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The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

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Page 1: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

The DispaTchThe magazine of the Texas Military Forces

2012 Year in Review

www.TxMF.us

Page 2: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

2  The DispaTch  End of Year 2012

In The Dispatch:

Camp Mabry hosted its annual Texas Military Forces Open House featuring the American Heroes Air Show on April 21st and 22nd in Austin, Texas to celebrate those who serve and sacrifice. The free two-day event featured an opening ceremony, a naturalization ceremony, World War II reenactments, military helicopter demonstrations and other interactive activities to educate the public about the National Guard. This annual event also allows members of the Texas Military Forces to thank the community for continued support. (Photo courtesy of Meena Balakrishnan)

Photos from 2012 showcase the many missions accomplished by the Texas Military Forces. (Photo collage by Staff Sgt. Jennifer D. Atkinson, Texas Military Forces Public Affairs)

In this special issue:4 From The Adjutant General: Relevant and ready

5 From the Senior Enlisted Advisor: It’s a great time to be a Soldier or Airman in the Texas Military Forces

6 From the Public Affairs Office

48 Texas remembers the fallen in the Global War on Terror

50 Where to find your Texas Military Forces online

Page 3: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

* The Dispatch is an authorized publication for members of the Texas Military Forces and the Department of Defense. Contents of The Dispatch are not necessarily the official views of, or endorsed by, the U.S. Government, the National Guard Bureau, or the State of Texas. * The editorial content of this publication is the responsibility of the Texas Military Forces Public Affairs Office. * The appearance of advertising in this publication, including inserts or supplements, does not constitute endorsement of the products or services advertised by the U.S. Army or the Texas Military Forces. * Everything advertised in this publication will be made available for purchase, use, or patronage without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, physical handicap, political affiliation, or any other nonmerit factor of the purchaser, user, or patron. If a violation or rejection of this equal opportunity policy by an advertiser is confirmed, the publisher will refuse to print advertising from that source until the violation is corrected. * Content is edited, prepared and provided by the Texas Joint Military Forces Public Affairs Office, Bldg. 10, 2200 W. 35th Street, Camp Mabry, Austin, Texas. 78703.*

Public Affairs OfficerCol. Amy Cook

Deputy Public Affairs OfficerLt. Col. Jonathan Pettit

Public Affairs Operations NCOMaster Sgt. Kenneth Walker

Public Affairs Staff1st Lt. Martha Nigrelle Staff Sgt. Malcolm McClendon Staff Sgt. Phil Fountain Spc. Maria Moy John Thibodeau Laura Lopez

Managing EditorStaff Sgt. Jennifer D. Atkinson

Contributing Writers and PhotographersThe Texas Military Forces Public Affairs Office would like to thank all the contributing writers and photographers who so generously shared their talent with us this year. Without the hard work and dedication of these Soldiers, Airmen, and civilians, we would not be able to tell YOUR Texas Military Forces story.

Year in Review 2012

GovernorGov. Rick Perry

The Adjutant General Maj. Gen. John F.

Nichols

7 Diversity in the ForceMen and women from all over the country and the world call Texas home, and serve honorably in the Texas Military Forces. The leadership of the TXMF proudly supports and celebrates the unique by mentoring Soldiers and Airmen in diversity leadership.

8 TXMF history, from the militia to current dayAlthough the Texas Military Forces have been in the spotlight in recent years due to deployments in support of the Global War on Terrorism and missions at home helping Texans during fires, flood, and hurricanes, there is a long, proud history of Texans serving; From WWI to Hurricane Celia, from Korea to Hurricane Ike, Texas has always answered the call of the nation and the world.

12 Unit locationsFind your local Texas Military Forces Unit! This map shows armories, wings and unit locations by county.

15 Texas Adjutant General’s DepartmentThe mission of the State Services is to care for our customers and to pro-vide committed, professional support of our agency’s mission as stewards of the state’s financial and human resources.

18 Texas Army National GuardThe Nation’s premier force of well led, Mission-Ready Units, backed by Resilient Families, fully engaged in our communities, unified in purpose and committed to excellence.

26 Texas Air National GuardBe ready to defend the homeland as the Governor’s first responders and decisively take the fight to the enemy abroad with superb Leadership, relevant training, and equipped citizen-Airmen in our Total Force Core Functions.

34 Texas State GuardThe Texas State Guard (TXSG) mission as a branch of the Texas Military Forces is to provide mission-ready military forces to assist State and local authorities through Defense Support to Civil Authorities (DSCA) and aug-ment the other two branches of the TXMF as force multipliers.

40 Domestic OperationsProvide Dual-Status command and control of State Active Duty, Title 32, and Title 10 forces for immediate and long term response to any Defense Support to Civil Authorities (DSCA) event at the request of the Governor of Texas.

The DispaTch

Page 4: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

4  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

CAMP MABRY, Texas (Nov. 8, 2012) – Since taking office last year, I have met with senior leaders across the Texas Military Forces, and our state and federal partners, to discuss the goals and objectives for the Texas Military Forces to and beyond 2035. From these discussions, I have made the following conclusions.

We must put people first by investing in our human capital. We will put people first – no exceptions. To do this, we have to develop strong leaders who act in the best interest of Soldiers, Airmen, civilian employees and their families.

This means we must develop transparent personnel pro-cesses that can be reviewed, tracked and improved.

We will instill a sense of ownership and value in each of our employees. Mental health and family readiness will be priority efforts.

We must be relevant by becoming the force provider of choice. A 2011 Department of Defense (DoD) report states “the Guard and Reserve should be a ‘force of first choice’ for those tasks for which they are particularly well suited, owing to their overall cost effectiveness and the skill sets that they can pro-vide.”

Although DoD recognizes our value, we should not rest on our laurels. We must consistently demonstrate through our performance that we are a future-oriented organization capable of performing state and federal missions in a joint manner.

We must be ready to provide the right forces at the right time.

We are operating in a resource-constrained environment. As good stewards of the taxpayer dollars we will allocate re-sources to those programs and activities that keep us ready for our state and federal missions. This requires a comprehensive plan to ensure we have properly equipped the right force struc-ture in the right locations.

We must communicate to get our message out. We cannot afford to take for granted that our constituents and stakeholders understand who we are and what we do. We will proactively en-gage legislative, state and federal organizations to build mutually beneficial relationships.

Internally, we will strive to improve our information re-positories and public websites. The accurate dissemination of information to the lowest level is essential to ensuring that our Soldiers, Airmen, civilian employees and families know their importance to us.

We must partner to build relationships that matter. The

TXMF does not operate in a bubble. We rely on external support mechanisms and organizations to accomplish our missions.

We will strengthen our existing relationships and look to forge new alliances. Legislative, military and interagency engage-ment plans will be developed to ensure that we can leverage the expertise, capabilities and benefits of these organizations.

Likewise, we will look to the private sector and civilian population to determine what programs and initiatives we can implement that build trust and confidence in our service to them.

Although I am currently looking out to 2035, I envision our strategic planning as a five-year effort. Our plan should be forward-thinking enough to get us five years out, but with annual reviews that will allow us to refocus our action plans.

We are a premier organization comprised of professional, unsurpassed, mission ready forces. We are “Texans Defending Texas,” and by working together – whether you are Army, Air, State Guard or civilian employee – we will remain a premier organization and strategic partner that our state and federal leaders can count on to effectively serve at home and abroad.

Planning for the future: relevant, ready

Maj. Gen. John F. NicholsThe Adjutant General of Texas

ThE adjuTanT GEnERal

Page 5: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  5

sEnioR EnlisTEd advisoR

As we draw back from a decade of war, our Soldiers and Airmen must remain committed to excellence. We must not only be tactically proficient, we must also continually strive to be technically proficient in our core tasks.

To ensure our continued readiness for missions both at home and abroad, I encourage Soldiers and Airmen to participate in their unit proficiency boards, as well as unit-sponsored “Best Warrior” competitions. While these competi-tions have traditionally focused on the Army, I challenge our Airmen to show off their tactical and technical skills.

We are proud to protect and defend our State and Nation.

The Airman’s Creed

I am an American Airman. I am a warrior. I have answered my nation’s call.

I am an American Airman. My mission is to fly, fight, and win. I am faithful to a proud heritage, A tradition of honor, And a legacy of valor.

I am an American Airman, guardian of freedom and justice, My nation’s sword and shield, Its sentry and avenger. I defend my country with my life.

I am an American Airman: Wingman, leader, warrior. I will never leave an Airman behind, I will never falter,and I will not fail.

The Soldier’s CreedI am an American Soldier.

I am a warrior and a member of a team. I serve the people of the United States, and live the Army Values.

I will always place the mission first.

I will never accept defeat.

I will never quit.

I will never leave a fallen comrade.

I am disciplined, physically and men-tally tough, trained and proficient in my warrior tasks and drills. I always maintain my arms, my equipment and myself.

I am an expert and I am a professional.

I stand ready to deploy, engage, and de-stroy, the enemies of the United States of America in close combat.

I am a guardian of freedom and the American way of life.

I am an American Soldier.

Command Sgt. Major Bradley C. BrandtSenior Enlisted Advisor Texas Military Forces

It’s a great time to be a Soldier and an Airman in the Texas Military Forces.

Page 6: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

6  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

public affairs office

The Public Affairs Team was honored to tell the Texas Military Forces (TXMF) story in 2012! Thank you for sharing your stories, photographs, memories and triumphs with us. Please continue to share story ideas about your accomplishments or upcoming missions.

In 2013, our goal is to expand coverage and fully represent the diversity of people, jobs, units, missions, and history within the agency by dividing Texas into four regions and focusing quarterly editions of The Dispatch on a different section of the Lone Star State. We will continue highlighting the great partnerships we share with civilian agencies, as well as our close working rela-tionships with Chile and the Czech Republic.

We hope you will continue to share with us all of the great things that illustrate the value that the Texas Mili-tary Forces brings to the State of Texas and the Nation.

We look forward to hearing about, or attending some of your upcoming events!

To submit a story to the Public Affairs Office, share pictures with us, or invite us to one of your events, you can easily contact us by visiting our newly designed public webpage: www.txmf.us, or you can give us feedback or information by following us on Facebook or Twitter. Current pictures and videos are found on our Flickr and YouTube pages with the latest information and events on our Community Calendar and/or our blog: http://texasmilitaryforces.tumblr.com/.

We look forward to your feedback and learning how we can improve representing you through the webpage, our social media presence, and this magazine!

If and when you find yourself at Camp Mabry, please stop by and visit your Public Affairs Office in Building 10 for a cup of coffee, a piece of fine chocolate, or some hands-on training (camera kits available for check out). We are honored to continue to support our diverse Texas team!

A Note from your Public Affairs Group…

Page 7: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  7

divERsiTY in ThE foRcE

Successful leaders understand how to lead a diverse team. They establish and sustain the National Guard culture. Leaders appreciate and ultimately leverage the power of diversity within their teams to meet all federal and state mission challenges.

Leaders who Understand Diversity• Recognize their own biases and prejudices • Step outside their personal comfort zone to learn more about others

who may be different than themselves• Know and understand the members of their team beyond the obvious

name, rank, skill identifier, or military occupational specialty

Leaders who Appreciate Diversity• Promote diversity concepts and principles with their teams, units, and

organizations• Hold others accountable for their diversity efforts within the team • Foster a leadership climate that respects the uniqueness and potential

of everyone on the team

Leaders who Leverage Diversity• Create diversity-based teams for special projects and problem-solving

teams• Seek council and mentoring from others who are different, in order to

grow as a leader• Form subordinate staff and command teams based on diversity so

diversity-based leadership permeates throughout the command

Encouraging diversity leadership

Men and women from all over the country and the world call Texas home, and serve honorably in the Texas Military Forces. The leadership of the TXMF proudly supports and celebrates our unique heritage by mentoring Soldiers and Airmen in diversity leadership.

Page 8: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

8  The DispaTch  End of Year 2012

The Texas Military Forces- Relevant and ready yesterday, today and tomorrow

1835

1846

1860

1898

1916

1918

1943

1943

1943

1944

1945

Militia units fight in Texas Revolution.

Texas joins in the Mexican-American War.

The American Civil War begins. Texas supplies 89,500

troops to the Con-federacy, and 2,000 troops to the Union.

Texas troops fight in the Spanish-

American War.

Texas troops patrol the southwest

border to defend against the Mexican bandit Pancho Villa.

Units from Texas and Oklahoma, as part the 36th

Infantry Divi-sion, leave to fight in France and Germany.

The Texas Defense Force is renamed the Texas State Guard. A new shoulder patch, a blue shield with a white star and a red

T is issued.

The 36th Inf. Div. lands in Salerno,

Italy- the first American combat di-vision to land on the continent of Europe.

One thousand, two hundred members of the Texas State Guard deploy to help quell racial

unrest in Beaumont, Texas.

The 36th Inf. Div. takes heavy casual-ties in the Rapido

River action, losing the better part of

two of its three regi-ments attmpting to

cross the river.

The 36th Inf. Div. returns to Texas.

