It was a proud moment Wednesday when Maj. James Bono, Iraq Training and Advisory Mission-Air senior weather advisor, stepped onto an Iraqi C-130 to return from Qayyarah West Air Field, Iraq, to Baghdad.
He and two other members of his weather team had just spent the day setting up a brand new tactical weather radar and tactical meteorological observation system for the Iraqi air force.
The job, which took just over 4 hours, is part of an ongoing process to set up a stable weather program for the Iraqi air force and provides an expanded weather capability for the program as a whole.
While installing the equipment, members of the team also did some impromptu training to help familiarize the Iraqis with the systems.
"Most of the Iraqis have been through at least one class on each of the systems," said Senior Airman Ryan Unger, 22nd Expeditionary Weather Squadron weather technician, who is deployed from the 2nd Combat Weather Systems Squadron at Hurlburt Field, Fla. "During set-up, I answered any questions they had about each system and explained the importance of preventative maintenance."
Up until the new systems were installed, the Iraqis had been using equipment on loan from the U.S. Air Force.
The new radar, one of four Ellason Weather Radar 600s purchased for the Iraqis, is the same system used at the Iraqi Air Operations Center in Baghdad. Utilized in conjunction with the new TMQ-53 weather observation system, it should provide the IqAF with the ability to forecast weather in the local area around the air field.
"The weather data at Q West will be used locally to support flying operations there," said Bono, deployed from Detachment 2, Air Force Weather Agency, Sagamore Hills Solar Observatory, Hamilton, Mass. "This data will also help complete the country-wide weather picture to support the missions of all services of the Iraqi military."
This expanded capability allows them to plan for flights and missions and keep aircraft safe by planning based on the weather while they work to purchase more permanent weather systems.
"This is to give them an initial capability to perform their mission," said Bono, a native of Salem, Mass. The next step would be for the Iraqi air force to purchase hardened, installed weather infrastructure.
This added capability not only benefits this air field, but also expands the Iraqi weather scope as a whole.
"Airfield observations and radar data will be communicated to the Iraqi weather forecasters at the Iraqi Air Operations Center to improve the quality of forecasts and provide mission critical weather data to the IAOC," Bono said.
Date Taken: | 03.05.2011 |
Date Posted: | 03.07.2011 02:01 |
Story ID: | 66602 |
Location: | QAYYARAH WEST AIR FIELD, IQ |
Web Views: | 373 |
Downloads: | 0 |
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