Letter to Airmen:
Support to Operations
March 10, 2008
Last month I wrote about my AOR trip and
the outstanding impacts Airmen are making in OIF and OEF every day.
This month I want to salute all those who provide support to
operations around the globe. From the acquisition professionals
whose rigorous analysis resulted in the selection of a new air
refueling tanker to the numerous Air Force agencies that contributed
to the recent satellite intercept, thank you for all you do to
defend America. Your efforts ensure we maintain the Global
Vigilance, Reach and Power required to defend our National
interests.
I am continually amazed at the Air Force's ability to project combat
power to any spot in the world from non-deployed locations. Every
hour of every day, Airmen conduct network-enabled ISR missions from
the United States and distributed locations around the world using
Predators, Reapers and Global Hawk UAVs to support combat operations
in Iraq, Afghanistan, or wherever the Joint team needs them. Air
Force Distributed Ground Stations collect and analyze massive
amounts of imagery and data resulting in actionable intelligence for
Joint and Coalition operations and national decision makers.
Meanwhile, mobility Airmen provide airlift, tanker and aeromedical
bridges that deliver Joint personnel and equipment rapidly to, from
and throughout the AOR. This combination of reachback and mobility
decreases the number of Airmen deployed and saves lives by
drastically reducing the number of ground force convoys required to
travel on dangerous roads as well as getting the injured to medical
facilities rapidly.
Recently, our knowledge enabled Airmen once again provided
operational impact beyond the CENTCOM AOR by supplying critical
expertise in support of a multi-agency effort. In this instance,
Airmen played a pivotal role in destroying an uncontrollable NRO
satellite on a trajectory to re-enter Earth's atmosphere with 1,000
pounds of toxic fuel onboard. This satellite posed an unacceptable
threat. With the tracking and targeting information, weather
analysis and space situational awareness provided by Airmen, the
satellite was successfully destroyed and this transformational space
event eliminated a risk to public safety. Although media attention
focused on the missile launch and intercept phase, this amazing
achievement would not have been possible without the diligence and
expertise of the professional Total Force Airmen who brought Air
Force space and cyberspace capabilities to bear. While Air Force
missileers have provided disciplined nuclear strength for decades,
this intercept demonstrates Airmen's contributions to the defensive
side of our reachback missile team.
The world understands the many roles our Airmen have played in
CENTCOM during the last 17 years of continuous combat operations,
but these successes could not happen without reachback support. Last
month's space operation highlights the unique contributions Airmen
bring to air, space and cyberspace around the world. When America
and her combatant commanders call, you consistently answer,
delivering decisive effects as part of the Joint team. Thank you for
safeguarding the public and for all you do for our country every
day.
(Archives)
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