By the end of WWII, the 36th

spent 400 days in combat, won seven

battle streamers for exceptional performance in

combat, accepted the surrender of

German Field Marshal Hermann Goering, and taken part in two assault landings. Fourteen

members of the division earned the

Medal of Honor.

TExas miliTaRY foRcEs hisToRY 1836-1970

Page 9: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

End of Year 2012  The DispaTch  9

The Texas Military Forces- Relevant and ready yesterday, today and tomorrow

1946

1946

1946

1946

1947

1947

1951

1957

1960

1965

1970

The 36th Inf. Div.

becomes part of

the Texas National Guard.

The 136th Fighter Group, originally the 368th Fighter Group, is transferred to the newly-established Texas Air National

Guard.

The 182nd Fighter-Interceptor Squad-ron is formed in the Texas Air National

Guard.

The 111th Fighter-Interceptor Squad-ron is formed in the Texas Air National

Guard.

Members of the Texas State Guard

deploy to Texas City, Texas when the

city is placed under martial law after a freighter ship ex-

plodes. The explo-sion kills almost 400 people and injures nearly 4,000 more.

Federal legislation au-thorizing the Texas State

Guard expires and the TXSG is disbanded. The colors are cases and all members are placed on

the Inactive list.

The 136th Fighter Group deploys to Korea. The

136th is the first Air National Guard unit to en-ter combat in any theater.

The 111th is ex-panded and flagged as the 147th Fighter-Interceptor Group.

The 149t h Fighter Group is established

out of the 182nd Fighter-Interceptor

Group.

Legislation re-autho-rizing the Texas State

Guard passes.

The 147th is re-des-ignated as the 111th Combat Crew Train-ing Squadron. The 111th trains pilots

on the F-102 fighter, the F-4 Phantom and

the F-16 Fighting Falcon.

TExas miliTaRY foRcEs hisToRY 1836-1970

Page 10: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

10  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

The Texas Military Forces- Relevant and ready yesterday, today and tomorrow

1973

1978

1986

1993

1999

1999

2001

2004

2005

2005

2005

The 49th Armored Division is activated,

and the lineage of the 36t Inf. Div. is transferred to the

36th Brigade, under the 49th.

The 136th reflags to the 136th Tacti-cal Airlift Wing. From 1978 to 2012, over 6,000 Airmen have deployed with the 136th during Operations

Noble Eagle, Iraqi Freedom, Enduring Freedom, and New Horizons.

The 149th receives F-16 Fighting

Falcons.

The Texas State Guard is organized into the current regimental

structure. Currently, the TXSG includes six

Army regiments; two air Wings, the Medical Bri-gade and the Maritime

Regiment

The 149th be-comes a formal training unit for Air Force F-16

pilots, a mission it continues to

this day.

After the attacks on Sept. 11, four fighters from the 111th escort Air Force One as Presi-dent George W. Bush travels from Florida to

Louisiana, Nebraska and finally to

Washington D.C.

The 49th Armored Div. is reflagged as the 36th Inf. Div.

Airmen from the 147th Fighter Wing deploy to Iraq in support of Op-eration Iraq Freedom. The unit flies 462 sor-

ties in two months with a perfect maintenance

record.

Over 3,000 troops from the 56th Infan-try Brigade Combat Team, 36th Inf. Div. deploy to Iraq. It is the largest deploy-

ment of Texas troops since WWII.

C-130 cargo planes from the 136th are

some of the first aircraft to arrive in New Orleans after Hurricane

Katrina, bringing relief supplies and

workers.

TExas miliTaRY focEs hisToRY 1973-2012

Soldiers from the 36th Inf. Div. deploy to Bosnia for Endur-

ing Mission 3

Page 11: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  11End of Year 2012  The DispaTch  11

The Texas Military Forces- Relevant and ready yesterday, today and tomorrow

2005

2006

2007

2007

2007

2008

2008

2008

2010

2012

2012

1st Squadron, 124th Cav. Reg., 36th Inf.

Div. are the first Cav-alry unit to serve as peacekeeping forces in the Sinai Desert

for the Multinational Force and Observers.

Airmen from the 147th deploy to Iraq. Pilots

complete 348 planned missions, six no-notice close air support mis-sions, and four alert

launches.

The TXSG travels to Eagle Pass, Texas to contribute to tor-

nado relief efforts, and to Marble Falls,

Texas to assist in flood relief

Members of the Tex-as State Guard travel

to New Orleans to help with Hurricane

Katrina relief operations.

The 147th Fighter Wing receives MQ-1

Predator drones and is renamed the 147th

Reconnaissance Wing.

56th IBCT sends 3.000 Sol-diers to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Soldiers and Airmen from all three components of the Texas Military Forces deploy in support of civil authori-

ties during Atlantic hurricane season. Four hurricanes,

Dolly, Edouard, Gustav and Ike impact Texas.

The 36th Inf. Div. deploys to Basrah, Iraq in support of

Operation New Dawn. The 36th is one of the last American combat

units to leave Iraq.

Over 450 Soldiers from various units of the Texas Army Na-tional Guard deploy

to Afghanistan as Security Force Assist

Teams. Each SFAT will train and mentor small units of Afghan

military forces.

Texas Governor Rick Perry empha-sizes the need for the 136th C-130s in Texas for Gulf

Coast emergency relief. Since 2005,

the 136th has flown over 400 missions.

With over 560 hours of flight time, the 136th has trans-

ported more than 3,000 passengers and delivered 939 tons of emergency

supplies.

TExas miliTaRY foRcEs hisToRY 1973-2012

3rd Battalion, 144th Inf. Reg., 36th Inf. Div. mobilizes for Operation Iraqi

Freedom. as Task Force Panther.

Page 12: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

12  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

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SAGINAW CSMS#1

WACO R.C.

WYLIE R.C.FMS #9

TYLER R.C.

MEXIA R.C.

CAMP SWIFT T.C.UTES #3

HONDO R.C.

DENTON R.C.

TEMPLE R.C.

TAYLOR R.C.

SEGUIN R.C.

LAREDO R.C.FMS #6

DENISON R.C.

DECATUR R.C.

KILGORE R.C.

EL PASO R.C.

WACO FMS #33KILLEEN R.C.

BRENHAM R.C.

BRYAN R.C.FMS #11

PASADENA R.C.

EL CAMPO R.C.

ANGLETON R.C.

VICTORIA R.C.

ARLINGTON R.C.

TERRELL - R.C.

CORSICANA R.C.

PALESTINE R.C.

TEMPLE FMS #30

BEE CAVES R.C.ABIA R.C. AASFFMS #3

ROSENBERG R.C.

LA MARQUE R.C.

WELLINGTON R.C.

LUBBOCK AFRCFMS #20

GREENVILLE R.C.

WAXAHACHIE R.C.MIDLAND AIRPORT

SAN ANGELO R.C.

GATESVILLE R.C.NORTH FORT HOOD

SAN MARCOS R.C.

ELLINGTON FIELD R.C.AASF

MARTINDALER.C.AASFFMS #27

WESLACO R.C.FMS #25

WEATHERFORD R.C.MARSHALL R.C.FMS #21

BARKER RESERVOIR

STEPHENVILLE R.C.

WICHITA FALLS R.C.

CAMP MAXEY T.C.UTES #1

CAMP MABRY - TXMF HQFMS #4, CSMS #2

NEW BRAUNFELS R.C.

EAGLE MOUNTAIN LAKE

FREDERICKSBURG R.C.

CORPUS CHRISTI R.C.FMS #7

RED RIVER ARMY DEPOT R.C.

FORT WOLTERS T.C.UTES# 2

CAMP BULLIS - UTES #5CAMP BULLIS R.C.

DALLAS - RED BIRD R.C.FMS # 8

FT WORTH - SANDAGE R.C.

CAMP BOWIE T.C.UTES #4

HOUSTON - WESTHEIMER R.C.FMS #36

ABIA AFRC

FORT SAM HOUSTON R.C.FMS#29

FT WORTH - COBB PARK R.C.

DALLAS - C. CROSSING R.C.

SHOREVIEW FMS #15FMS #15

GRAND PRAIRIE (DNAS) FMS #16AASF

TYLER AFRC

SAN MARCOS AFRCFMS #23

LUFKINAFRC

LEWISVILLE AFRC

KINGSVILLEAFRC

HUNTSVILLE AFRC

CAMP BULLIS AFRC

BROWNSVILLEAFRC

AMARILLOAFRC

(HOOKS) RED RIVERAFRC

AFRC - JVMF

DYESSAFRC - FMS #1

ROUND ROCKAFRC - FMS #5

FT BLISSAFRC - UTES #6

SEAGOVILLEAFRC - FMS #31

NW HOUSTONAFRC - FMS #26

ABIA

AFRC - FMS #18

GRAND PRAIRIE AFRCFMS #10

209 WF

149 FW

111 RS

147 RW

136 AW

273 IOS

217 TRS

204 SFS

272 EIS

221 CCS254 CCG

TXANG HQ

1

9

8

7

2

4

3

10

24

6

16

18

20

14

5

12

19

17

11 23

13

21

22

15

TEXAS MILITARY FORCESMAIN ASSETTS

andGEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION

With Texas Disaster Districts

61 Readiness Centers (Armories)33 Maintenance Facilities 4 Army Aviation Support Facilities---------------------------------------------------------------------98 TOTAL

19 Armed Forces Reserve Centers (AFRC) 5 TXARNG Hosted: ABIA, Lubbock, NW Houston, Dyess AFB, Ft Bliss 14 USAR Hosted

4 Major Training Centers 3 Air Wings and 4 Geographically Separated Units

TXARNG Facilities

TXANG Wings and GSUs

BRAC AFRCs

Last Update: December 2012Please Contact CFMO-GIS Office for updates and additional copies

TEXAS MILITARY FORCES MAIN FACILITIES

and GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION

With Texas Disaster Districts

Page 13: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  13

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SAGINAW CSMS#1

WACO R.C.

WYLIE R.C.FMS #9

TYLER R.C.

MEXIA R.C.

CAMP SWIFT T.C.UTES #3

HONDO R.C.

DENTON R.C.

TEMPLE R.C.

TAYLOR R.C.

SEGUIN R.C.

LAREDO R.C.FMS #6

DENISON R.C.

DECATUR R.C.

KILGORE R.C.

EL PASO R.C.

WACO FMS #33KILLEEN R.C.

BRENHAM R.C.

BRYAN R.C.FMS #11

PASADENA R.C.

EL CAMPO R.C.

ANGLETON R.C.

VICTORIA R.C.

ARLINGTON R.C.

TERRELL - R.C.

CORSICANA R.C.

PALESTINE R.C.

TEMPLE FMS #30

BEE CAVES R.C.ABIA R.C. AASFFMS #3

ROSENBERG R.C.

LA MARQUE R.C.

WELLINGTON R.C.

LUBBOCK AFRCFMS #20

GREENVILLE R.C.

WAXAHACHIE R.C.MIDLAND AIRPORT

SAN ANGELO R.C.

GATESVILLE R.C.NORTH FORT HOOD

SAN MARCOS R.C.

ELLINGTON FIELD R.C.AASF

MARTINDALER.C.AASFFMS #27

WESLACO R.C.FMS #25

WEATHERFORD R.C.MARSHALL R.C.FMS #21

BARKER RESERVOIR

STEPHENVILLE R.C.

WICHITA FALLS R.C.

CAMP MAXEY T.C.UTES #1

CAMP MABRY - TXMF HQFMS #4, CSMS #2

NEW BRAUNFELS R.C.

EAGLE MOUNTAIN LAKE

FREDERICKSBURG R.C.

CORPUS CHRISTI R.C.FMS #7

RED RIVER ARMY DEPOT R.C.

FORT WOLTERS T.C.UTES# 2

CAMP BULLIS - UTES #5CAMP BULLIS R.C.

DALLAS - RED BIRD R.C.FMS # 8

FT WORTH - SANDAGE R.C.

CAMP BOWIE T.C.UTES #4

HOUSTON - WESTHEIMER R.C.FMS #36

ABIA AFRC

FORT SAM HOUSTON R.C.FMS#29

FT WORTH - COBB PARK R.C.

DALLAS - C. CROSSING R.C.

