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JET Combat Skills Training
Airman 1st Class John Fallesgon peers through the smoke to engage enemy during a foot patrol at combat-skills training Sept. 2, 2010 at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J. Airman Fallesgon is a food services chef at Langley Air Force Base, Va. (U.S. Air Force photo/Chief Master Sgt. David Richards)
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JET Airmen: 'Fit to fight any given day'

Posted 10/19/2010 Email story   Print story

    


by Airman 1st Class Bryan Swink
Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst Public Affairs


10/19/2010 - JOINT BASE MCGUIRE-DIX-LAKEHURST, N.J. -- Airmen often have a reputation of being "behind the scenes," never in the action, but persona is changing with Air Force's heavy involvement in joint tasking operations where Airmen are performing non-traditional jobs and missions alongside sister service members.

There are many Joint Expeditionary Tasked Airmen from various specialty codes deployed to southwest Asia today. Each of these JET Airmen received combat skills training at one of Army's four power projection platforms to learn the tactics and skills required to be successful in a combat environment.

"This training is critical for Airmen being deployed with the Army for the joint service taskings in Iraq and Afghanistan," said Lt. Col. John Hanlon, 602nd Training Group (P) Detachment 6 commander, Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J.

The 31-day JET training course provides Airmen the same training Soldiers receive to be successful in deployed environments. Detachment 6 trains approximately 50 percent of the Airmen going through Army CST.

"We are the largest power projection platform," said Colonel Hanlon. "We train 50 to 120 students per class and put out approximately 2,400 JET Airmen annually, with an increase scheduled for next year."

"Airmen focus on learning how to shoot, move, communicate and treat on the battle field," said Master Sgt. Tammy Birky, 602nd Training Group (P) Detachment 6 first sergeant.

The students cover a number of individual and specialized training areas, including rules of engagement, weapons familiarization, land navigation, unexploded ordnance/improvised explosive device training, high mobility multipurpose wheeled vehicle egress and rollover training, personnel and vehicle search, casualty operations, self-aid buddy care and combatives (hand-to-hand combat).

"We have the Army experts training our JET Airmen to operate in harm's way," said Sergeant Birky. "The training is so repetitive it establishes muscle memory which becomes second nature. This way of training builds confidence in our Airmen."

A large amount of the training is conducted using state-of-the-art equipment, but technology is not always reliable when down range. Students must be knowledgeable and proficient without the use of modern technology.

"The Army taught us land navigation -- both mounted and dismounted," said Senior Airman Courtney Beard, a 204th Intelligence Squadron intelligence analyst stationed here. "The mounted portion was done using a defense advanced GPS receiver while the dismounted portion was done the old fashioned way -- with simply a map and a compass. While counting our paces and navigating through the woods, we were expected to locate three different field sites."

Acclimation into a joint environment also begins at JET training. Most Airmen move directly downrange upon completion of the course.

"The Army environment is a culture shock to say the least, but I expect it to serve me well as I deploy to work with the Army," said 1st Lt Emily Meredith, the 802nd Force Support Squadron military personnel section chief at Joint Base San Antonio, Texas. "I got a little better taste of how they do business and the differences from what I'm used to. I am grateful for the training, even though I hope I never have to implement the skills downrange."

Capt. Jeffrey Underwood, a Class A25W student who is a production cost analyst in the F-35 Program Office in Arlington, Va., is deployed to Afghanistan. As a financial reform officer, he is working with the Afghan National Police to resolve pay issues.

"Less than five days on the ground I was on a mission with our commander to Herat on a pay team visit," Captain Underwood said. "It was an eye opening experience - CST training was good preparation for what we encountered."

