces Dispersed Ops Thru NE 23-2
by U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Tylir Meyer August 5,
2023
Staging out of Kadena, the “Keystone of the
Pacific”, afforded U.S. forces and partner nations the opportunity
to work through interoperability challenges across joint,
multinational and multi-domain operations in support of the shared
security objectives in the Indo-Pacific region.
July 12, 2023 - Top ... U.S. Air Force and Japan Air
Self-Defense Force Airmen pose for a group photo during
exercise Northern Edge 23-2at
Hyakuri Air Base, Japan. Bottom... U.S. Air Force F-15C
Eagles and Japan Air Self Defense Force F-2s fly in
formation over the Sea of Japan. Conducting joint training
enhances the lethality and readiness of U.S. forces and its
ability to project superior airpower to the Indo-Pacific
region. (Image created by USA
Patriotism! from U.S. Air Force photos by Airman 1st Class Tylir Meyer.)
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“Northern Edge 23-2 (NE 23-2) was a success
in challenging our forces to exercise distributed operations in the
field rather than simple simulations, increasing proficiency and
force durability,” said U.S. Air Force Col. Nicholas Evans, 18th
Wing commander. “Working together with our Japanese counterparts
enables us to bolster our real-world training capabilities which
enhances our readiness and lethality.”
The large-scale
exercise tested participants’ mission capabilities to include
command and control, movement and maneuverability, hub and spoke
distribution, combat search and rescue, and the testing and
experimentation of new technology.
From infancy, multilateral
partners gave inputs into the operational design of the exercise and
continued to participate all the way to its culmination.
“By
training with our partners, we learn how to work through some
operational challenges as a collective force and get closer to our
goal of a truly interoperable, joint and multinational partnership,”
said USAF Maj. John Della Pia, 18th Operational Support Squadron
Wing Weapons and Tactics Chief.
NE 23-2 also achieved the
Joint Force Air Component Commander’s vision by deploying over 5,000
personnel, 90 fighters and 20 tankers to 10 locations throughout the
region.
“Our Airmen essentially deployed – physically moving
between different locations, picking up a pack and sleeping bag,
showing up to a place that they might not have everything they need
and learned how to work through those struggles in real-time,” said
USAF Master Sgt. Scott Darden, 336th Fighter Generation Squadron
maintenance project officer during NE 23-2. “The JASDF were great
partners and were 100 percent willing to help and were key to our
success.”
An integral aspect of NE 23-2 was exercising
distributed operations through a centralized hub and dispersed
spokes, demonstrating greater agility and ability to outpace an
adversary’s actions and complicate targeting cycles through movement
and maneuverability across a wide area.
“Planning and
coordinating an exercise on this scale introduces some incredible
challenges ... in terms of the sheer number of airplanes, the amount
of fuel required to keep airplanes flying, and the outstanding work
of our logistics teams to ensure both our hub and spokes were
successful in their missions,” Della Pia said.
The range of
operations provided by spoke operations in Hyakuri and Tsuiki Air
Bases, Japan, allowed additional USAF commands to validate new
tactics, techniques and procedures.
Such coordination
resulted in four F-35A Lightning IIs completing a historic endurance
mission by flying for ten hours before joining allied forces in the
air to participate in a tactical training mission over the
Indo-Pacific region.
“Northern Edge provides opportunities
for us to train like we will fight ... as a joint and coalition
force,” said U.S. Air Force Capt. Rachel Self, 355th Fighter
Squadron F-35A pilot.
Another new capability tested, in
conjunction with the Air Mobility Command’s concurrent full spectrum
exercise Mobility Guardian 23, was the Real-Time Information in the
Cockpit system (RTIC), that provides intelligence and C2
capabilities to KC-135 Stratotanker crews. This technology provides
operations which streamline aircraft tracking and proficiency
on-time, on-target across vast distances.
As Kadena continues
to demonstrate its strategic importance as a hub facilitating
multiple, multi-faceted exercises, and continue daily operations to
meet mission objectives, the 18th Wing reinforces its vital position
to ensuring long-lasting peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific
region.
“It’s been a herculean effort to ensure that our
daily operations haven’t suffered as a result [of Northern Edge],”
said Della Pia. “It’s easy to forget that we have normal operations
and taskings that occur daily, and it’s no exception during an
operation like this. Team Kadena has been working in overdrive to
ensure mission success and they've knocked it out the park!”
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