432nd ATKS executes first-ever MQ-9 participation in Air Force virtual exercise

  • Published
  • By 28th Bomb Wing Public Affairs
  • 28th Operations Support Squadron
Last month, 432nd Attack Squadron achieved another remotely piloted aircraft first by participating in Virtual Flag, the Air Force's largest virtual warfighting exercise, using an MQ-9 Reaper flight simulator, May 13 to 19.

The 432nd ATKS -- an Air Combat Command tenant unit located at Ellsworth -- has been flying combat air patrols since the squadron was formed in 2012.

In previous exercises, MQ-9 crews had to travel to Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico, where the exercise is hosted and use a generic computer to participate.  But through a ground-up effort, the 432nd Attack Squadron was able to build and test a new capability to join these exercises from home station using a realistic MQ-9 cockpit.

"For 15 years, the MQ-1 and MQ-9 units in the Air Force have not been able to fully participate in one of the main training venues of the Air Force and the other services.  Today we've solved that problem," explained Lt. Col. Matt Martin, who initiated the project.  "Every other weapons system in the Air Force has had this ability for years, and they use it to conduct complex, joint training at a fraction of the cost of live flights.  But, because the MQ-1/9 enterprise has been flying non-stop combat missions since 9/11, we're only just now catching up."

Called Distributed Mission Operations, this new capability gives the 432nd ATKS the ability to connect its flight simulator to potentially hundreds of other simulators via a global network.  The participants can then conduct combat training that simulates highly complex missions and prepare for future wars. 

According to Lt. Col. David Henshaw, 432nd Operations Group deputy commander at Creech AFB, Nevada (the parent unit of the squadron), the achievement is the product of local hard work. 

"This is a great example of innovation at the unit level to solve urgent problems when we have limited budgets and constrained resources," Henshaw said. "With the help of the 28th Bomb Wing, and some ground-breaking work being done by an [U.S.] Army lab in Huntsville, Alabama, called the Joint Simulation Integration Laboratory, the 432nd was able to achieve this using existing resources. We hope to spread this capability to the rest of the MQ-1/9 fleet."

The flight simulator provides the squadron with the ability to take part in complex, realistic exercises where they are able to work with live forward air controllers, aircrews from other aircraft, and different command centers, added Capt. Andrew, an MQ-9 pilot who participated in the exercise"

"We can connect all our simulators and get great training," said Andrew. "It's a game-changer for us."

"One of our missions in the 28th Communications Squadron is to support the 432nd so they can conduct 24/7 combat operations," said Staff Sgt. Kelby Rossmiller, the 28th CS's lead communications technician on the project. "But they've always had a real challenge getting the training they needed.  So when we found out we could help close that gap, we were eager to put in the extra hours and make it happen."

As stated on the Kirtland AFB website, the Virtual Flag exercises are currently the only exercise to train full spectrum Theatre Air Control System warfighters from start to finish, and warfighter focused events.

Now, with innovative efforts from Airmen at multiple levels, 432nd ATKS aircrews are able to participate in this training.