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NEWS | June 10, 2025

Nebraska Guard’s 155th Air Refueling Wing Tests Combat Readiness during Exercise

By Lisa Crawford, 155th Air Refueling Wing, Nebraska Air National Guard

LINCOLN, Neb. – The Nebraska Air National Guard’s 155th Air Refueling Wing conducted a Combat Readiness Exercise during its regularly scheduled drill weekend, June 6-8, at the Nebraska National Guard air base here.

The Combat Readiness Exercise evaluated the wing’s ability to rapidly mobilize, deploy and sustain operations in a simulated contingency environment. The exercise tested the deployment readiness and supporting infrastructure of the installation to support wartime operations by assessing Airmen on performance-based tasks critical to mission readiness, such as cargo processing, personnel deployment and emergency response actions.

For three days, Airmen operated under compressed timelines to execute deployment tasks efficiently and effectively, replicating the pressures of real-world operations.

“Combat Readiness Exercises are a vital part of ensuring our Airmen are ready to respond to real-world missions,” said Col. Christopher Hesse, commander of the 155th Air Refueling Wing. “It’s about practicing how we fight, working through challenges as a team and validating our ability to deploy and operate under pressure.”

The exercise scenario tasked the wing to support the simulated deployment of more than 300 personnel and 80,000 tons of cargo from the unit’s home station at the Nebraska National Guard air base to a deployed location, which was simulated on the west ramp of the airport in Lincoln.

The exercise allowed Airmen to practice operating as if they were in a contingency location, said 1st Lt. Jordan Gunter, officer-in-charge for the 155th Civil Engineering Squadron. They built up a new base of operations with an Expandable Single Pallet Expeditionary Kitchen to feed the Airmen and temporary structures that served as working quarters and operational shelters.

“This is the very first time we have operated this particular operational muscle,” said Gunter, adding that the exercise concept allowed planners to work through problems involved in moving a significant portion of the wing to a deployed location and then quickly setting up operations.

“We are making sure that we can do everything we can do at home at a deployed location with a reduced footprint, because what matters is that we practice how we fight, so we’re going to practice it and see how well we do.”

Throughout the exercise, Airmen completed a variety of prepared injected challenges that simulated a more intense and degraded operational environment. They wore mission-oriented protective posture equipment, increased security protocols that monitored for external threats such as drones and amplified emergency responses. Additional unplanned difficulties, such as an early summer rainstorm, increased the complexity of the Airmen’s ability to effectively complete required tasks, including launching multiple KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft under adverse weather conditions.

“The CRE – Combat Readiness Exercise – is the new Air Force model for readiness that helps us shift our training focus from one geographical area to another,” said Lt. Col. Michael Newman, 155th Mission Support Group deputy commander who served as the simulated deployed instillation commander for the exercise. “This new model sees us adjusting our tactics, techniques and procedures to be more agile throughout mission execution.

“This exercise was our first practice opportunity to identify any deficiencies and areas for improvement through collected lessons learned,” Newman said, adding that the Lincoln exercise offered an opportunity for the wing to test this new model, find what success looks like and help build muscle memory for the future.

“We constantly threw challenges at our Airmen, and every single time they digested the problem, came up with a solution and executed,” Newman said. “Big kudos to all of them for executing and making this weekend a great success.”

 

 

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