SHOREVIEW FMS #15FMS #15

GRAND PRAIRIE (DNAS) FMS #16AASF

TYLER AFRC

SAN MARCOS AFRCFMS #23

LUFKINAFRC

LEWISVILLE AFRC

KINGSVILLEAFRC

HUNTSVILLE AFRC

CAMP BULLIS AFRC

BROWNSVILLEAFRC

AMARILLOAFRC

(HOOKS) RED RIVERAFRC

AFRC - JVMF

DYESSAFRC - FMS #1

ROUND ROCKAFRC - FMS #5

FT BLISSAFRC - UTES #6

SEAGOVILLEAFRC - FMS #31

NW HOUSTONAFRC - FMS #26

ABIA

AFRC - FMS #18

GRAND PRAIRIE AFRCFMS #10

209 WF

149 FW

111 RS

147 RW

136 AW

273 IOS

217 TRS

204 SFS

272 EIS

221 CCS254 CCG

TXANG HQ

1

9

8

7

2

4

3

10

24

6

16

18

20

14

5

12

19

17

11 23

13

21

22

15

TEXAS MILITARY FORCESMAIN ASSETTS

andGEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION

With Texas Disaster Districts

61 Readiness Centers (Armories)33 Maintenance Facilities 4 Army Aviation Support Facilities---------------------------------------------------------------------98 TOTAL

19 Armed Forces Reserve Centers (AFRC) 5 TXARNG Hosted: ABIA, Lubbock, NW Houston, Dyess AFB, Ft Bliss 14 USAR Hosted

4 Major Training Centers 3 Air Wings and 4 Geographically Separated Units

TXARNG Facilities

TXANG Wings and GSUs

BRAC AFRCs

Last Update: December 2012Please Contact CFMO-GIS Office for updates and additional copies

Page 14: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

14  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

ADJUTANT GENERAL’S DEPT

Mr. Duane WaddillMs. Roben Davis

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2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  15

CAMP MABRY, Texas (Jan. 12, 2012)—Diligently working at Texas Guard facilities throughout the Lone Star State is a cadre of state employees that aid and support the activities of the Texas Military Forces (TXMF), which are collectively comprised of the Texas Army National Guard, Texas Air National Guard, and the volunteer Texas State Guard.

Initially established under the Republic of Texas, the Adjutant General's Department (AGD) continued opera-tions after Texas entered the Union in 1845, and is currently the state agency responsible for "building repairs, grounds maintenance, environmental oversight and protection of the state and federal installations that house our National Guard members," according to the Adjutant General's Department Strategic Plan 2011-2015.

Duane Waddill, the agency's executive director, ex-plained their interconnectivity with the Joint Forces.

The civilian professionals help administratively facilitate the domestic response when the state's forces are activated by the governor, and perform functions that range from facility management and security to state payroll and human resources.

A twenty-year veteran of Texas state govern-ment, Waddill likened the agency he now manages to weatherizing caulk, in that it has the ability to provide a cohesive seal for TXMF activities.

"Our flexible structure allows us to bridge gaps," Waddill said. "We can help fill in the cracks that naturally occur when the Army, Air, and [Texas] State Guard can't cross functions."

Additionally, AGD activities include coopera-tive partnerships with the National Guard to rebuild trucks for units across the United States, help educate at-risk teens through the ChalleNGe program, as well as excite young minds to math and science through the STARBASE program.

Waddill discussed the value his agency provides the state, from a fiscal standpoint.

"For a $10 to $12 million annual investment from the Texas Legislature [for the Adjutant General's Department], the state receives over $1 billion of benefit, in terms of eco-nomic impact from our activities," said Waddill.

The Adjutant General of Texas, Maj. Gen. John F. Nichols, recently held an appreciation breakfast with the Command Group for AGD maintenance professionals on Camp Mabry, the state military's headquarters in Austin. At the event, Nichols expressed his gratitude, and thanked the workers for their years of service, noting that some have served over thirty years on behalf of the state.

While the civilian employees of the Adjutant General's Department often operate in the shadows of the uniformed personnel that permeate the state's military units, the essen-tial work they perform does not go unnoticed.

State agency bridges gaps in Joint ForceStory and photo by Staff Sgt. Phil FountainTexas Military Forces Public Affairs

Officer Ian McPherson, a shift supervisor with the Adjutant General’s Department’s security forces, verifies the credentials of a visitor to Camp Mabry, in Austin, Texas.

Find out how You can help a de-ploYed texas servicemember!!

visit http://www.uso.org/waYs-to-volunteer.aspx

adjuTanT GEnERal’s dEpaRTmEnT

Page 16: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

16  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

CAMP MABRY, Texas (May 3, 2012)—Uniformed and civilian members of the Texas Military Forces celebrated the opening of a new STARBASE acad-emy at Camp Mabry, in Austin, Texas, on May 1, 2012. This is the 2nd site in the state overseen by the National Guard, and builds upon the program that was organized in 1994 at Hous-ton's Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base.

Maj. Gen. John F. Nichols, the Adjutant General of Texas, and Gail Whittemore-Smith, Texas STARBASE's state director, were on-hand for a ribbon-cutting ceremony, which was followed with the welcoming of the inaugural class at the Central Texas location.

STARBASE is a U.S. Department of Defense funded youth program that is principally directed toward at-risk youth. The initiative provides practi-cal application to math and science problems and opens the world of sci-ence and technological-based career-fields to students through hands-on, simulation and experimental activi-ties.

The newly created program in the state's capital city is available to area 5th grade students through partner-ships with local educators. During

the month of May, 240 students from Del Valle and Austin's indepen-dent school districts are expected to participate in initial orientation courses, called "A Taste of STARBASE," with more robust coursework to fol-low during the next school year.

The program's state director de-scribed Texas STARBASE as "a rigorous academic training experience that supports STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) skills." She further explained that the curric-ulum has been developed to enhance the learning experience in a way that supports state and national education standards.

In addition to the ribbon-cutting, and day of classes, attendees wit-nessed an aerial demonstration by a Texas Army National Guard UH-72 Lakota, a light utility helicopter, and had the opportunity to interact with its pilot.

"We are a program that tech-nically collapses the walls of the traditional classroom, gets the kids out into an area that normally is not provided in a normal traditional classroom," Whittemore-Smith said. "It allows the students to study the STEM concepts and skills, then apply that in some way, with either hypothesizing, experimenting, simulating, then talk

to real-world experts that are in the STEM workplace."

Jennifer Garcia, a certified science teacher with Del Valle ISD's Gilbert El-ementary School, was excited to have her students participate in the Austin location's inaugural class.

"It provides students an oppor-tunity to see new things; from new technologies and critical thinking techniques to helping prepare the students for STAAR testing next year," Garcia said. The State of Texas Assess-ments of Academic Readiness (STAAR) examination is legislatively-mandat-ed, and includes sections on math and science knowledge.

Discussing the program, the state's senior National Guard officer and trained fighter pilot said, "it's aca-demically oriented, its high-tech, and allows them to see what they can do. Then it shows them hands-on what actually happens."

"I see the light in the kid's eyes," Nichols said. "It gives them a spark, and as elementary kids it can many times carry over to their high school time and gives them a different idea of what they can do."

You can view additional photos at the Texas Military Forces Flickr page - http://bit.ly/J9EWOm.

National Guard launches 2nd Texas STARBASE AcademyStory and photos by Staff Sgt. Phil FountainTexas Military Forces Public Affairs

Left: Maj. Gen. John F. Nichols, the Adjutant General of Texas, and Gail Whittemore-Smith, Texas STARBASE's state director, par-ticipate in the ribbon cutting ceremony for Austin's STARBASE program alongside Monica Diaz, Texas STARBASE's deputy state director, and John Harris, a training specialist for the Austin STARBASE, at Camp Mabry, in Austin, Texas, on May 1, 2012.Right: Shannon Estapinal, deputy director of the STARBASE program at Houston’s Ellington Field, assists Jesus Alvarez, a 5th grade student at Del Valle Independent School District’s Gilbert Elementary, during a flight simulation exercise.

adjuTanT GEnERal’s dEpaRTmEnT

Page 17: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  17

ARLINGTON, Va. (Feb. 3, 2012)—Texas and Wis-consin National Guard units were among several from the reserve components recognized Friday, Feb. 2 at the 2012 Department of Defense Reserve Family Readiness Awards ceremony, here, at the Pentagon.

Representing the Army and Air National Guards, respectively, were 1st Battalion, 147th Aviation Regiment, Wisconsin National Guard, and the 136th Airlift Wing, Texas Air National Guard.

Edith Pond, Family Readiness Group program manager of the 1/147th, said representing the Army National Guard was an incredible honor.

“To have the opportunity to receive support from our community, as well as provide support for our community has been just wonderful overall … having an opportunity to come together due to the sacrifices of the soldiers of the 147th … and to also serve in our way.”

Pond said pre-deployment programs and support from local clubs and organizations that helped set the soldiers and family members of the 147th up for success.

“In return, we gave back to those that supported us by hosting blood drives and a water station for the American Legion at their national convention; we also did the same for the Madison Mini-Marathon in support of our soldiers,” Pond said.

Other programs that set the 147th FRG apart were their scheduling of guest speakers to present topics such as post-traumatic stress and the way in which they used technology to host meetings via phone bridges – seamlessly integrating and support-ing members from the Michigan National Guard that were attached to the 147th.

“On behalf of Lt. Col. Marty Pond and the sol-diers of the 147th, we just want our FRG to know how much they meant to us and how their support, taking care of our families and the camaraderie they built to help each other get through the mobilization

was appreciated by us,” said Army Sgt. 1st Class Troy Kleinheinz, military point-of-contact for the 147th FRG.

“We would not have gotten through it without their support and what they did to assure us that when we got home, everything was going to be OK. We had an amazing FRG.”

The hard work and dedication of FRG members to ensure that families are taken care of back home can ensure that soldiers and airmen are focused on the mission.

“You can take my best C-130 pilot, with the most years of experience and the most combat time, and put him in the skies over Afghanistan on a critical mission,” said Air Force Col. David M. McMinn, com-mander of the 136th AW. “If he just got a call from his wife that [the] refrigerator isn’t working … right before he takes off, that guy is now useless.”

He’s no longer focused on the mission because he’s 4,000 miles away from home and unable to do his job as a husband, McMinn said.

“We really want our members to keep their head on and we want them [to know] that we will handle the families and work with the families,” said Laura Wedel, the 136th FRG leader.

Some of the key elements that set the 136th FRG apart were their events held during deployments, which included back-to-school parties and “powder-puff” football events and their involvement in a local council that consisted of FRG members from all of the other service branches, allowing them to build cross-component integration.

McMinn said the recognition by the DoD was “a testimony to the men and women that we have in our family readiness group and how hard they work.”

“A robust family readiness group back home, tak-ing care of our families’ needs, helps us be effective when we deploy – that is the meat of why these folks are being recognized here today.”

Texas, Wisconsin units recognized for top family readiness programsStory and photo by Sgt. Darron Salzer National Guard Bureau

Members of the Texas and Wisconsin family readiness groups. Both units were recognized for outstanding FRG activity and leadership at the 2012 Department of Defense Reserve Family Readiness Awards ceremony on Feb. 17.

adjuTanT GEnERal’s dEpaRTmEnT

Page 18: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

18  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

36th ID: return to duty, new commander

TEXAS ARMY NATL GUARD

MG Joyce L. Stevens

CSM Richarch Milford

Page 19: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  19

CAMP MABRY, Texas (Jan. 23, 2012)– The 36th Infantry Divi-sion celebrated a successful deployment and welcomed a new commander during a ceremony held Saturday, Jan. 21, at Camp Mabry in Austin.

After three years in com-mand and an historic deploy-ment to Iraq, Maj. Gen. Eddy M. Spurgin handed the divi-

sion’s colors to newly promoted Maj. Gen. James K. “Red” Brown. Brown served as rear detachment commander for the division headquarters during its deployment, and as the 56th Infantry Brigade Com-bat Team commander during a deployment to Iraq in 2005.

“I am proud to stand beside you,” Brown said to his troops. “Thank you so much for giving me this op-portunity.”

The 36th Div. headquarters is comprised of more than 700 Texas National Guard Soldiers. In Decem-ber 2010 they deployed to Basrah, Iraq, where they provided command and control of approximately

8,000 active-duty troops in support of Operation New Dawn.

The headquarters worked hand-in-hand with Iraqi leadership in an effort to improve the security, safety, stability, and economic viability of Iraq’s nine south-ern provinces. With the Iraqi Security Forces, the unit conducted 570 tactical operations that resulted in the discovery of 127 weapon caches, the elimination of 200 roadside bombs, and the arrest of 465 sus-pected terrorists.

“This time in command has certainly flown by quickly,” said Spurgin. “It seems like just yesterday I was sitting where General Brown is sitting now, pre-paring to take over the reigns of this great division.”

“As commanders, we learn very quickly how bittersweet it can be to let go of a command, espe-cially when they have been blessed, as I have been blessed, with outstanding Soldiers and a great staff.”

36th ID: return to duty, new commanderStory and photos by Sgt. Josiah Pugh100th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

Above- Former 36th Infantry Division Commanding General, Maj. Gen. Eddy M. Spurgin and Command Sgt. Maj. Wilson L. Early unfurled their unit’s colors during an uncasing cere-mony at Camp Mabry, Austin, Texas, Saturday, Jan. 21, 2012. The ceremony marked the end of the historic deployment for the division.

