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Home : News : State Partnership Program
NEWS | April 9, 2025

176th Air Defense Squadron Fields State-of-the-Art Battle Command Center

By David Bedard, Alaska National Guard

JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska –  Two Russian Tu-95 Bears and two Chinese H-6 Badgers with Su-30 and Su-35 Flanker fighter escorts speared across the sky July 24, 2024, in formation over the northern Pacific careening toward the Alaska Air Defense Identification Zone and bringing the nuclear-capable long-range bombers closer to U.S. sovereign airspace.

The combined bomber patrol marked the first time NORAD detected Russian and Chinese military aircraft together entering the Alaska ADIZ and the first time Chinese warplanes encroached on the U.S. ADIZ.

From their battle command center at JBER, Alaska Air National Guardsmen and Canadian Armed Forces Airmen of 176th Air Defense Squadron provided mission command for interception of the bombers 500 miles from the coast of Alaska by NORAD-assigned U.S. Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcons and F-35 Lightning IIs as well as NORAD-assigned Royal Canadian Air Force CF-18 Hornets.

The 176th ADS Battle Command Center’s 3rd generation AN/FYQ-156 Tactical Command and Control System, also known as Battle Control System-Fixed, was at the technological center of the successful detection and intercept.

Lt. Col. James Fowley, former 176th ADS commander, said NORAD introduced BCS-F in 2004 and fielded it in 2006. Its predecessor, the AN/FYQ-93, had been in service since 1983 and used an analog graphical user interface with a keyboard and antiquated arcade-style trackball.

BCS-F brought the BCC into the 21st Century by upgrading the user interface to a modern tactical display framework, providing advanced technology with increased sensor capacity. The upgrade also improves interoperability among hundreds of legacy sensors, including more radar systems.

Fowley said the challenge with BCS-F and its operator workstations was the inability to integrate other required air surveillance systems into a single user interface that was easy to use.

Nearly every system added to 176th ADS operator workstations since 9/11 had its own hardware that required a separate keyboard and computer mouse. This resulted in a complex configuration that forced air defense operators to comb through several systems to develop tactical actions and decisions to conduct air defense intercepts.

In December, NORAD completed a $13.1 million agile operations project that simplified configuration. Fowley marked the 176th ADS BCC as fully operational capable at a Jan. 24 ribbon-cutting ceremony that was officiated by Royal Canadian Brig. Gen. David Moar, Alaskan NORAD Region deputy commander.

“This first of its kind in [Indo-Pacific Command] provides the combatant commander with increased efficiency and reduced opportunities for human error,” Fowley said during the ceremony. “We’ve already put the system to good use. It conducted the first NORAD intercepts of two Chinese H-6 bombers and most recently intercepted Tu-95s off the coast of Alaska [Dec. 14].”

The National Guard Reserve Equipment Appropriation provided funds for the agile operations project through Air Combat Command, the Continental U.S. North American Aerospace Defense Command-1st Air Force (Air Forces Northern/Air Forces Space), and the National Guard Bureau. The Naval Warfare Information Center, Atlantic, provided technical oversight and conducted the planning and construction with 176 ADS Airmen.

Air defense operators on the operations floor now have access to all systems at a workstation through a single keyboard, video and mouse system called ThinkLogical, which allows them to switch quickly between multiple systems with different security classifications. That enables air defense crews to develop, share and take action on critical information faster. 

Maintenance of the agile operations system is simpler now. Cyber maintainers have unimpeded access to equipment, and coordination time for system maintenance is less.

The installation of new equipment also can be done without disrupting air defense operations. The space saved by removing hardware means the operations floor can split into two sections for executing multiple battle management teams in defense of Alaskan airspace if needed.

The 176th ADS Airmen are asked to do more to keep up with the tactical environment because of increasing strategic and geopolitical complexity, Moar said. The modernized BCS-F helps them adapt well to NORAD’s mission requirements.

“We owe you every single advantage we can possibly give you,” Moar said. “We put you in hard situations, we ask you to work hard every day, and we owe you the best environment we can give.”