BUFF 8 Posted March 3, 2008 More than a dozen pilots with the 188th Fighter Wing flew to Fort Hood, Texas, on Sunday to train in conditions simulated to reflect the battlegrounds of Iraq and Afghanistan. “This is a big deal for the Wing, a monumental day,” said Lt. Col. Clark Walker, commander of the 184th Fighter Squadron of the 188th Fighter Wing. “It’s the first training deployment with our new planes.” The 188th received the first four of a fleet of A-10 Thunderbolt II attack aircraft in April 2007. The A-10s, regarded as suitable for the type of close air support needed in the current ground wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, replaced the F-16 Fighting Falcons flown for years by the 188th. Pilots with the 188th have been training with the A-10s, also referred to as the A-10 Warthogs, in anticipation of possibly being deployed to either Iraq or Afghanistan in the coming years, according to Capt. Heath Allen, public affairs officer for the 188th. “We have to be qualified on a lot of things with a new aircraft to be mission deployable,” Allen said. “We won’t be fully operational to deploy in a wartime situation until spring 2010. This is part of the training to get spun up for that.” A total of 14 pilots and 60 members of maintenance personnel with the 188th began training at Fort Hood in Kileen, Texas, upon arrival Sunday. The pilots will fly several practice missions throughout the week until training concludes Friday. The 188th will train alongside the 4th Infantry Division and 21st Cavalry, an attack helicopter squadron, the 9th and 11th Air Force Air Support Operations squadrons and a Danish Army unit deployed to Fort Hood to practice flying Apache helicopters in weather conditions far less frigid than that of their homeland, Walker said. Training in cooperation with various military machinery, such as Army Apache helicopters and tanks, lends toward preparing for Middle East combat conditions, Walker said. “We don’t have the ability on our range to work with tanks,” Walker said. The Fort Hood training grounds will also allow for the 188th to practice simulated bombing missions against moving targets, a feature also unavailable at the 188th’s practice range, according to Walker. Although the 188th previously trained at Fort Hood from the seats of F-16s, it is once again exciting to train at the historic base, Walker said. The commander of the 184th Fighter Squadron described Ford Hood as the home of the “first cavalry division that goes back to World War II.” Share this post Link to post Share on other sites