Page 20: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

20  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

Community gathers to say Godspeed

Clockwise from top left- The color guard stands at attention during the Security Forces Advise and Assist Team deployment ceremony at Manor New Tech High School in Manor, Texas, on July 31, 2012. Forty seven teams, comprised of almost 450 Soldiers from units all across Texas will advise and train the Afghan National Security Forces counterparts, building trust and positive working relationships.Top right- Soldiers render honors during the playing of the National Anthem.Middle right- Col. Anthony Woods and Command Sgt. Maj. Darrell Clendennen case the Task Force Arrowhead colors, signifying the SFAAT’s transition from home station to training, and from there, deploiyment.Bottom right- Capt. William C. Willett takes a moment with his son, Chance, 6, after the SFAAT deployment ceremony.Middle left- Maj. Gen. John F. Nichols, Texas Adjutant General, addresses the Sol-diers, families and community during the SFAAT deployment ceremony.(All photos by Staff Sgt. Jennifer D. Atkinson, Texas Military Forces Public Affairs.)

TExas aRmY naTional GuaRd

Page 21: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

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KUNAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan (Aug. 7, 2012)–As Kiowa scout helicopters and soldiers from both the 1st Battalion 12th Infantry Regiment and Afghan National Army provide outer security, members of Provincial Reconstruction Team Kunar’s engineering section conduct quality assurance checks at the Shigal Girl’s School.

But the real security, both at the school and at the numerous other places that the PRT conducts its mission on a daily basis, falls to the team’s security force element, composed of soldiers from A Company, 1st Battalion, 143rd Infantry (Airborne) out of Austin, Texas.

The unique unit, the only airborne battalion in the National Guard, brings special mission capabilities and skillsets to the security mission of the PRT, ac-cording to Army National Guard Capt. Jeffrey Preston, A Company commander.

“What’s unique about our unit is the way our mandate was created, we’re very airborne ranger centric in those we bring into leadership roles,” he said. “This is a factor out here in Kunar specifically, because we’re seeing more traditional stand-off engagements and ambushes, and our guys are trained to conduct and counter those types of engagements.”

A key factor in the team’s success has been meeting the tactical directives set forth by the International Security Assistance Force commander, specifically using the appropriate amount of force to combat the enemy, an area in which the team has excelled, according to Army National Guard Sgt. 1st Class Jason Bro-yles, the team’s platoon sergeant.

“It comes right down to the scope of their duties and how they are con-ducting themselves, which has been exceptional,” he said. “At no point have they been over-aggressive or under-aggressive, it’s a very fine line that a soldier has to walk, and our guys have done an extremely good job of walking that path.”

The good work done by the security force element has been noted by the PRT

leadership as well, as U.S. Navy Cmdr. Michael Yesunas, PRT Kunar commander, complimented them on their profession-alism and military bearing.

“They have allowed us to safely continue our mission with confidence, poise and professionalism,” he said. “They always use the amount of force neces-sary to take the fight to the enemy and protect the people of Afghanistan at the same time.”

Fortunately for the PRT, the engage-ments with the enemy have been few and far between, which provides its own challenges for the combat ready security force element according to Preston.

“There aren’t a lot of dynamic mis-sions within the PRTs, we’re not conduct-ing raids or providing cordons, our intent is non-lethal, it’s all about governance and stability,” he said. “What we’re get-ting from across all of the provinces is that our guys aren’t giving in to the bore-dom and complacency that can come from this stable mission set. They remain focused and ready, so that if a threat does present itself, they aren’t caught off guard.”

That professionalism is visible not only in the way the security forces

conduct themselves, but in the way the engineers, agricultural specialists and civil affairs personnel, as well as key lead-ers within the PRT and local governance conduct their missions without fear thanks to the efforts of the soldiers, said Yesunas.

“The nature of the PRT mission is heavy with meetings with local leaders, and speaking to them and using what they’re giving you to help them with a way forward with their country,” he said. “When I’m in these meetings I can’t concentrate on my security, but I have absolute confidence that we’re safe and the guys outside are watching over us.”

“I don’t have to worry about if they’ll do the right thing or not, I know they will, and they’ll keep us all safe,” said Yesunas. “I think we have the best pla-toon in Afghanistan, and I’d put our guys against any enemy, and I know they’d come out as good or better than anyone else.”

The day at the school ended quietly, with the engineers conducting their assessment and heading back home without incident, but confident that if needed, the team’s Security Force ele-ment would be there to protect them.

Story and photo by Tech. Sgt. Christopher MaraskyProvincial Reconstruction Team Kunar

Security force teams ensure mission safety and accomplishment

Members of Provincial Reconstruction Team Kunar’s Security Force Element wear the “Texas T” patch to show they are assigned to A Company, 1st Battalion, 143rd Infantry (Airborne) out of Austin, Texas.

TExas aRmY naTional GuaRd

Page 22: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

22  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

VYSKOV, Czech Republic (July 15, 2012)—Texas Army National Guard medical personnel traveled to the Czech Republic, July 9-13, to share their knowledge with the country’s military medical personnel while building relationships they believe will enhance global security, under-standing and cooperation through the National Guard’s state partner-ship program.

The Texas Army National Guard medical personnel conducted subject matter expert classes and training on advanced trauma care with the Czech Republic Armed Forces medical personnel.

Involved in the training were the Texas National Guard’s Capt. Angela Todd, physician assistant with Head-quarters and Headquarters Com-pany, 2-149th Aviation 36th Com-bat Aviation Brigade; Sgt. 1st Class Arthur Phillips, special forces medical sergeant with Company C., 5-19th Special Forces Group (Airborne); Staff Sgt. Robert Harris, health care spe-cialist with Texas Medical Command;

and Spc. Conrad Krueger, health care specialist with 627th Heavy Dive Team.

While in the Czech Republic, the four Texas Guardsmen, who have a wide range of medical knowledge, were able to teach and give hands-on-training to approximately a dozen Czech Republic Armed Forces medical personnel. The Czech medical person-nel, who included enlisted, warrant officers and officers, ranged from a combat lifesaver truck driver to fam-ily physicians and even a surgeon.

They mostly wanted to learn about all the advanced life saving innovations we knew and used, said Krueger.

Throughout their time in the Czech Republic, the Texas Guardsmen were able to teach and share ad-vice on such things as advanced airway, intubation, needle chest decompression, hemorrhage and much more. They also shared stories from their experiences in the medical field.

“There were some tips or tricks from sergeant (Sgt. 1st Class Arthur) Phillips that helped me improve my knowledge,” said Warrant Officer 1st Class Jari Duchon, military vice presi-dent of Czech Association of Combat Medics, “like how to treat a patient with small amount of materials.”

The education wasn’t one-sided, either. The Czech medical personnel were also able to pass on medical ex-perience and information to the Texas medics. According to the Texans, this enabled them to return home with a better understanding of the Czech’s medical system along with knowledge and tips they could use in their own practices.

“They taught us little techniques that they used to quickly find the second intercostal space for putting

Texas Medics share knowledge, friendship in Czech RepublicStory and photos by Spc. Heidi KruegerNebraska National Guard

TExas aRmY naTional GuaRd

Page 23: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  23

in a needle chest decompression,” said Krueger, “little techniques that medical personnel pass along to each other after being in different situations in your career.”

During one of the classes, the Texas medics not only used mannequins to create lifelike scenarios, but also pork ribs to help the Czech medical personnel better visualize the techniques the American Guardsmen use to do needle chest decompressions.

“It was great,” said Duchon. “It’s always a great experience to share knowledge. It doesn’t matter what it is, (combat lifesaver) or just training for medics and doctors, it’s always something new we can learn and we can share because everyone has some experience.”

For the Texans, the opportunity to share their knowledge and experiences with another culture was something they will never forget.

“It’s a great experience cooperating with a different country,” said Krueger. “Medical collation between coun-tries on the battle field leads to a sense of interchange-able healthcare easily recognized at a higher level of care in the field.”

The Texas National Guard members also saw the ex-change as a way to give back and do their part.

“It’s rewarding to know that if our Soldiers were ever treated on the battle field by these Czech medical profes-sionals that it would be as if one of my fellow medics or myself were performing the treatment,” said Krueger. “I hope that we hear of or even get the chance to be a part of many more missions like this one.”

The Czech participants agreed.

“I think the cooperation was good,” said Duchon. “It was great because we meet each other during military deployments to Afghanistan and we complement each other, especially like medics, they are close to each other.”

“We must know how you treat a patient and how we treat a patient,” said Duchon about the importance of the training exchange. “The sharing of information improves

the treatment because the only goal for medics is to save the lives.”

Both groups say they hope it isn’t the last time they have the opportunity to exchange information, either. “We want to share information in the future,” said Duchon, “not only with the Czech medics, but also inter-nationally.”

The Texas National Guard members also saw this ex-change and teaching of medical practices as a way to give back and do their part.

“It’s rewarding to know that if our Soldiers were ever treated on the battle field by these Czech medical profes-sionals that it would be as if one of my fellow medics or myself were performing the treatment,” said Krueger. “I hope that we hear of or even get the chance to be a part of many more missions like this one.”

Opposite page, left- Staff Sgt. Robert Harris, a health care specialist with Texas Medical Command, demonstrates on Spc. Conrad Krueger, a health care specialist with 627th Heavy Dive Team, how to properly stop blood from an open wound to a group of Czech Republic Army medical personnel in Vyskov, Czech Republic on July 12.Opposite page, right- Warrant Officer 1st Class Jari Duchon, military vice president of Czech Association of Combat Medics, practices proper care of a wound on Spc. Conrad Krueger, a health care specialist with 627th Heavy Dive Team, in Vyskov, Czech Republic on July 12.Top right- Sgt. 1st Class Arthur Phillips, special forces medical sergeant with Company C., 5-19th Special Forces Group (Airborne), ensures proper place-ment when a Czech Republic Soldier demonstrates different medical proce-dures to his fellow Soldiers after Texas National Guard Soldiers gave classes on Advanced Trauma Care in Vyskov, Czech Republic on July 12.

Texas Medics share knowledge, friendship in Czech RepublicTExas aRmY naTional GuaRd

Page 24: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

24  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

AUSTIN, Texas (Nov. 1, 2012) – Texas Gov. Rick Perry presented a Texas National Guardsman with the Purple Heart, the Air Medal with “V” Device for acts of heroism and the Combat Medi-cal Badge during a ceremony at the Texas State Capitol in Austin, Texas, Nov. 1, 2012. Perry, com-mander-in-chief of the Texas Na-tional Guard, honored the service member's sacrifice, as well as the numerous Texans and Americans who have served during the past decade.

“The young men and women of this generation have been asked to perform on battlefields in Iraq, and Afghanistan, standing up against the forces of terror at home and abroad,” Perry said. “Without their willingness to give their all, if required, America would be noth-ing but a sad footnote in history, a place that held great promise, once upon a time.”

Staff Sgt. Patrick D. Rogers, Jr., of Galveston, Texas, a flight medic assigned to the Texas Army National Guard’s Austin-based 36th Combat Aviation Brigade, received the citations from Perry, on behalf of the U.S. Army, for his actions this past June and July while he was assigned to the U.S. Army’s Task Force Wolfpack, a subcomponent of the 4th Platoon at Forward Operating Base Saler-no in the province of Khowst, in southeastern Afghanistan, which is near the country’s border with Pakistan.

“Today, we are honoring a particularly brave individual,” Perry said. “Staff Sgt. Patrick Rog-ers not only served his country in Iraq and Afghanistan, he also served as medic, which means he didn’t really get involved until

things had gone really bad.”

After sustaining injuries dur-ing an attack that damaged FOB Salerno’s dining facility in June, Rogers is credited with rescu-ing several soldiers and a local national from the building and then setting up a triage station to evaluate and initiate treatment for additional injured personnel.

It wasn’t until he was ordered to stop tending to the wounded that he finally relented and al-lowed other medics to take care of his own injuries,” said Perry.

Then, in July, Rogers was involved in an aerial rescue opera-tion near FOB Salerno while being exposed to gunfire from enemy combatants, according to Capt. Joshua C. Aronson, the aeromedi-cal evacuation officer for Task Force Wolfpack, who wrote the recommendation for Rogers to receive the Air Medal with “V” Device. Rogers was lowered by a hoist and a steel cable from inside a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter and helped with the extraction of two sol-diers from a narrow ledge on a mountainside.

For his actions under fire, Rogers was also pre-sented the Combat Medical Badge, which is conferred upon military medical personnel that face combat conditions. The badge was first awarded to American combat medics during World War II.

Perry said he was hum-bled and privileged to pres-ent Rogers with the awards.

The feeling between the Governor and the Citizen-Soldier appeared to be mutual.

“It was definitely an honor,” Rogers said of receiving his awards from the state's chief executive, “this is something I will never forget.”

Rogers said he has to undergo further physical therapy and treatments for his combat injuries, but that he will soon head back to Galveston to continue life, go back to work and raise his children.

“Everything after combat is great,” Rogers said. “Everything else is easy."

Perry honors Texas Guardsman for combat valorStory and photo by Staff Sgt. Phil FountainTexas Military Forces Public Affairs

Texas Gov. Rick Perry finishes placing the Purple Heart onto the uniform of Staff Sgt. Patrick D. Rog-ers, Jr., a flight medic and member of the Texas Army National Guard, at the Texas State Capitol in Austin, Texas, Nov. 1, 2012. Perry is the commander-in-chief of the Texas Military Forces, which includes the Texas Army National Guard. Rogers received the Purple Heart for injuries he sustained in Afghanistan.

