NATO Air Chiefs Converge at Ramstein Air
Base
By Capt. Elizabeth Aptekar, USAF
Special to AFPS
RAMSTEIN AIR
BASE, Germany -- A NATO Air Chiefs Conference held here Aug. 30-31
brought together the top leaders of NATO's air forces to discuss
their favorite subject -- air power.
The air chiefs
of 19 nations, including six of the seven new member nations accessed
in March, came together to discuss current operations, the International
Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, support to the NATO
Response Force, and air policing.
The annual
conference was co-hosted by Component Command Air Headquarters
Ramstein and Izmir Air Station, Turkey. "CC Air-Ramstein
and Air-Izmir hold their own meetings with their commanders, and
this is a culmination of all the meetings," said U.S. Air
Force Lt. Gen. Glen W. "Wally" Moorhead III, Air Commander
Izmir. "This meeting not only helps us think through issues
and challenges that we have in the air, but the specific nations'
issues as well."
CC Air-Ramstein
and -Izmir are the two air headquarters' previously known as AIRNORTH
and AIRSOUTH respectively. The new names reflect the July 1 re-
organization that streamlined the NATO Command Structure. The
structure originated in 2002 as a result of the Prague NATO Summit.
"It's
a part of a wider command structure (and) NATO rearrangement.
... From the airmen's point of view there are no boundaries in
the air, so for us to be North or South is meaningless really,"
said Air Marshal Philip Sturley, CC Air- Ramstein chief of staff.
"These Headquarters can cover something happening anywhere
in the NATO area, so we moved away from the idea of North and
South, which implied some sort of divide, to a more collective
way to approaching NATO problems."
Since NATO
is undergoing transformation both internally and externally, the
leadership meeting allowed the alliance members to discuss issues
to meet the new global-security challenges through air power.
"The
air chiefs, like any other group, get together and need to discuss
common issues and problems. We are an alliance, and a strong one
at that," said the air marshal. "We have a forum where
everyone has a say. It's very important to have an open and frank
discussion so you can solve problems that affect all of NATO.
General (Robert H. "Doc") Foglesong (commander of U.S.
Air Forces in Europe) and the staff here have taken the lead in
ensuring that this is possible."
An example
of why these leaders come together to discuss issues is the ongoing
effort toward the alliance's International Security Assistance
Force mission. According to the air marshal, NATO Air continues
to contribute deployed tactical forces performing air tasks ranging
from tactical airlift and medical evacuation to airborne reconnaissance,
deployment of quick-reaction forces and close-air support. The
Air Component at Ramstein Air Base provides air command and control
to ISAF with a reduced forward footprint and the effective use
of reach back.
The next event
where the NATO air forces will test their interoperability skills
together is at the NATO Air Meet, scheduled for Sept. 4 to 16
at Konya Air Base, Turkey. More than 1,500 people from 16 nations
will participate with 93 aircraft and plan to conduct about 100
training missions a day.
"This
is our last meeting before the (NATO Air) Meet to make sure the
planning is set and everyone is ready to execute," said Moorhead.
"(Combined Air Operations Centre) 6 will be running the operations,
so this will not only be good for the aviators, but our command
and control folks will get training as well."
Out of the
26 NATO member nations there are 24 air chiefs; Iceland and Luxembourg
do not have air chiefs.