Colonel Hanlon has a motto that suits the attitude and readiness JET Airmen display at all times: "Fit to fight, any given day."



tabComments
10/22/2010 5:06:59 AM ET
Don't worry sir I'm from the internet.
Billy Bob, cyberspace
 
10/22/2010 4:24:05 AM ET
Taking the dustcover off your scope technique only.
- Capt G. , Texas
 
10/21/2010 6:06:23 PM ET
Some knuckleheads keep insisting that we and every other branch can keep fighting these wars with such low end strength numbers.
Sgt whoever, conus
 
10/21/2010 6:03:31 PM ET
I recently re-deployed from Victory Base Complex Iraq as a JET Airman. The training in McDixHurst was redundant, things we already done to deploy with the Air Force. The best part of the training was the shooting and the gear the Army gave us. I am a personnelist deployed as Casualty Operations for the Division. The Army needed our mindset and I was glad to volunteer. It was not boring. I learned alot about the Army plus I was trained to fight outside the wire. The experience I gained in a joint environment was all to my advantage.
Kehle, Hill
 
10/21/2010 5:56:13 PM ET
The training would be much more life like if he took the dust cap off his sight scope but at least there is a magazine in the well. A cook going into combat. Sounds like a Steven Segal movie.....The Army has a Total Force of over 1.1 million Soldiers. They can't find enough of their own cooks to fill in the gaps Really
D Conrad, SWA
 
10/21/2010 4:19:20 PM ET
Steve if your definition of Joint is the AF will do other services jobs because they don't have the skills then you are correct...again if you ask the Army to fill a slot for the AF you will get the big NO...why? Also asking a cook intel troop or even a personnelist to become a combat soldier in 30 days is a crock...the Army trains everyday for combat no matter their MOS. I was and still will be for jointness, meaning we support each other - not do their duty.
Thankfully Retired, USAFA
 
10/21/2010 12:44:21 PM ET
Excellent We must have more airmen NOT doing the job they were trained to do. What a waste of time resources and money.
W, USA
 
10/21/2010 11:36:03 AM ET
D Conrad Thankfully Retired while you both make valid arguments on this issue you must bear in mind that the military has evolved towards a joint environment. Manning will always be an issue but it is not limited to just our service. The Air Force produces the most technically trained airmen in the world and their skills and expertise are highly sought by our sister branches to emulate from. As they learn and adapt their missions utilizing our concepts we must in turn be able to learn and adapt to theirs for maximum efficiency/proficiency as the greatest military might in the world. The joint environment is here to stay and I urge we continue living the Air Force mantra of - Flexibility is the key to airpower.
Steve, Tampa
 
10/21/2010 3:18:45 AM ET
If it has to be done then it has to be done. I don't like it either but it looks like this isn't going anywhere soon and will be the wave of the future for the AF. What bothers me is why isn't every Airman getting this in basic Training or a combat type school after Basic Training I was in another branch of the military before coming into the AF. The AF breeds great technicians it does not breed great combat troops. Sending some folks to a JET school doesn't change the mentality it takes to be combat ready and neither does adding the words Fit Fight or Combat to headings.
Double D, RAFL
 
10/21/2010 1:16:43 AM ET
@D Conrad - You hit the nail on the head. Our senior leaders need to start pushing back on the JET requirements. The article says that the JET requirements will increase next year. Say what? There are a half million Army soldiers. The Army needs to figure out how to fill these slots 9 years into a war instead of relying on the Air Force. We don't rely on soldiers to guard missile silos, fly planes or work on aircraft - why should the Army have Airmen fill their billets?
- Capt G. , Texas
 
10/20/2010 12:08:08 PM ET
Force shaping continues to show airmen the door. Still many AFSC's are undermanned with high Ops Tempo yet we continue to give up our greatest resource to fill Army billets. If the Air Force has an abundance of airman to fill Army slots maybe they should shuffle those airman into critical AFSC's so our folks aren't strained with constant deployments. I'm sure the Army would gladly give up some soldiers to fill airman billets should the need arise...Right? Another leadership failure by the branch of the military still trying to figure out what it is after 60 years.
Thankfully Retired, USAFA
 
10/20/2010 11:33:38 AM ET
You can't turn an Airman into a Soldier in 31 days. If the Army needs Soldiers, make them use their own personnel. Sorry, but it's 9 years into this thing and they still can't figure out how to staff their requirements Not buying it. We need to start saying no. We have plenty of Air Force work that Airmen need to do. Think of all the CST dollars we could save.
D Conrad, SWA
 
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