TExas aRmY naTional GuaRd

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2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  25

TExas aRmY naTional GuaRd

TYLER, Texas (Dec. 23, 2012)—Friends, family and coworkers filled the chapel of the Stewart Family Funeral Home in Tyler, Texas on Dec. 23 to say goodbye to Sgt. 1st Class Nelson David Trent, of Whitehouse, Texas. Trent was killed in Afghanistan on December 13, 2012, when a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device detonated near his vehicle..

Born in Tyler, Texas, Trent grew up in Whitehouse, Texas, a small community near Tyler, and graduated high school in 1993. He enlisted in the United States Army in 1999, as a signal support systems specialist, and deployed twice in support of Op-eration Iraqi Freedom. Trent joined the Texas National Guard in 2006 and served on the Texas Border Security Mission through 2008.

In 2010, Trent accepted a full-time position with the Texas Military Forces as a communications non-commissioned officer, first with the 6th Civil Support Team and then with Joint Task Force 71. During his time at JTF 71, he was recognized as the bri-gade NCO of the Year for his outstanding performance, military knowledge and bearing.

In May of 2012, Trent moved to the 56th IBCT and deployed as a member of Task Force Arrowhead, a group of approximately 400 Soldiers deployed to advise, train and assist the Afghani security forces.

Teaching Soldiers was another task Trent excelled at. During his memorial service in Afghanistan, Major Kenneth Walker, SFC Trent’s Team Leader, remembered Trent “as a good teacher. He always reflected patience and ability in teaching the most dif-ficult tasks to Soldiers.”

Command Sgt. Maj. Darrell Clendennen, command sergeant major of TF Arrowhead, sent remarks emphasizing Trent’s ability to teach others. The remarks, read by Command Sgt. Maj. Wil-son Early, 36th Inf. Div. Command Sgt. Maj., also reflected the dedication Trent brought to his calling in the military.

“As exceptionally painful as it is to lose someone so close to you, it is at these times you really understand what you have. Sgt. 1st Class Trent gave a lot to all of us,” said Command Sgt. Maj. Darrell Clendennen, Task Force Arrowhead. “He dedicated his life to training, and mentoring us on surviving and taking care of each other. Even though he is not physically here with us, his teaching will go on forever. I had the privilege of know-ing this outstanding Soldier, I loved Trent, and I’m truly going to miss him.”

“Trent was a man who possessed a warrior spirit and a leader who would never accept defeat,” said Col. Anthony Woods, Commander of Task Force Arrowhead . “Heroes such as he are remembered for their contributions to life. His legacy will live forever in his children and in the pages of history. We grieve because of the loss of this warrior has left and empty place in our hearts. He will continue to be a shining example in the midst of danger. “

Although friends and family knew Trent as an exemplary Soldier, his sense of humor and desire to make other people smile were also widely remembered during his memorial servic-es, both in Texas, and in Afghanistan. “He was a loveable guy,” said Walker. “He was that guy that would make you laugh when times were bad or randomly jump out from behind something with his bald head.”

Gen. James K. “Red” Brown, commander of the 36th Infantry Division, held Trent up as “a great example to all of us, in how he lived, and what he did in the service of this great nation.”

“Every day he served, as you’ve heard his friends say today, he made a difference to them individually,” said Brown. “His life was full, he was a wonderful father, caring and loving husband, a wonderful son and brother and an outstanding Soldier.”

Brown’s closing words emphasized Trent’s affect on the lives he touched. “We are so very proud of him, so very proud of what he did for us, we are proud of how he served, and we’re proud of how he lived,” said Brown. “He truly made a differ-ence. Our words are inadequate to express what this man did. Thank you for your son, for your husband, for your father and for your brother. He is an absolute hero and a wonderful American.”

Sgt. 1st Class Trent is survived by his wife, April; son David; daughter Camryn; parents Nelson and Fritzi; sister Traci Trent and brother Brian Trent. He is interred among other valiant Americans in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va.

Maj. Gen. James K. “Red” Brown salutes Mrs. April Trent after presenting the memorial flag during Sgt. 1st Class Nelson D. Trent’s internment at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va. on Jan. 8, 2013.

Family, friends, gather to mourn, say goodbye to SoldierStory and photo Staff. Sgt. Jennifer D. AtkinsonTexas Military Forces Public Affairs

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TEXAS AIR NATL GUARD

CCM Kevin O’GormanBrig. Gen. Kenneth Wisian

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YANKEE RANGE, Texas (June 4, 2012)—For over a quarter of a century, Detachment 1, a subcomponent of the Texas Air National Guard’s 149th Fighter Wing, has managed Yankee Range, the northern of two ranges that comprise the McMullen Target Complex, which is part of Naval Air Station Kingsville. The nearly 3,000-acre remote location in McMullen County, Texas, is situated between San Antonio and the Rio Grande Valley.

Yankee Range is primarily used for practice bomb and gun-strafing operations to enable the Air National Guard unit to accomplish its primary federal mission to train combat-ready F-16 pilots for worldwide operations. In ad-dition to being able to accept air-launched munitions from fighter aircraft, the location has the capability to accom-plish numerous state training missions as well.

“We’re 1 of 13 such ranges throughout the country that are managed by the National Guard,” said Capt. Eric Hoopes, commander of Det. 1. “We have maneuver space, are [geographically] positioned to assist with disaster pre-paredness staging, and have numerous targets and mock villages for both air and ground components to accomplish realistic training.”

From May 30-June 1, 2012, Det. 1 hosted a joint service, multinational event called Texas Red Flag, which allowed for aerial and ground maneuvers involving Texas Air and Army Guard personnel, as well as members of the air force of the Czech Republic, one of Texas’ counterparts within the National Guard’s State Partnership Program.

The exercise allowed the Citizen-Airmen and soldiers to sharpen their combat readiness skills and improve capabili-ties in order to support civil authorities during times of disaster within the state.

During the activities, participants operated alongside each other for close air support operations with Gunfighter F-16s and practiced insertion and extraction maneuvers into a faux village, known as a military operations in urban terrain site, with Texas Army National Guard helicopters from the 449th Aviation Support Battalion assigned to the Martindale Army Airfield, in San Antonio.

Additionally, C-130H tactical aircraft with the Texas Air National Guard’s 136th Airlift Wing at Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth trained on employing coun-ter-measures to evade ground attack during low-altitude combat support missions.

Tactical Air Control Party and Joint Terminal Attack Controllers from the Texas Air National Guard’s 147th Air Support Operations Squadron at Houston’s Ellington Field received on-the-ground CAS training.

“We integrate air power into the Army commander’s

ground scheme of maneuver,” said Lt. Col. John Olsen, commander of the 147ASOS. In a real-world situation, Olsen, also an F-16 pilot, explained he would “serve as the senior air liaison to the combatant brigade or battalion commander, and two [TACP’s and JTAC’s] are with each battalion of Army soldiers.”

The role of the TACP’s and JTAC’s is to communicate with the combat pilots from the ground, and “only they are allowed, by law, to clear [the aircraft’s] weapon release when close air support is required in close proximity of friendly forces,” Olsen added. Additionally, they “coor-dinate with senior leaders, and can add items to the (Air Tasking Order).”

Additionally, members of the Texas Air National Guard’s 149th Communications Flight, a part of the 149th Fighter Wing, established a satellite communications link and live video feed from Det. 1 to the state’s National Guard head-quarters at Camp Mabry, in Austin.

“This is about facilitating cross-service training, using our money wisely, and increasing efficiencies within the state,” said Col. Thomas Duke, director of operations for the Texas Air National Guard and officer-in-charge of the joint operation. “These activities help coordinate training not only for overseas missions, but here at home.”

The Texas C-130’s can “quickly position personnel and assets throughout the state. In a disaster, the JTACs can use this training to assist with search and rescue,” Duke said.

149FW Det. 1 facilitates joint training, hosts Texas Red FlagStory and photos by Staff Sgt. Phil Fountain149th Fighter Wing Public Affairs

Members of the Texas Air National Guard's 147th Air Support Operations Squadron aboard a Texas Army National Guard CH-47 Chinook helicopter above Yankee Range, the northern of two ranges that comprise the McMullen Target Complex, which is part of Naval Air Station Kingsville, and is managed by Detachment 1, a sub-component of the Texas Air National Guard's 149th Fighter Wing at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, on May 30, 2012.

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JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-LACKLAND, Texas (Feb. 14, 2012)—The Texas Air Na-tional Guard's 149th Fighter Wing launched

the Honorary Commander Program here on Feb. 11, by welcoming ex-ecutive leaders of the San Antonio Talons professional arena football team as the newest members of the Lone Star Gunfighters team.

Jason Lohe, owner and chief executive officer, and Cree Craw-ford, senior vice president and chief operating officer, both of the Talons organization, were selected to serve as the inaugural honorary commanders of the 149th Fighter Wing.

The U.S. Air Force developed the honorary commander pro-gram as a community relations initiative to educate those with limited knowledge about Air Force missions, customs, and tradi-tions. Individuals are selected as honorary commanders because of their position or influence in the community, and have the ability to foster awareness and public sup-port for the base.

The 149th Fighter Wing launched its program to forge a relationship with San Antonio's new professional football team. A ten-year old franchise, the San An-tonio Talons are a member of the Arena Football League (AFL), and are new to the San Antonio com-

munity after relocating from Tulsa, Oklahoma, in December 2011.

The inaugural honorary com-manders have been paired with Col. John Kane and Col. Michael Kelley, the 149th Fighter Wing's commander and vice commander, respectively. They will experience first-hand how the 149th operates, from its federal F-16 training mis-sion to humanitarian and disaster relief preparations on behalf of the state of Texas. The Talons and the Lone Star Gunfighters will also team up for various activities throughout the two year honorary commander term.

The kick-off event included a brief ceremony that was modeled

after the military assumption-of-command, where the honorary commanders were publicly pre-sented Texas flags with a streamer indicating their new role with the South Texas military unit.

"The Honorary Commander ceremony is based on a time-hon-ored tradition in the military, which visibly assures continuity of com-mand," Kane said. "Today's event illustrates the San Antonio Talons assuming a role as true ambassa-dors of the 149th Fighter Wing and the Texas Air National Guard."

"We are honored by this recognition and are humbled to be able to partner with the 149th Fighter Wing," Lohe said.

Story by Staff Sgt. Phil Fountain149th Fighter Wing Public Affairs

149th Fighter Wing Inaugurates Honorary Commander Program

Col. John Kane (left) welcomes Jason Lohe of the San Antonio Talons professional arena football team, as an Honorary Commander of the Texas Air National Guard unit at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas, Feb. 11, 2012. (Photo by Staff Sgt. Eric Wilson)

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JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO - LACKLAND, Texas (Nov. 4, 2012) – About 50 members of the Chilean Air Force par-ticipated in a training exercise with the Texas Air Nation-al Guard’s 149th Fighter Wing here, Oct. 24-26, 2012, as part of the National Guard’s State Partnership Program.The three-day exercise teamed aviators and aircraft maintenance crews from each organization, said Maj. Bryan Carlson, an instructor pilot with the 149th Fighter Wing. The training was designed to enhance the Chilean service members’ expertise in deploying the F-16 Fight-ing Falcon, a multirole fighter aircraft, overseas during combat operations.“Training fighter pilots for aerial combat is not new for the 149th,” said Maj. Carlson.The primary mission of the 149th Fighter Wing, known as the Lone Star Gunfighters, is to train U.S. active duty military, National Guard and reservists to fly the F-16. The unit has held its current training mission for nearly 20 years, and was previously a combat deployable fighter unit.The Chilean Air Force deployed three F-16s and one KC-135 Stratotanker, an aerial refueling military aircraft, to JBSA-Lackland, Texas, for the joint training exercise, said Chilean Col. Leonardo Romanini, air attaché to the United States. This is the first time the Chilean Air Force deployed their F-16s abroad.“The opportunity to share experiences, and get some

training with pilots who have a lot of experience with the airplane is really, really good,” said Col. Romanini.The training consisted of air combat, air-to-air and op-posed surfaced attack scenarios.The operation was conducted as part of the National Guard’s State Partnership Program (SPP), which was established in 1991 to build cooperative relationships with nations emerging from the former Soviet Bloc, ac-cording to programmatic documents. Since that time, the program has expanded to include 65 global partner-ships.The Chile-Texas partnership was formally established in 2009, Carlson said. In addition to Chile, the state of Texas has been paired with the Czech Republic.“This partnership offers opportunities for high-level exchanges and cooperation on civic-military activities,” said Col. John F. Kane, commander of the 149th Fighter Wing.“This visit builds on the foundation of the ongoing, pro-fessional relationship developed between the Chilean Air Force and the Texas Air National Guard,” Kane said. “This relationship will facilitate the continued sharing of information and exchange of ideas long after the visit is over.”For more on the National Guard’s State Partnership Program: http://www.nationalguard.mil/features/spp/default.aspx

Chilean Air Force trains with Texas Air GuardStory by Staff Sgt. Phil Fountain149th Fighter Wing Public Affairs

Left- F-16 Fighting Falcon aircraft from the 149th Fighter Wing, Texas Air National Guard and 3rd Aviation Group, Chilean Air Force fly together during a joint training exercise at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland Air Force Base, Joint Base San Antonio, Oct. 24, 2012. (Photo by Staff Sgt. Agustin Salazar, 149th Fighter Wing Public Affairs)Right- Lt. Col. Jorge Vargas, Commander, 3rd Aviation Group, Chilean Air Force accepts a 182nd Fighter Squadron lithograph from Col. John Kane, Commander, 149th Fighter Wing, Texas Air National Guard at the conclusion of a joint training exercise at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, October 26, 2012. (Photo by Master Sgt. Bill Conner, 149th Fighter Wing Public Affairs)

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Story and photos by Staff Sgt. Phil FountainTexas Military Forces Public Affairs

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (June 12, 2012)–In prepa-ration for the state’s hurricane season, members of the Texas Military Forces joined other military components, as well as civilian emergency man-agement officials for the Coastal Bend Regional Evacuation Exercise (CBREE) to practice medi-cal evacuation capabilities in and around Corpus Christi, May 14-18, 2012.

