An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | March 1, 2011

Illinois Air Guard wing performs unique refueling mission

By Army Sgt. Nathan Hastings Illinois National Guard

Scott Air Force Base, Ill. - The Illinois Air National Guard's 126th Air Refueling Wing, the first air refueling wing in the Air National Guard, has a mission some may say is unique.

The 126th performs three roles, its conventional refueling mission, national emergency mission and its state support mission using the KC-135 Stratotanker.

The conventional mission involves refueling aircraft from the Navy, Marines, Air Force, Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard.

“Our mission is to provide air refueling to anyone, anytime, anywhere,” said Air Force Maj. Mike O'Koniewski, deputy chief of scheduling, 108th Air Refueling Squadron, 126th Air Refueling Wing here.

They also refuel aircraft from coalition forces while serving overseas or serving as part of Operation Noble Eagle, defending the United States.

The wing also performs relief missions, like when it delivered supplies during the Hurricane Katrina relief effort.

“They asked for volunteers for the Katrina relief effort, so I volunteered. It was the highlight of my time here,” said Air Force Senior Master Sgt. Shonn Latimer, chief boom scheduler for the 108th.

When not performing their missions, the 126th constantly trains and prepares for the next time they receive the call.

“Day-to-day training is the key so that when a mission comes along, it's like second nature for these guys,” O'Koniewski said.

The 126th must negotiate with the Federal Aviation Administration to use specific air spaces called tracks for training.

They must also negotiate with receiver units so Guardmembers can work on every aspect of refueling aircraft in mid-air. The wing typically runs four training flights a day, which have to be set up weeks in advance.

“Most of the training missions aren't major offloads, but small amounts of fuel so that the Airmen can get the full picture from hooking up, to contact, to offloading fuel, also called passing gas,” O'Koniewski said.

The 126th may sometimes be asked to refuel aircraft mid-mission; sometimes cutting a training session short, but Latimer said this provided great experience for the boom operators and pilots.

Deployments come on a four-to-six month cycle for the Air Guard, but they share that time with two other units; one from the Tennessee National Guard and one from the Pennsylvania National Guard.

The unit is expected to be deployed again in 2012 and the commanders of each squadron will meet to decide who the lead unit is during the next deployment.

The 126th can be deployed as a solid unit, with all the support forces it contains, like civil engineers, security forces and logistical personnel, or it can deploy only pilots, boom operators and planes, or only support forces known as Expeditionary Combat Support.

In 2003, in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, the wing deployed to the Azores off the coast of Portugal.

It flew missions to provide fuel to aircraft carrying servicemembers and supplies to Iraq. It also was deployed to Qatar in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, refueling aircraft providing close air support to troops on the ground in Afghanistan.

“Refueling A-10's in Afghanistan at 16,000 feet when the mountain caps are 10,000 feet is a little scary. Insurgents could just pop out and take pot shots at you,” Latimer said.

The 126th has a versatile mission that consists of more than refueling aircraft.

"Our civil engineers deployed to Kuwait, installing plumbing, building schools and any other type of construction to help the locals," said Air Force Col. Jeff Jacobson, Vice Wing Commander, and 126th Air Refueling Wing.

"Our security forces went on multiple deployments to Iraq, mostly guarding air bases while their commander was stationed in Baghdad. I think they got a lot of satisfaction for performing a task they don't normally get to do."

The 126th consists of about 300 full-time Illinois National Guard Airmen and about 600 traditional Airmen.

The unit also has a sister active duty Air Force Air Refueling Squadron attached to it.

The 126th has operational control over the active-duty unit, but administratively the unit falls under a unit from the active-duty Air Force. There are only three other National Guard Refueling Wings with active-duty unit's attached to them.

“The Airmen all mesh together,” Jacobsen said. “They are embedded with our people to where you can't tell them apart.”

 

 

Related Articles
President Donald Trump awards the Medal of Honor to retired U.S. Army Command Sgt. Maj. Terry P. Richardson during a White House ceremony in Washington, D.C., March 2, 2026. Richardson was awarded the Medal of Honor for acts of conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty, Sept. 14, 1968, while he was a Staff Sgt. serving as the Lima Platoon Leader with Company A, 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division during action in the vicinity of Loc Ninh, Republic of Vietnam. (U.S. Army photo by Christopher Kaufmann)
President Trump Awards Medal of Honor to Retired Guard Soldier
By National Guard Bureau | March 6, 2026
WASHINGTON — In a White House ceremony on March 2, 2026, President Donald J. Trump awarded the Medal of Honor to retired Command Sgt. Maj. Terry P. Richardson, U.S. Army, for his heroic actions on September 14, 1968, while...

In June 2021, an MQ-9 participated in the concept-to-theory Establish Fury Exercise at the 188th Wing, in Fort Smith, Arkansas.
Arkansas Airmen Sharpen Information Warfare Skills During Exercise
By Staff Sgt. Joshua Coombes, | March 6, 2026
EBBING AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, Ark. – Several Arkansas Guard Airmen from Ebbing Air National Guard Base’s Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance Group recently participated in The One True OMEN, or TOTO, III...

U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Daniel Pau, an information technology specialist assigned to the 1st Battalion, 297th Infantry Regiment, Alaska Army National Guard, operates a high-frequency radio while participating in exercise Arctic Connect at the Alaska National Guard’s Joint Operations Center on Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, March 3, 2026. Arctic Connect is high-frequency radio communications exercise conducted across Alaska, designed to validate select Alaska Organized Militia units’ ability to communicate with the Alaska National Guard’s Joint Operations Center and with each other. Photo by Alejandro Peña.
Exercise Arctic Connect Validates Communication Across Alaska
By Dana Rosso, | March 6, 2026
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska – In a state where communities are separated by vast terrain, and severe weather can isolate regions without warning, resilient communications are essential. More than 30 radio...