Even in the air, military leaders and heads of state must always have the ability to communicate.
In the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility, the 379th Communications Squadron's Viper Team is on call 24/7 to provide that vital communication link.
Taking its name from the brand of their gear, the mission of the Viper Team is to provide roll on airborne communications for the U.S. Central Command commander as well as any other distinguished visitors they are tasked to support, said Viper Team NCO in Charge Master Sgt. Juli Croft, deployed here from Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho. "We provide access to both classified and unclassified information and secure voice capabilities," Croft said, which gives leaders the ability to make decisions about operations in real time should the need arise.
"Normally the communications infrastructure is embedded at the location into which they're flying; the Viper Team provides a communication bridge from one ground spot to another," Viper Team member Master Sgt. Bryan Doyea, deployed from Grand Forks AFB, N.D., said.
The Viper Team is a one year special duty assignment for communications Airmen. As such, there are requirements that are above and beyond those found on a normal communications deployment.
"In order for us to go on a job, we have to be on crew orders," Doyea, who is on his second Viper deployment, said. "We have to go through [Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape] training, water survival training, and high-altitude chamber testing. Within the Air Force communications community, there are a select few that get to go through this."
Those select few are drawn from three Air Force Specialty Codes to give the team a wide range of knowledge. "We have computer operators, tech controllers, and [satellite communications] operators." Croft said. The team members help those from different AFSC's so that all members will be prepared to tackle any issue that may arise during a mission.
"We cross utilize our experience, practice those skills and train each other on our strong points because when we send out a team, it could include any of us," team member Master Sgt. Dustin Sampson, deployed from Scott AFB, Ill., said.
Teams of two or three will go out on a typical mission, which can be as short as a one-day trip to Baghdad or as long as a weeklong tour of the AOR. For each flight, there are nine cases of equipment weighing 1,200 pounds to be loaded onto the aircraft. "We are our own ground crew," Sampson said. Additionally the team boasts a one hour response time for short notice missions.
Doyea said that even after the aircraft touches down, their job continues.
"When the customer gets off the plane, often a lot of their staff will stay on board to coordinate the next stop or collect the necessary reports. Even when we're sitting on the tarmac, we are still up and running to provide the required information," he said.
The only one in the CENTCOM AOR, the Viper Team was first organized in 2005. At the time, Doyea said, Viper teams were based out of Andrews AFB, Md., and were usually committed to supporting other VIPs when then-CENTCOM Commander Army Gen. Tommy Franks requested support. Franks requested a team be stood up within the AOR for his communication purposes and since then, the CENTCOM commander has been the primary customer for Viper support.
As time passed however, the spectrum of operations the Viper Team supports has gradually expanded. When they aren't tasked to fly with CENTCOM Commander Gen. David Petraeus, the team has supported flights carrying other officials such as the Secretary of the Air Force. On occasion they are even asked to support Coalition Partners.
"When this team was first established, its mission focus was AOR-specific, but after several years the scope has expanded. We've flown from Europe all the way over to Japan," Doyea said.
Sampson best summed up the Viper Team credo. "Basically, it's anytime, anywhere," he said.
Date Taken: | 11.21.2009 |
Date Posted: | 11.21.2009 02:35 |
Story ID: | 41852 |
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Web Views: | 649 |
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