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Tenn. Air Guard Leads Patrol Course Before Defender Falcon 22

  • Published
  • By Capt. Kealy Moriarty,
  • Tennessee National Guard Public Affairs Office

LAVINIA, Tenn. – Security Forces Airmen assigned to the 164th Airlift Wing hosted an annual two-week patrol course at Milan’s Volunteer Training Site Aug. 6-20 to strengthen relations with their Bulgarian counterparts and reinforce airbase ground defense skills.

The course included participation from the Air National Guard, U.S. Air Force, and the Bulgarian Air Force.

The Tennessee National Guard and Bulgaria have been partners under the Department of Defense National Guard Bureau State Partnership Program since 1993.

“Joint training like this is very useful for us,” said Bulgarian Forces Junior Sgt. Desi Stoyanova. “It helps us bridge the language barrier and learn from one another. Additionally, we can use what we learned here in Tennessee and share it with our security forces back in Bulgaria.”

The course was structured in a fast-paced crawl, walk, run format that concluded with a culminating field training exercise. It was designed to test each member in all leadership positions while challenging them physically and mentally. Each member had to work as a team, overcome obstacles, and complete each assigned mission.

“When this course was first being developed, we wanted to expand upon force protection capabilities and integrate allied forces,” said Tennessee Air National Guard Master Sgt. John Hogue, the Patrol Course superintendent. “We designed it to reinforce those defense skills, enhance our ability to rapidly deploy, and continue building upon our long-lasting partnership with our Bulgarian counterparts.”

The class was divided into two fire teams to form a 10-person squad. Leaders received information and developed and communicated a movement plan. The leaders were rotated every few days to test all participants.

“We have trained a lot in squad tactics, and I think this is the best training I’ve ever received,” said U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Samantha Sheridan. “This kind of training allows security forces to not just stick to stateside operations but to embrace combat operations and become more lethal against any future threat. This course has really opened my eyes and I am excited to go back to my unit and effectively train those below me and prepare them for any future deployments.”

The course began with several training classes led by Tennessee Army and Air National Guard instructors. The classes included patrol tactics, land navigation, survival skills, urban assault, squad maneuvers, combat lifesaving, and troop leading procedures.

The field tactical exercise replicated a reconnaissance mission where the squad tactically maneuvered behind enemy lines while encountering numerous obstacles. It began with a designated squad member coordinating air transportation with assistance from the Tennessee Army National Guard’s 1-107th Air Operations Battalion. The squad navigated through harsh terrain to a landing zone to be airlifted by a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter and crew. The 20-minute flight included rotary-wing maneuvers to simulate combat.

Both fire teams were inserted at their target location, regrouped, and began a night reconnaissance mission.

“The Black Hawk insertion really added to the squad’s experience and helped immerse them in the mission at hand,” said Hogue. “It was great to be able to show these Airmen and Bulgarians what a real mission would look and feel like while demonstrating the partnership between the branches.”

The squad stealthily moved throughout the dense woodland terrain for nearly 10 hours using only dim light from the overcast clouds. That was just the first day of the field exercise. By the end of the two-week course, squad members estimated they rucked over 60 miles.

“Although this course is not part of Defender Falcon, it does serve as an opportunity for our Airmen, both participants and instructors, as well as our Bulgarian counterparts, to prepare for this large-scale exercise and further operations,” said Hogue.