“Many agencies came together to work in this case,” said Brig. Gen. Kenneth W. Wisian, Texas’ Assistant Adjutant General – Air and Commander of the Texas Air National Guard. “The Texas Mili-tary Forces are here with our C-130’s and some other capabilities. We’ve got state response forces on the emergency side, aeromedical teams, all together with the local officials to practice a patient evacuation in an emergency.”

The Texas Air Guard commander explained that the weeklong exercise provided an opportunity to demonstrate the capability of the state’s C-130H tactical aircraft assigned to the Texas Air National Guard’s 136th Airlift Wing at Naval Air Station Fort Worth Joint Reserve Base.

“The C-130 is a rugged and dependable air-craft,” Wisian said. “They can be used to evacuate people away or bring aid and aid resources for-

ward during a disaster.”Members of the Texas State Guard, a volunteer

component of the Texas Military Forces, assisted with the processing of patients using the Texas Emergency Tracking Network, which utilizes Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) wristbands to en-sure patients are safely transported from the aero-medical evacuation hub, onto their remote treat-ment location and back to their medical home.

In addition to the Texas Guard assets, the train-ing event included members of the Kentucky Air National Guard’s 123rd Contingency Response Group, based in Louisville, Kentucky, and the U.S. Air Force Reserve’s 433rd Aeromedical Evacua-tion Squadron and Aeromedical Staging Squad-ron, both based at Lackland Air Force Base, in San Antonio, Texas.

The military professionals practiced the pro-cess of transporting medically needy patients from local hospitals and nursing homes, which would be the most high-risk during an emergency situation. The Texas C-130s transported mock patients from Corpus Christi to San Antonio and Dallas during the exercise.

Prior to being loaded onto the aircraft, the pa-tients were treated and stabilized in an aeromedi-

Texas Military Forces practice hurricane relief during Coastal Bend Regional Evacuation Exercise

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Texas Military Forces practice hurricane relief during Coastal Bend Regional Evacuation Exercise

cal staging facility, which was established in an aircraft hanger at the Corpus Christi International Airport.

Significant coordination was required, and the military activities were in support state and local officials, as will be required during an actual disas-ter situation.

“We’ve been here all week preparing for this exercise and getting ready for this year’s hurricane season,” said Nim Kidd, assistant director of the Texas Department of Public Safety and chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management. “We’re continuing to reinforce and test the ties between local government, local emergency management, the state of Texas, the Texas Military Forces and our federal partners.”

The state’s senior emergency management of-ficial emphasized the need for this training, and its importance to Texas and the region.

“Since 1953, when FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) started keeping records, Texas is number 1, we lead the nation in the num-ber of disaster declarations,” Kidd said. “This is about making sure that all of the things we’ve taken for granted, the things we always knew how to do, that we can still do [them] with new or in-

terchangeable people, and how that always has to be synchronized with our local and state partners.”

This joint exercise provided the civilian and military officials an opportunity to continue to hone their plans and skills to effectively respond to disaster situations. It can be of critical for local residents and emergency management officials, who are not likely to have adequate resources to respond once a disaster becomes regional.

“It’s been proven to save lives in the past. We had a dry run during Hurricane Ike [in 2008], when we were forced to evacuate people,” said Andy Cardiel, an assistant fire chief and emer-gency management official with the city of Cor-pus Christi. “We have to thoroughly understand each other’s capabilities, so that we know exactly what we can and can’t do. It is essential that we continue to work closely, learn and improve our response.”

“It’s essential to Corpus Christi and the people of South Texas,” Cardiel added.Left and center- Members of the Air Force Reserve’s 433rd Aeromedical Evacu-ation Squadron load on board a C-130H aircraft assigned to the Texas Air Na-tional Guard’s 136th Airlift Wing as they transport patients during the Coastal Bend Regional Evacuation Exercise (CBREE), a hurricane evacuation exercise in San Antonio and Corpus Christi, Texas Right- A member of the volunteer Texas State Guard (right) and the Air Force Reserve’s 433rd Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron at Joint Base San Antonio- Lackland, Texas (left), position a training mannequin onto a C-130H aircraft assigned to the Texas Air National Guard’s 136th Airlift Wing.

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CAMP MABRY, Texas (April 12, 2012) – Gov. Rick Perry, commander-in-chief of the Texas Military Forces, visited with Airmen of the Texas Air National Guard’s 136th Airlift Wing, at Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth, Texas, and joined state and federal legislators to discuss the impact of an Air Force proposal to transfer the unit’s C-130s to Montana.

Last month, the U.S. Air Force announced plans to relo-cate the 8 cargo aircraft from the North Texas unit to a loca-tion in Montana, which would leave the states located along the Gulf of Mexico without a National Guard C-130 unit.

U.S. Rep. Kay Granger, a member of the House Com-mittee on Appropriations and chairwoman of the commit-tee’s subcommittee on state and foreign operations, was in attendance, and said that the 136th Airlift Wing “responds to all of the natural disasters along the Gulf states,” and that the unit has conducted over 400 missions during the past several years, including operational support of the response to “[Hur-ricane] Katrina, all the tornadoes the storms, the flooding.”

Additionally, the Fort Worth congresswoman said the op-erational infrastructure has yet to be constructed in Montana to facilitate the transfer.

“There’s no hangers in Montana to house these planes, and there are no pilots that are trained to fly them,” Granger added. “It will take two years before they have pilots trained in Montana to fly these planes.”

“Today we’re asking the Department of Defense to over-turn the Air Force decision to move these critical air assets,”

Perry said during the visit. “At a time when our nation needs to scale back on unnecessary spending, there is absolutely no reason to reinvent the wheel in Montana, at the expense and the safety and the security of the Gulf Coast.”

Perry said that opposition to the proposed move is not just from local leaders, and added that the “entire Texas delegation, both Democrats and Republicans,” are united on this issue.

Granger said she’s been working with her colleagues in the U.S. House and Senate to highlight the issue, and sent a letter, signed by every member of Congress from Texas, including the state’s two United States Senators, to Michael Donley, secretary of the United States Air Force, challenging the decision that’s said to cost taxpayers upwards of $100 million to facilitate.

Maj. Gen. John F. Nichols, Texas’ Adjutant General, echoed the safety concerns for the region.

“Without these C-130s, the safety of Texas is put at risk,” Nichols said. “We also support our Gulf neighbors from here all the way to Florida.”

Nichols explained that National Guard assets can be called upon without delay, and that relying on the federal Air Force to move assets could “take a matter of two to two and a half days” to respond to a disaster.

“We’re fighting for our disaster relief all across the Gulf states,” Granger said.

Texas leaders defend Gulf Coast Guard C-130sBy Staff Sgt. Phil FountainTexas Military Forces Public Affairs

Above left - Gov. Rick Perry along with U.S. Reps. Kay Granger and Joe Barton hold a press conference at the NAS JRB Fort Worth, for the 136th Airlift Wing to fight for the C-130s from leaving Texas. The eight C-130s are proposed to transfer to the Montana Air National Guard as part of the PB 13 proposals.Above right- Congresswoman Granger speaks to Airmen at the 136th Airlift Wing after the press conference. (Photos by Senior Master Sgt. Elizabeth Gilbert, 136th Airlift Wing Public Affairs)

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HOUSTON, Texas (Oct. 14, 2012)—Months after Texas Air National Guard Staff Sgt. Mitchell Corbin rescued Nancy Decker from her burn-ing car on the Sam Houston Tollway, the 147th Reconnaissance Wing and the state recognized his heroic actions.

During a commander’s call ceremony on Oct. 14 at Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base here, Col. Jack B. Daniel, wing commander, Com-mand Chief Marlon K. Nation, wing command chief, and Brig. Gen. Kenneth W. Wisian, Texas ANG assistant adjutant general, presented the aerospace ground equipment technician with the Lone Star Med-al of Honor and a proclamation from Houston Mayor Annise D. Parker proclaiming Oct. 14, 2012 Staff Sgt. Mitchell Corbin Day in the pres-ence of Decker and her family and members of the wing. The wing also honored for her support of the wing with a Texas flag that was flown in an MQ-1 Predator on a mission and a certificate.

On June 1, the aerospace ground equipment technician was travelling on the toll way when he spotted Decker’s overturned car with flames emerging from the engine compartment.

“I think when we pulled up, I took a deep breath and didn’t see anybody else doing anything,” so Corbin stepped in, evaluated the situation, and pulled Decker to safety moments before the car was completely engulfed in flames.

Corbin was on his way to the airport to visit his family in Ohio, and after the ordeal,

he returned to his car and continued to the airport. For a few days following the accident, the identity of the “guardian angel” who saved Decker was unknown.

Decker addressed the airmen at the ceremony, giving thanks to them for their service and training and praising Corbin for his heart that allowed him to stop and save her life.

Decker said she respects and thanks the troops for their service and training, but it took a special heart to step in and apply that train-ing to save her life.

Members of Decker’s family also attended the ceremony.Charles Decker, Decker’s husband, said described his reaction as

hysteria when he learned of his wife’s accident.But now, Charles, who said he took things

for granted, now cherishes all the moments in his life.

“Because of Mitchell, I’m able to be here today,” she said. “I really, truly believe he was a guardian angel and it took that particular angel to get me out of the car.”

Corbin said he was grateful for the acknowl-edgment and hopes it will inspire someone else to intervene when a situation arises that can potentially save another life.

“I hope that this moment right here is not just for the recognition I get but to inspire somebody else to help,” he said.

Story and photo by Airman 1st Class Alicia Lacy147th Reconnaissance Wing Public Affairs

Airman pulls woman from burning car, recognized as hero

Brig. Gen. Kenneth Wisian, Commander,Texas Air National Guard, presents The Lone Star Medal of Valor to Staff Sgt. Mitchell Corbin.

ELLINGTON FIELD JOINT RE-SERVE BASE, Texas (Jan. 9, 2012)—Master Sgt. Janet S. O’Keeffe-Her-nandez has returned home after a successful deployment as a Joint Expeditionary Tasking airman (JET) to Camp Buehring, Kuwait in sup-port of Operation New Dawn.

The 147 RW Chaplain Assistant - who volunteered for the JET deploy-ment- served as the Joint Forces Chaplain’s Assistant and Non-Com-missioned Officer in Charge of the Chaplain Section. A Joint Expe-ditionary Tasking is the Air Force term used to indicate deployments under the Joint Sourcing Solution program in support of the Army. O’Keeffe-Hernandez worked for a United States Army Chaplain and also directly reported to the Camp Commander.

O’Keeffe-Hernandez supervised

many chaplain programs as well as all the building, supply and op-erational details for the Chaplain’s section. “I was the go to person for all things chaplain” she said.

O’Keeffe-Hernandez was praised by her Army supervisors as displaying strong initiative and possessing superior logistician skills. One unnamed superior said of O’Keeffe-Hernandez “She was usually three steps ahead of me and anticipates actions that need to be accomplished well in advance.” In order to be successful she had to learn to communicate “army style.” O’Keeffe-Hernandez was awarded the Army Commendation Medal for her superior job performance.

She gave required daily briefings to senior leadership and filled in for the chaplain when needed. She also was granted a special title from the Military Diocese for the Catholic Church that of Eucharistic Minister

and Alter server to assist priests dur-ing mass. “It was a blessing to serve as a Catholic and serve my brothers and sister in Kuwait. I feel this has been good for my faith, it has given me a sense of renewal.” she said.

