GA 7~;";Ua:fdsman Fall 2002 cfta~asman Contents Features 4 New Life Airmen with th e 165th Airlift Wing help with the restoration of a Cold War bomber 10 'Red Leg' Assessment The 11 Bth Field Arti llery's new com mand er talks abo ut his unit and its performance during Annual Training 2002. 12 116TH Makes History Georgia's I16th Bomb Wing becomes the I16th Air Control Wi ng in a ceremony at Robins AFB. 14 Bringing Down the House Members of the 878th Engineer Banal ion help Georgia residents reclaim their neighborhoods. 21 SDF Annual Training Georiga's State Defense Force undergoes extensive instruction at the Combat Readiness Training Center. 2 Departments 3 Guard News 23 Command Focus In Brief About the Cover: Members of the 116th Bomb Wing pose for one last picture with the wing 's 8-1 bombers Pholo1:>yStanSg1Ton~ Georgia Guardsman l WASHINGTON - The new U.S Northern Command wi ll stri ve to help defend the homeland in the same spirit the National Guard has for centuries. Air Force Gen. Ralph Eberhart said Eberhart, who was appointed to be NORTH COM's commander in June, made that co mm ent to the l ,800 delegates gat hered in Long Beach. Calif., for the Nat ional Guard Associa tion ofthe United States' I24th :mmml confo rcncc we can't provide tOr the homeland defense and the security or th is great nation without the National Guard," Eberhart said It was the first time many of the Guard leaders from the 50 states and four territories heard firsthand how Northern Command will funct ion and how much their 460,000 citizen-soldiers and ainncn arc valued by NORTl ICOM Eberhart vowed to select the best people who apply for NO RTHCOM positions regardl ess or whether they arc Guard, Reserve or active duty. [f a Gua rd sman is best suited to Jill a position and that person is available, that's who will be hired, he said. "We will not accept from th e personnel eomrmmity (the idea) that this such individuals have to be active duly person nel.'' he added Eberhart has already selected Maj Gen. I-I. Stcven 131urn. fonnereommander of the Virginia Army Guard 's 29th Infantry Di vision, as hi s ehicfofstaff. At least 23 Army and Ai r Guard olliccrs and NCOs will be working there. with more being added later. said Maj Gen. Raymond Recs. acting chicfof1hc National Guard Bureau, during his State of1he Guard address in September. -- From the Armed Forces lnfurmalion Service Professionalism defines service by Guardsmen since Sept. 11, 01 A s the holiday season approaches, I wa nt to take this opponuni ty to thank ou1 soldiers, airmen, state defen se force personnel, state and fede ra l employees and their famil ies for th e many sacrifi ces th ey ha ve made s ince September 200 I. We jus t welcomed hom e members of th e 48 th Infantry Brigade from their success ful! pcackecping mission in Bosnia, w hen terrorists s tru ck A meric a Everyone remembers the terrible cvcms of that day and 1hc immediate aftermath. By the tum of the year, the nat ion was fu lly engaged in war; citizcnsoldicrs became full-time warriorss Li ves, fami lies and jobs were changed. Georgians began deploying -- and conti nu e to dep loy -- to location s the world Monrocs' l 78th Military Police Company, fo r exa mpl e, deployed to Guantanamo Bay Naval Ba se in Cuba to guard a l-Qaida and Taliban detainees at Camp Delta. The I22 nd Rear Operations Command dep loyed to Afghan istan to help rebui ld thai nation after the fall of the Taliban government. Closer to home, the 4th Weapons of Mass Destruction C ivil Support Team fo und itself busy responding to ca lls from a variety of businesses - from CNN to the Atlan ta Braves - and governmen t agencies. O ur state defense force, without hesitation, took on roles to strengthen force protection at areas across the state. And as the nati on's mi lita ry marched off to war, Amer icans sought serv ice in record numbers in the SD F, creating an all-vo lunteer force th at is second to none. The Air National Guard. whose units regularl y depl oy in peace or wa r, fo und them se lves in so me cases coming off one deployment and immediately beginning another It was a busy time, for exam pl e, for members of Sa,annah's I 17t h Air Control Sq uadron, the 224th Joi nt Communicat ions Support Squadron out of Brunsw ick and the 283rd Com bat Communications Squadron based at Dobbins Ai r Reserve Base. And, as yo u can sec in this issue