Total Force MAF leaders execute rehearsal of concept for Mobility Guardian ‘23

Support Local Journalism

LOGIN
REGISTER

Air Mobility Command hosted Air Force Vice Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin and senior leaders from seven major commands, at Phoenix Warfighter here, Apr. 21. Total Force wing commanders, strategists and planners from across the Mobility Air Forces presented their planned scheme of maneuver for Mobility Guardian ’23, scheduled to execute in the Indo-Pacific theater this summer.  

More than 250 attendees embraced air mobility’s role as the linchpin for the projection and sustainment of the U.S. military specifically focused on MAF readiness, integration and agility.

“We must get this right. Everyone’s success depends on us,” said AMC commander Gen. Mike Minihan. “This is a [wing] commander-centric discussion; they’re the ones tasked to win.”

Wing commanders from across the total force then presented their plans and preparation activities during the rehearsal of concept. For close to a year, MAF leadership at all echelons reviewed their tactics, techniques and procedures through an outside-the-box approach and an increased tolerance for risk in order to accelerate change to win.

Max generation exercises, endurance missions, experimentation, Ready Airman Training programs, integration, interoperability, Warrior Heart culture and partnering with industry are just some of the things that are key to putting the MAF into its three-point stance.

“From where we were a year ago is beyond A+, but we’re not done,” said Minihan. “We need to continue to press with urgency and action. Aggressively seek situational awareness, aggressively seek integration and aggressively seek mission.”

Mobility Guardian ‘23, AMC’s premiere bi-annual mobility exercise, is fully integrated into USINDOPACOM’s large-scale global exercise, supporting eight joint exercises and building interoperability with seven Nations.

The largest iteration in history, it’ll include 67 mobility aircraft and 3,000 Airmen. The MAF will be tested in every mission set – airlift, aerial refueling, aeromedical evacuation, global air mobility support and command and control.

It is clear to me that the leadership is engaged and the Airmen are ready to execute, said Allvin. “This will take Phd-level leadership to really test ourselves.”

The best thing that will come out of this is the lessons learned, he continued.

“We must maintain custody of our readiness and get better every day,” added Minihan. “We will add depth, increase integration and continue to tackle the hard problems.”

Earlier in the week, AMC hosted its Spring Phoenix Rally. This year’s iteration focused on Warrior Heart, enabling Airmen to strengthen their minds, bodies and crafts in order to fortify the will to win.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Previous Article

AF Week in Photos

Next Article

Luke Airmen exercise ACE during Wild Coyote

Related Posts
Total
0
Share