VAQ-142 happy to be home
Transcription
VAQ-142 happy to be home
NAVIGATOR NORTHWEST VOL. 7, NO. 10 Serving NAS Whidbey Island and Community ON JOB Page 2 TEAMWORK Middle school renews partnership Page 3 ARMY-NAVY GAME Whidbey footballers join squad Page 8 www.northwestnavigator.com VAQ-142 happy to be home By Lt.j.g. Joe Reardon VAQ-142 Public Affairs Growlers in Fallon FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2010 T he “Gray Wolves” of Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 142 are all back home at NAS Whidbey Island, just in time to share the Thanksgiving holidays with families and friends, following a highly successful 6-month deployment to Al Asad Air Base, Iraq in support of Operations Iraqi Freedom and New Dawn. In the early hours, Nov. 18, the squadron’s maintenance and support personnel arrived home. The squadron’s EA-6B Prowlers, aircrew and a small contingent of maintenance person- nel arrived at noon today. VAQ-142 departed Whidbey Island in May 2010 and immediately immersed themselves in the rigors of around-the-clock operations. Every Gray Wolf worked diligently to keep Prowlers airborne at all hours, providing electronic attack in support of U.S. and Iraqi ground forces across Iraq. This deployment, possibly the last EA-6B Prowler expeditionary deployment, offered all the challenges of combat operations including maintaining aircraft in debilitating heat topping 140?F and sun-eclipsing sandstorms. “The dry heat of the Lt.j.g. Joe Reardon A VAQ-142 jet flies the blue skies over the desert during six-month deployment at Al Asad Air Base. first several months was breathtaking,” said Lt. Chad Mickelson, “But the jets survived two major sandstorms with no loss of operational capacity through the sheer will of the maintainers.” Gray Wolf Sailors earned many accolades while deployed. Cmdr. Courtney Smith, Skipper of VAQ-142, presented 205 awards including 39 Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medals and ten Good Conduct Medals. Thirty eight Gray Wolf Sailors earned their Enlisted Aviation Warfare Specialist Wings, 15 Sailors reenlisted and two Sailors received U.S. citizenship. Seventeen Gray Wolves earned promotions, including four through the NAVCENT Combat Meritorious Advancement Program. Aircrew achieved sev- eral milestones during the deployment. Smith and Lt. Brian Pridgen reached 1,000 EA-6B Prowler hours and Lt. Cmdr. Scot Taylor reached 3,000 EA-6B Prowler hours. Overall, the Gray Wolves flew more than 1,660 hours and completed over 470 combat sorties. As the squadron prepared to leave Al Asad, some reflected on the experience. See VAQ-142 > Page 11 Cougars sharpen claws on USS Reagan By Lt.j.g. Gabriel Duran VAQ-139 After four demanding weeks on board USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76), the Cougars of Electronic Attack Squadron 139 (VAQ-139) returned home to Whidbey Island from their Composite Training Unit Exercise (COMPTUEX). For Carrier Strike Group Seven, Carrier Air Wing 14 (CVW-14) and VAQ-139 it proved to be an arduous, yet successful boat detachment. There were many lessons learned by both new and seasoned Cougars. COMPTUEX is a two-part exercise of scripted and spontaneous simulations. It is the last required qualification the strike group must complete to be certified ready for deployment. It typically represents the first time in a training cycle that a carrier strike group operates together as a cohesive team. The exercise is scenario driven, containing “battle problems” of increasing complexity and difficulty, as well as Blue Water Certification, which allows Reagan and CVW-14 Lt.j.g. Toni Miggins Lt. Larry Greunke of VAQ-139 traps on board the USS Ronald Reagan during a monthlong training exercise. to operate without a divert airfield nearby. The scenarios were designed to measure the ability of the strike group to act as a coordinated, combat-ready force, and were intended to closely resemble real-life situations the carrier strike group could encounter during deployment. The first set of challenges the Cougars had to overcome was com- placency as the Reagan dealt with maintenance issues a few days after the start of the exercise. Cougar pilots had to re-fly their initial carrier qualification period as it had been a week since their arrival. “Once you get that groove, you can’t let it loose,” said Lt. Cmdr. David Elias. “We all had to re-cage our brains and press on despite the long lull between flights. I’m proud of all our Cougar pilots for maintaining their focus.” A week of non-flying on board the carrier would have given any Prowler maintenance department an early Christmas. However, the week off only made the amount of stress on the seasoned Prowler even greater as more flights within the COMPTUEX curriculum were compressed into only three weeks. “The Cougar maintenance department never stops to amaze me,” said Maintenance Officer Lt. Cmdr. James Carver. “We have young men and women who worked 12-hour days seven days a week to make it all happen.” The Cougar maintenance department was able to achieve the best sortie completion rate VAQ139 has seen in the past five years during COMPTUEX . In order to demonstrate the squadron’s combat readiness, the Cougars had to participate in numerous long-range strikes to NAS China Lake, Calif., and NAS Fallon, Nev., as well as a number of surface See COUGARS > Page 11
Similar documents
CNATTU chief joins officer ranks
team environment.” Barnes will leave CNATTU on March 16 to attend a five-week course at
More information