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Wake Island Airfield undergoes $87M upgrade; Ceremony marks end of Marines' 'Tomcats'
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington (UPI) Oct 19, 2019

Air Force 'Orange Flag' exercise tests data transfers in combat
Washington (UPI) Oct 19, 2019 - An "Orange Flag" exercise united land units, spacecraft and over 40 aircraft to study the transfer of test data for warfighting, the U.S. Air Force announced.

The test activities spanned 40,000 square miles of California and Nevada, with Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., as its command post, the Air force said in a statement on Monday.

"Orange Flag is an opportunity for participants to integrate technology into operationally representative scenarios at any and all technology readiness levels," said Maj. Brandon Burfeind, Orange Flag director. "Our goal is to disrupt traditional test timelines and expose technologies to difficult situations early and often."

This exercise, conducted three times per year, focused on evaluating data driven assessments of interoperability, lethality, and survivability, using all available data inputs, including those available from satellites and in cyberspace.

Notable successes in the 2020 test series include the progress made in connecting F-35 Lightning II fighter planes directly to Army artillery fire without human-in-the-loop intervention, the Air Force said.

"We are excited to bring a new set of capabilities and test objectives to Orange Flag in 2021," said Maj. Daniel Prudhomme, Orange Flag operations director.

The Wake Island Airfield, regarded as among the most isolated installations in the U.S. military, is undergoing an $87 million upgrade, the Air Force said.

The infrastructure modernizations include improvements to the deteriorating runway, new lighting, and grounding and pavement markings to support mission readiness and global air mobility, the Air Force Civil Engineering Center at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas, announced.

California-based contractor AECOM won the contract for the improvements in 2019, and is expected to complete the project in early 2021.

"The remote location of the Wake atoll required extensive logistics planning to ship construction equipment, material, parts and supplies which we successfully accomplished in November 2019," Capt. David Leonard, AFCEC project manager, said in a press release.

The three-island atoll in the Pacific Ocean, halfway between Hawaii and Japan, has been a U.S. possession since 1898, and has been under control of the U.S. Air Force since 1973.

It lies 1,501 miles east of Guam, 2,298 miles west of Honolulu and 1,991 miles southeast of Tokyo. With a runway 9,800 feet long, it serves as a crucial refueling depot for trans-Pacific military missions, as well as a training and missile testing area.

The airfield serves between 500 and 600 aircraft annually, according to the Air Force.

Sundown ceremony marks end of Marines' 'Tomcats' air squadron
Washington (UPI) Oct 19, 2019 - A sundown ceremony for the storied Marine Attack Squadron 311 deactivated the unit as it and Marine Attack Squadron 214 transition to F-35 fighter planes in 2022, the U.S. Marine Corps said Monday.

Early next spring, the U.S. Marine Corps' VMA-311 squadron, known as the "Tomcats," and VMA-214, the "Black Sheep Squadron," will reactivate as Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 311, operating the F-35C Lightning II at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Calif., while VMFA-214 will fly the F-35B from Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Ariz.

The ceremony, held last week at Yuma, marked the end of the use of AV-8B Harrier short-takeoff-and-landing aircraft by VMA-311, as well as the structure of the squadron, organized in 1942.

VMA-311 saw action in the Pacific theater of World War II and flew the first Marine jet combat mission in the Korean Conflict. The squadron also flew in combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"The reputable Tomcats have an exceptional level of esprit de corps representing 78 years of superior performance," Sgt. Maj. Colin Barry of VMA-311 said in a press release.

VMA-214 will also sundown, and the new unit will fly F-35C fighter planes from the Miramar air station, with the F-35B short-takeoff-and-landing variant flown from Yuma.

Three other active fleet squadrons and one training squadron, all based in North Carolina, will continue flying the AV-8B Harrier, Marine Corps officials said.


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AEROSPACE
USAF airmen in Materiel, Global Strike commands to collaborate
Washington DC (UPI) Oct 12, 2020
The U.S. Air Force Materiel Command and Global Strike Command agreed to partner to better understand each other's practices, the Air Force said on Monday. The planned cooperation comes after the Materiel Command began a similar venture, the Lead Wing Collaboration, in January with the Air Combat Command. A memorandum signed by Gen. Arnold W. Bunch Jr., AFMC commander, and Gen. Timothy M. Ray, AFGSC commander, seeks to develop deeper collaboration between the program offices and operation ... read more

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