Wing Chaplain Assistant returns home from Joint Expeditionary TaskingStory by Master Sgt. Dale Hanson147 Reconnaissance Wing Public Affairs

Master Sgt. Janet O’Keeffe-Hernandez, 147th Reconnaissance Wing Chaplain Assistant,at Camp Buehring, Kuwait. (U.S. Air Force Photo)

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TEXAS STATE GUARD

BG Charles A. Miller

MG Manuel Rodriguez

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Oral rabies vaccine dropped in South TexasStory and photo by Laura LopezTexas Military Forces Public Affairs

ZAPATA, Texas (Jan. 20, 2012)– Members of the Texas State Guard joined forces with the Tex-as Department of State Health Services, the United States De-partment of Agriculture, as well as other local, state and federal agencies from January 3, 2012 to January 18, 2012 to participate in the 2012 Texas Oral Rabies Vaccination Program.

With 1.8 million doses of the oral rabies vaccine expected to be dropped over portions of South and West Texas, Texas State Guard Soldiers with the 3rd Bat-talion, 1st Regiment provided both ground and air crew sup-port that included navigational assistance, the operating and managing of the bait drop and the loading of the baits onto the aircraft. A program the Texas State Guard has actively taken part in since 2007, this is one of the many humanitarian missions they are proud to be a part of.

“The 2012 ORVP mission will be an experience I will not soon forget,” said incident commander 2nd Lt. Stephen Walker, 3rd Battalion, 1st Regiment. “I was honored to work alongside fellow members of the TXSG, members of federal and state agencies and to serve the citizens of Texas. Such a mission truly gives the TXSG members a feeling of giv-ing back to his or her community for such a worthwhile cause.”

Originally initiated in 1995, with the goal of creating zones of vaccinated coyotes and gray foxes along the leading edges of the epizootics, statistics from the Texas Department of State Health Services show animal cases of the canine strain of ra-bies in southern Texas fell from 122 in 1994 to zero in 2000 with

single cases in 2001 and 2004. In addition the fox strain, prevalent in western Texas, dropped from 244 animal cases in 1995 to zero in 2010 and 2011.

A mission Brig. Gen. William L. Smith, Director Joint Staff and Commander, Domestic Opera-tions for Joint Force Headquar-ters of Texas describes as im-portant to the state of Texas, its citizens and to the Texas econo-my, he and other representatives from the Texas Military Forces and Department of State Health Services visited the command post in Zapata, Texas on January 6, 2012 for a first-hand look.

This is another example of how we can effectively work together with our partnering agencies and benefit our citizens at a time when no disaster is present,” said Smith.

While the vaccine dose dropped is enclosed in a small packet dipped in fish oil and coated with fish meal crumbles, health services representatives say the baits do not pose any risk to humans and will not become established in the environment, making the Texas Oral Rabies Vaccination Program an excep-tionally safe method of control-ling rabies.

Texas State Guard member, Corporal Paul Petit of the 3rd Battalion, 1st Regiment, unloads a bag of bait to be dropped over the South Texas Zapata area during the 2012 Texas Oral Rabies Vaccination Program.

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RIO GRANDE VALLY, Texas (July 30, 2012) —On Monday July 23 six sites in the Rio Grande Valley opened their doors to provide free health-care services to the people of Texas. The previous Saturday approximately 300 military and federal personnel and 100 from the Department of State Health Services arrived in the Valley to man the operation. Together with approximately 500 volunteers from local communities they provided the staff for Operation Lone Star (OLS) 2012.

In its 14th year, Opera-tion Lone Star brings health services to this area of South Texas. The program began in the summer of 1999 when the U.S. Navy approached the Texas State Department of Health (now the Department of State Health Services) for an exercise using Navy and Marine Corps reserve person-nel to provide health services in an underserved area of the state. Working with the Office of Border Health they set up temporary clinics in local schools, supplying naval medical providers and equip-ment, as well as developing the general patient flow and basic details of the operation.

From the outset health services were provided to anyone who came to the clinic sites, without concern for nationality or immigration status. In 1999 OLS oper-ated for two weeks at three

sites, and served about 3,000 clients. Additional sites were established in Hidalgo and Cameron counties in 2001, and the number of clients served rose to 8,000.

As Navy and Marine Corps reserve forces were deployed overseas following 9-11, they were replaced with Texas Military Forces; first the Army and Air National Guard and then the Texas State Guard. In 2006, the decision was made to “jump” from sites in the lower valley to sites in the Laredo area between the first and second weeks of OLS to expand care to more under-served populations.

Dr. Brian Smith, Depart-ment of State Health Services Region 11 Medical Director, participated in the initial OLS and all subsequent ones. He recalls that in organizing the

initial OLS a key decision was to use public schools for the clinic sites, creating strong ties between the state and military providers and local communities.

OLS 2012 represents the current configuration of the operation. The partnership consists of the Department of State Health Services and the county health offices, which serve as the lead agencies, the Texas Army National Guard and Air National Guard, the Texas State Guard, the U.S. Public Health Service and Re-mote Area Medical Volunteer Corps, along with volunteers from local agencies, and sup-port from local governmental and school officials. Observ-ers from Texas partner mili-tary forces from Chile and the Czech Republic also partici-pated.

Operation Lone Star: Fourteen years of partnership and serviceStory by Warrant Officer 1 Cary WintzTexas State Guard

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This year OLS returned to a one-week format with six sites: Browns-ville, Mission, Rio Bravo, Rio Grande City, San Juan, and Zapata. Health services included diabetic screening, blood pressure screening, hearing and vision exams, and general evalu-ations for clients of all ages. Special services for children included im-munizations and school sports physi-cals. Dental services for both adults and children were available at the Brownsville site, while Rio Grande City provided preventive dental ser-vices for children.

Operation Lone Star serves mul-tiple purposes. It is a massive public health program, one of the largest in the country. Over the past 14 years OLS has provided health services to well over 100,000 clients. In the process it has increased health aware-ness and impacted overall health in its targeted communities. Secondly, for its military and governmental partners OLS serves as a major train-ing activity. Military forces, the Department of State Health Services, county health departments, and local govern-ment officials who partner for OLS have de-veloped networks that enable them to function effectively together should they have to respond to a natural disaster or other crisis situation.

The Texas State Guard (especially the Medi-cal Brigade) and the state and county health agencies have proven experience moving into a community, setting up health care facilities in public spaces, delivering health on a mass scale, and demobilizing and moving out—skills that have application in a number of critical circumstances.

Finally, Operation Lone Star has had a significant impact on the communities it has served. Because these communities are also

partners in the process, they too have developed skills in addressing crisis situations. Mayor Ruben Villarreal of Rio Grande City pointed out that through his city’s involvement in OLS his community has the confidence, the resources, and the networks to mobilize and handle local disasters such as the Rio Grande River flooding that they experienced in the summer of 2011.

Looking back at OLS and its evolution in the past fourteen years, Smith identified the partnerships that OLS has created as the major accomplishment. “Most remarkable was the ability of OLS to integrate the many different organizations, people, and personalities, who come together, and to focus them on the mission and implement our vision of what can be done to help the people we serve,” he said.

Above- On Thursday, July 26, 2012, residents of Brownsville, Texas visit Edward Manzano Middle School to take part in Operation Lone Star; a large-scale humanitarian mission that provides free medical and dental care to citizens in South Texas. Opposite page- Operation Lone Star volunteers from South Texas Vocational College receive hands-on training in taking a blood pressure from a member of the Texas State Guard. One of six sites offering free medical and dental ser-vices to the residents of South Texas, Edward Manzano Middle School is one of the busier sites seeing over 1,600 patients in 2011. (Photos by Laura Lopez, Texas Military Forces Public Affairs)

Operation Lone Star: Fourteen years of partnership and serviceTExas sTaTE GuaRd

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38  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

AUSTIN, Texas ( Jan. 4, 2012)– With an emphasis on practical leadership development, the Texas State Guard’s redesigned Officer Candidate School (OCS) has begun with 17 soldiers start-ing their journey to second lieu-tenant.

“The only person who is going to beat you out of being an officer is you,” OCS Commander Col. Tom Hamilton told the candi-dates on the first evening. “An officer isn’t what you do, it’s who you are.”

A revised OCS curriculum has been more than 18 months in the making, designed with the spe-cific needs and mission of the TXSG in mind.

“This is an investment in the future of the Guard… We want leaders who will be prepared to handle what they aren’t prepared for,” Hamil-ton said earlier in the evening, as the candidates processed in Building 32 at Camp Mabry. “There’s always one more thing to do, one more task.”

Being prepared to handle those tasks is what attracted JoAnna Kearns of Leander to pursue the

challenges presented by OCS. She currently serves as S1 for the 2nd Battalion of the 2nd Regiment.

“It seemed to fit,” said Kearns, an insurance broker whose husband is also in the TXSG. “I like to try to keep things going, keep things moving and organized.”

She will have the opportunity for that. Candi-dates spend two to three days a month at Camp Mabry, through the six-month program, sitting through course lectures, practical exercises and physical training. They also have at-home assign-ment to be completed in the intervening weeks.

Hamilton said the OCS program developed for the TXSG is fundamentally different than a pro-gram for the U.S. Army or National Guard, recog-nizing that often soldiers going through the pro-gram are older with more life experiences under their belt.

“These are all very smart, very mature and capable people,” he said. “We have a pilot, an at-torney, folks with multiple advanced degrees. Each one of them is incredibly impressive on their own.”

Maj. Troy Evanovich, the OCS executive officer, clearly agreed with his boss’ assessment. But, he

also told the candidates during their in-brief, that the program will require them to “rely on each other.”

“You cannot do this alone,” he said. “Leader-ship includes recognizing you need the support of those around you.”

With redesigned curriculum, new State Guard OCS class beginsStory and photo by Maj. Michael Quinn SullivanTexas State Guard Public Affairs

TExas sTaTE GuaRd

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CAMP MABRY, Texas (Aug. 22, 2012)—In a change of command ceremony at Camp Mabry on Saturday, Aug. 18, 2012, Maj. Gen. Manuel “Tony” Rodriguez assumed command of the Texas State Guard (TXSG) from Maj. Gen. Raymond Peters.

The ceremony is a landmark event in the history of the Texas Military Forces and the TXSG to bid farewell to one commander and welcome another. The Texas State Guard, along with the Texas Army National Guard and Texas Air Guard, is a major component of Texas Military Forces under the command of the governor.

The Texas Military Forces are commanded by the state’s adjutant general, Maj. Gen. John F. Nichols.

Peters was commissioned in July 1965, as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army. In July 2009, he was pro-moted to Major General and appointed commander of the Texas State Guard.

Reflecting on his 49 years of uniformed service, Pe-ters said he was honored to see the organization grow and evolve into its present role as a major component of the Texas Military Forces.

“I’m fortunate that I got to serve in the Texas State Guard. I never dreamed I’d go this far,” he said. “To the men and women of the state guard I say, ‘Thank You.’”

He is succeeded by Rodriguez, who was commis-sioned in 1983, as a second lieutenant in the United States Army. During his career, Rodriguez served in Honduras, Germany, Desert Storm, Bosnia-Herzegovi-na, Afghanistan and Iraq.

As part of the change of command ceremony, Ro-driguez was promoted to Major General.

Rodriguez said he was honored by the appointment and looked forward to serving the people of Texas in this new role.

Paraphrasing WWII era Gen. Haywood Hansell, Ro-driguez concluded his brief remarks by saying, “When I’ve done some more work, I’ll do some more talking.”

Nichols said the TXSG has become a key component of the Texas Military Forces over the last two decades,

with the defining moment occurring during the activa-tions in response to hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005.

“I’ve asked Gen. Rodriguez to take the baton from Gen. Peters and make the organization even better,” said Nich-ols. “I told him, get ready. Now he’s going to get to work helping Texas.”

Texas State Guard Changes Command, Rodriguez assumes command from Peters

Story by Maj. Michael Sullivan, Chief Warrant Officer 2 Janet Schmelzer and Chief Warrant Officer 2 Cary WintzTexas State Guard

Top- Maj. Gen. Manuel “Tony” Rodriguez accepts the Texas State Guard guidon from Maj. Gen. John F. Nichols, Texas Adjutant General, signifying the change of command of the TXSG.Bottom- (L to R) Maj. Gen. Manuel “Tony” Rodriguez, incomeing TXSG com-mander, Maj. Gen. John F. Nichols, Texas Adjutant General and Maj. Gen Raymond Peters, outgoing TXSG commander, review the assembled troops during the change of command ceremony.

TExas sTaTE GuaRd

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40  The DispaTch  End of Year 2012

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DOMESTIC OPERATIONS

BG William Smith

CSM Kevin Mullins

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Join t Task Force Coun te rdrug

Coun te rdrug mission ca te gorie s

Cha lle NGing young Te xa ns

to e xce l

#1Program

Management

#2TechnicalSupport

#3GeneralSupport

#4

Training

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Ground

Recon

#6

Civil

Operations

#7Substance

Abuse

23,189 Schoo ls a nd 1,790,042 To ta l Audie nce

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42  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

EL CAMPO, Texas (March 6, 2012) — The soldiers of the Joint Task Force 71 received the activation call at 3:45 a.m. following the alleged terrorist incident. Within two hours, the men and women of the Minuteman Brigade re-ported to their home station, prepared to travel more than 200 miles in response to that threat. Trained and prepared, they exercised their newly certified skill sets to support the citizens and civil agen-cies of the small town of El Campo.

