Agence France-Presse,
SOUTHWEST ASIA: B-1B Lancer aircrews of the 34th Expeditionary Bomb Squadron guard warfighters from high above Iraq and Afghanistan while carrying the largest payload of any aircraft in the theater.
Squadron members are responsible for close-air support, nontraditional intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance and armed overwatch for troops supporting operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom and Joint Task Force Horn of Africa.
“We provide the kinetic firepower for any of the three operations in the theater,” said Lt. Col. Kevin Kennedy, the 34th EBS commander. “Right now we're primarily focused on OEF in Afghanistan. We provide a great deal of the firepower there.”
The unit was one of the first to deploy to Afghanistan for Operation Enduring Freedom after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Now, in addition to the ability to lower the boom on the bad guys there, the aircraft of the 34th EBS feature Sniper Advanced Targeting Pods. The pod allows aircrews to detect and analyze targets on the ground through real-time imagery.
“Before we didn't have the television or infrared capability on the jet,” the colonel said. “Now we have that technology. We can look at something on the ground with our targeting pod and the (joint terminal air controller) on the ground can also see it.”
The unit's B-1Bs can also loiter for long periods over the area of responsibility because of their fuel capacity, two pilots and two weapons systems officers on the aircrews.
“We have the ability to fly for a long period of time and the speed to move through the country fairly quickly,” Colonel Kennedy said.
The unit uses these capabilities on a daily basis. On a typical mission crews will fly for 12 hours, most of which is spent conducting armed overwatch of troops on the ground or looking at requested areas of interest.
“If there happens to be a troops-in-contact situation, we'll check in with the JTAC who will bring us up to speed and if we need to deliver weapons we'll do that,” the colonel said.
Colonel Kennedy recalled one mission while here where the unit supported a convoy several times that had come under fire and had disabled vehicles.
“We got there and were able to help them find the enemy who was engaging them,” he said. “The ground commander made the target decision, 'Yes, I want to target them.' We engaged them, dropped weapons on them and assessed how well we did. From that first engagement there was a follow-on engagement where the enemy went to get some additional weapons such as a recoilless rifle and moved to another location where a (rocket-propelled grenade) team was trying to set up to take action against the coalition convoys. That is the mission that stands out to me personally. It was our longest mission for which I have records.”
One of the biggest challenges for 34th EBS aircrews is staying alert through the long sorties, Colonel Kennedy said.
“You have to be ready to execute at almost any minute,” he said. “There are no rest periods while we're up there.”
Because of the long missions, many of the unit's aircrew members have logged a large number of combat hours in the area of responsibility. Capt. Jess Hamilton, the unit's chief of weapons and tactics, recently went over 1,000 combat hours in the aircraft.
“Doing the close-air-support mission is pretty rewarding for me,” said the native of Sullivan, Ind. “There are guys on the ground getting shot at and you come in and handle that problem for them. Being an instructor pilot and the weapons officer for the squadron is also pretty rewarding. Teaching the new guys how we do business with close-air support and then watching them go get the mission done is probably the most interesting part of my job.”
Captain Hamilton also had the distinction of dropping the first bomb from a B-1B equipped with the Sniper pod during a mission Aug. 4. The 34th EBS is the first to use the pod on a B-1B in combat, which Colonel Kennedy called the biggest success of this rotation.
“I was out here last year and things have changed completely because of the Sniper pod,” said Staff Sgt. Joshua Schenewerk, the 34th EBS NCO in charge of intelligence who also debriefed the crew after the first drop. “I was really proud to be a part of it because I knew that was a big capability we brought on line in six months. We got it in theater to the guys who need it — those on the ground.”
Sergeant Schenewerk said the most interesting part of his job now is debriefing crewmembers after each mission.
“We sit down and watch the video and hear them talking to the guys on the ground,” he said. “You can hear the gunfire coming in or going out. You can hear the guys needing support. That, to me, is by far the most interesting part of my job. Getting to see how things on the ground are actually going, not reading what is in the newspaper but actually witnessing it firsthand via the pod and the debrief.”
Successful missions also encourage others who contribute to the unit's ability to guard warfighters on the ground.
“It's always fun to hear the crewmembers' stories when they get back,” said Airman 1st Class Justin Monroe, a Richwood, Ohio, native who ensures crewmembers are current and qualified in all areas before each mission. “I feel I put a lot in toward helping with the war effort. I help put these guys in the air, and they drop the bombs.”
About 300 people in several units at this Southwest Asian base contribute directly to the 34th EBS mission. Some of its key partners include the 34th Aircraft Maintenance Unit (which deployed with the 34th EBS from Ellsworth Air Force Base, S.D.), the 379th Expeditionary Operations Support Squadron, and the Combined Air and Space Operations Center.
Each Airman knows that it takes teamwork to put bombs on target. “This is what I signed up to do,” Sergeant Schenewerk said. “I signed up after Sept. 11 to fight terrorism.” The Winston, Ore., native, said he loved supporting those guarding coalition ground forces.
“Being intelligence we're not the tip of the spear, but we're close enough to it that we get to feel some of the effects while they're out there employing that spear,” he said. “We are doing what we're supposed to be doing and taking the fight to the enemy.”