of Th e Guardsmen, s tate and foderal leaders place a high va lue o n the se rvice of th e National G ua rd. T he Go ve rn o r 's A rrned Forces Appreciation Day clearl y put Gov. Roy Barnes out front in thanking Georgia G uardsmen for a job well done Sti ll, we didn't fo rget our state mission. Over th e past year. we ' vc helped take down a number of homes identified by law enforcement as "crack houses." In aid ing communities across the state, we have he lped to return a positive a11i1udc to o nce depressed neighborhoods. Finally, ifanyone needs evide nce of the professionalism a nd dedication of the Guard they need look no further than Warner Robins, where the I \6th Air Contro l Wing became the first "total force" Wing in the nation. In late September, members of the active duty 93rd Air Control Wing and the form er I 16th Bomb Wing became one unit, nying E8-C air craft and performing the sophisticated Joint STA Rs mi ssion. Georgia Airmen ex hibitin g a can do.. attitude again again point ing the way fo r the reshaping of the total force. We fight to defend the peace and liberty of this nation. The old axiom: '"sleep well, your Guard is on alert.. plays very we ll on these cool fall ni ghts, for Georgians all over the world are o n alert so you and I and all Americans can sleep well tonight -- Quotable Quotes -- " It is mo ra le th a t w in s victori es. With it, all things are poss ible. With out it , everything else -- planning, pre paration , exec uti on counts fo r nothi ng." Gcn.Gt.-orgcC.Marshall "We are a nation of many nationalities, many races and many re li g ions -- bound together by a single uni ty, the un ity of free do m and eq uality." Franklin Delano Roosevelt Georgia Guardstna11 3 Airmen with the 165th Airlift Wmg hoist the Mighty 8th Air Force Museum's 8-47 Strata 1et mto the air so its landing gear can be reattached 165th Ai rlift Wing helps museum restore B-4 7 St ory by Tech. Sgt. Bucky Burnsed 165th Airlift Wing M otorists traveling along Interstate 95 near the Savannah suburb of Pooler can now view a vintage Boeing B-47 Stratojet bomber sitting in a position of honor outside the Mighty 8th Air Force Museum. Members of the l65th Airlift Wing helped restore this imposing sweptwingjet bomber The six-engine, medium-range bomber, a mainstay of the Strategic Air Command (SAC) from the late 1940s to the mid-1960s, was capable of in-flight refue ling. It was also one of the first Air Force aircraft capable ofdelivering nuclear bombs, which made it an intimidating Cold War era weapon The Stratojet now on display was fo und four years ago in Florence, S. C., about 200 miles north of the museum . The plane, nccording to museum inspectors, had extensive weather-related corrosion damage and required a massive restoration effort. Still museum officials were determined to return the B-47 to the way it appeared in the 1950s. The process of do ing this was difficult. Before it could be moved, the plane was firs t disassembled in Florence, and its wings, tail section and landing gear delivered to the museum by truck. Once alt the bomber's pieces had arrived, retired Lt. Gen . Buck Schuler, chairman of the museum's board of trustees, began coordinating the aircraft's complicated restoration . His first call was to the 165th Airlift Wing and its vice-commander, Col. Ed Wex le1 "General Schuler knows airmen love airplanes, and that the l65th couldn' t just sit idly by and do nothing to help in th is project," Wexler said. Over the next 48 months some 25 airmen from the l 65th volunteered their time and expertise to the task of bringing the deteriorated bomber back to life The skin of the aircraft, for example, was removed, picce-bypiece, sanded and pa inted with green pri mer so it could recei ve its original silver paint scheme. Major hurdles in the restoration process, including lifting the fuselage so the restored landing gear could be placed under the aircraft had to be overcome. Also, moving the aircraft to its final resting place on a concrete pad and restoring the wings, tai l section and canopy had to be accomplished Former 8-47 pilot Darrell Lowell , who was a first lieutenant with the 8th Air Force and the Strategic Air Command, coor- Georgi(! G11(1r(/.:m1(111 4 dinated the last piece o f the restora ti on pu zz le: gett in g the plane's engines reattac hed TI1e ''S1ratojet," decked out in the p