Although the immediate re-action of this Army National Guard Unit was real, the scenario was simulated. On March 3, 2012, the Austin-

based JTF 71 participated in the El Campo Memorial Hos-pital Exercise, a joint, inter-agency training event testing the alert and response capa-bilities of the Guard and its civil partners.

"Things have gone remark-able smooth today," said Chief Terry Stanhill of the El Campo Police Department. "Communications were out-standing; resources rolled in at an unbelievable rate."

The ECMH Exercise included simulations for a hazardous material attack, an explosion and partial hospital collapse and a remote-site suspicious package incident.

"We need to make sure that

everyone understands," said Officer Erik Burse, a state trooper with the Department of Public Safety. "If we don’t do these drills, if we don’t practice to be perfect, then we are not doing what we are supposed to be doing."

In any emergency scenario, the clock begins once the first call alerts the soldiers to ac-tion. For the ECMH Exercise, this happened well-before sunrise, far from the incident site.

"This is the first time we did a no-notice training event," said 2nd Lt. Brandon Wells, a platoon leader for 436 Chemical Detachment. "We all received the alert notifica-tion at 3:45 a.m. We reported

Texas Guardsmen support local authorities for emergency exerciseStory and photos by Spc. Aaron MorenoJoint Task Force 71 Public Affairs

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Texas Guardsmen support local authorities for emergency exercise

to home station, consolidated there, con-ducted movement preparations, then got on the road."

The Texas Army National Guard, local first re-sponders, city officials and other state agen-cies all have a part to play in an emergency. For the local first responders this is a part of their Emergency Management Drills that are often done to prepare them for a real life incident.

"It's comforting for me to know that we have these resources that can come to El Campo this quickly."

Training events like this afford local depart-ments and National Guard units time to demonstrate their skill sets and share their best practices.

"We work with a multitude of civilian agen-cies," said Wells, "all the way from TDEM, Texas Department of Emergency Manage-

ment, to the local responders at the fire departments, police departments. Working with them can be challenging in the sense that we are military. We use military vernac-ular that they may not understand; they use terms and do things that we may not under-stand, but we try to do these training events with them, collectively, in order to work out some of those kinks, express our capabilities to them as well as learn their capabilities."

With this exercise, the Texas civil authori-ties and military elements communicate to the public at large that we are prepared to support the community in the event of any natural or man-made threat.

"I think it’s a positive message," said Burse." I think the community loves it and under-stands it and we need to do more of it."

Below - Members of Task Force 71 perform various tasks in support of local civil authorities as they jointly respond to a “disaster” in the city of El Campo.

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TEXAS-MEXICO BORDER (June 06, 2012) —For the Texas Military Forces, a mission on the border is nothing new. In 1916, members of the Texas Army National Guard, along with Guardsmen from Arizona and New Mexico, were called up to defend the border after a devastating Mexican raid in the Big Bend region of Texas. At the peak of the 1916-1917 border call-ups, Texas provided 3,762 troops stretched across large por-tions of the Southwest.

More recently, though TXMF members have been deployed in support of other border missions, providing extra eyes and ears to the Customs and Border Protec-tion agency to help curtail both

drug and human trafficking. All three sub-agencies of the CBP, the Border Patrol, the Office of Air and Marine, and the Office of Field Operations have benefitted from the partnership of CBP and TXMF, going back as far as Opera-tion Jump Start.

Operation Jump Start, an-nounced by President George W. Bush in May of 2006, gave the Border Patrol National Guard as-sistance in strengthening border security and fulfilling non-law enforcement duties while up to 6,000 additional agents were hired and trained. Open-source intelligence work, translation duties and infrastructure work performed by TXMF members

allowed the CPB to focus on train-ing new agents. Ending in July of 2008, the partnership was regard-ed as a successful collaboration between law enforcement agen-cies and the National Guard.

At the ceremony marking the close of the Operation Jump Start mission, David V. Aguilar, then chief of the Border Patrol stressed the pride taken in the relationship between CBP and the National Guard.

“Within law enforcement, there is one word that we put a lot of weight on,” said David V. Aguilar, chief of the Border Pa-trol. “That is the word ‘partner.’ … Today, I am very, very proud to use that word … with the National Guard, as true partners. ...,” said Aguilar. “Today, I am very proud to call every individual that wears the uniform of the National Guard, has ever worn it or will wear it, or is in any way affiliated with the National Guard … our true partners, and for that we truly thank you.”

CBP officials weren’t the only people who considered the mis-sion a success.

Lt. Col. Paul Hernandez, Texas National Guard commander for the El Paso sector of the mission, harbored no doubt the mission to support the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Agency was successful. “I think the mis-sion was a complete success,” the El Paso sector commander said during an interview in 2008.

Texas lends a hand at the US-Mexico border to give agents longer “legs”Story by Staff Sgt. Jennifer D. AtkinsonTexas Military Forces Public Affairs

Members of the Customs and Border Protection agency and Joint Task Force Liberty discuss the upcoming flight. Although National Guardsmen do not have any law enforcement powers on the border, they do provide air transportation for CBP agents, allowing them to move farther and faster through rough country side. (Photos by Sgt. Amy Urbina, Joint Task Force Liberty Public Affairs)

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“I visited with new Border Patrol civilians and offi-cers and reflected on when we first started, wonder-ing how it was going to go.” However, within a short time, he said, “Soldiers and Border Patrol agents fully embraced the mission, with the level of cooperation increasing throughout the nation.”

Overall, more than 176,000 undocumented aliens were apprehended, more than 1,100 vehicles seized, and more than 321,000 pounds of marijuana and cocaine were seized. National Guard pilots logged more than 28,000 hours of flight time for aviation assistance. More than 19 miles of road, 38 miles of fencing and 96 miles of vehicle barriers built and close to 720 miles of road were repaired.

Operation River Watch #2 is the current National Guard and Customs and Border Protection partner-ship operation focused on southwest border security along the Texas-Mexico border. Unlike Operation Jump Start the current joint border mission is less focused on repairing roads and building fences.

Instead, National Guard members are provid-ing longer “legs,” to allow CBP agents to cover more ground in the course of their duties. Much of the border is rugged terrain, and nimble helicopters allow the Border Patrol agents to get farther, faster than ever before.

The members of Joint Task Force Liberty, a South Carolina led task force comprised of Soldiers & Air-men from 14 states & territories, operate out of Laredo and Harlingen. Two flight companies, using UH-72 Lakota helicopters and a modified observation airplane, support the CBP mission in an “observe and detect” role. The aircraft are fitted with several mis-sion specific devices, including cameras with infrared sensors, a searchlight, mapping capabilities and digi-tal video recorders.

JTFL maintains an aggressive flying hour program over both the Laredo and Rio Grande Valle areas. Each flight company will spend about 320 hours in the air per month, while the airplane pilots log an ad-ditional 200 flight hours.

With cooperative weather, and operating at full

capacity since March 1, 2012, JTFL has flown over 3000 hours, directly supporting the CBP mission. JTFL successes include seizing over 16,000 lbs. of marijuana, apprehension of over 5,500 undocument-ed aliens (UDA), and over 3,000 UDA Turn-Backs back into Mexico.

Texas lends a hand at the US-Mexico border to give agents longer “legs”

In the air, CBP agents use various means of detecting suspicious activity, including cameras, searchlights, and digital recorders. The National Guardsmen allow the agents to roam further afield than in the past.

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46  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

Texas Military Forces demonstrate strength at State Response Activation ExerciseStory and photos by Laura LopezTexas Military Forces Public Affairs

AUSTIN, Texas (June 1, 2012)- As the official first day of the Atlantic Hurricane Season kicked off on Friday, June 1, 2012, members of the Texas Military Forces participated in the Texas Division of Emergency Manage-ment (TDEM) State Response Activation Exercise and Showcase at the South Terminal of Austin-Bergstrom International Airport in Austin, Texas. “This is critical. A lot of the state

agencies don’t often get a chance to work together,” said Lt. Col. Peyton Randolph, Operations Officers, 2nd Reg., Texas State Guard. “You’ll see on the termi-nal ramp they are all integrating their communication and emer-gency operations and actually getting to know each other and work together before the emer-gency happens.”

An exercise designed to increase public awareness, identify agency capabilities and assets, improve resource and interagency fa-miliarization, as well as identify space utilization for base camp operations, Texas Governor Rick Perry joined Chief Nim Kidd, As-sistant Director of the Texas De-partment of Public Safety (DPS) and Chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM) for a tour and briefing of the various agencies and equipment. With Perry proclaiming May 27- June 2, 2012 as Hurricane Pre-paredness Week in Texas, it was during his speech that he encour-aged all Texans to prepare for an emergency or disaster.“We are blessed to be coming

off a relatively quiet hurricane season,” said Perry “[However], we know that it’s not a matter of if another major hurricane is

going to hit us, it’s a matter of when.”Members of the Texas State

Guard viewed the exercise as an opportunity to employ the Texas Emergency Tracking Network (TxETN); a State-directed evacu-ee and resource tracking system for emergency response opera-tions that uses Radio Frequency Identification (RFID). Through the use of bar-coded wristbands and tags, the State Guard can monitor evacuees and his or her belongings from the time of their enrollment at transportation hubs through their sheltering and the return home, helping to keep families together and easily reconnect if separated. “It’s exercises like this that allow

us to be able to handle what is going to be thrown in our path, whether it be a natural disaster or a man-made disaster,” said Kidd.A common fixture in the skies,

throughout the state, during the massive wildfire season of 2011, the Texas Army National Guard displayed a variety of different helicopters that included the UH-60 Blackhawk, CH-47 Chinook and UH -72 Lakota. Other equip-ment and personnel partaking in the showcase allowed the Army National Guard to highlight some of its communications capabili-ties and other specialized emer-gency resources.One of eight C-130 Hercules

aircraft owned by the Texas Air Various stations at the Texas Department of Emergency Management (TDEM) State Response Activation Exercise.

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Texas Military Forces demonstrate strength at State Response Activation Exercise

National Guard was on display at the showcase and has worked over 110 hurricane support missions coordinating movement of over 540 tons of cargo and over 870 passengers since Hurricane Katrina in 2005.“Having the ability to move patients and ambula-

tory individuals very quickly can only be done by those aircraft [referring to the C-130 Hercules in his background] and having them right here in the state of Texas, which is where the vast majority of naturals disasters with broad impact, like a hurri-cane, are going to be.” said Perry. As Perry took the time to personally thank many

of those emergency responders often in harms way, those hosting the exercise added that in the past five months there has been a State Opera-tions Center (SOC) exercise (not at the center), four regional hurricane workshops, a DPS and TxDot staged a full-scale exercise to contraflow I-37 stressing that a successful response is a three-legged stool.“It has to be a first responder, a group of local

emergency responders dedicated to making good decisions, it has to a media that gets that message to the public and it has to be a public that will trust the media and trust the elected and first respond-ers,” said Kidd. Representatives from the American Red Cross

(ARC), Texas Forest Service (TFS), Texas Com-mission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC), Public Works Response Team (PWRT), Texas Parks and Wildlife (TPWD), Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS), Texas Engineering Extension Ser-vice (TEEX), Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT), Texas Task Force 1 (TX-TF1), the Salva-tion Army (TSA), the Civil Air Patrol (CAP) and the Veterinary Emergency Team (VET) also partici-pated in the exercise on June 1st. The 2012 hurricane season officially runs from

June 1- November 30, 2012. For more information about disaster preparedness, visit the Texas Pre-pares website at www.texasprepares.org.

Top- (Left to Right) Brig. Gen. Brian C. Newby, Chief of Staff for the Texas Air National Guard, accompanies Texas Gov. Rick Perry on his tour of the Texas Department of Emergency Management (TDEM) State Response Activation Exercise at the South Terminal of Austin Bergstrom International Airport on Friday, June 1, 2012. Middle left- Texas Gov. Rick Perry shakes hands with Command Chief Master Sgt. Kevin O’Gorman of the Texas Air National Guard.Middle right- A Texas Army National Guard Chinook helicopter on display at the TDEM State Response Activation Exercise.Bottom- Texas Governor Rick Perry visits with Senior Master Sgt. Jonathan R. Karlin at the J-6 communications trailer.

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Page 48: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.‑ Gen. George S. Patton

staff sgt. sean (Brady) Berry 1979-2005 

iraq

cW2 corry a Edwards 1969-2008 

iraq

staff sgt. shawn a. Graham 1971-2005 

iraq

sgt. jaime Gonzalez, jr. 1967-2008 afghanistan

capt. sean E. lyerly 1975-2007 

iraq

staff sgt. anthony (luke) mason 1970-2008 

iraq

staff sgt. christopher n. staats 1977-2009 afghanistan

sgt. maj. julio c. ordonez 1954-2008 

iraq

Texas RemembeRs OuR Fallen

staff sgt. christopher l. Everett 1981-2005 

iraq

Page 49: The Dispatch: 2012 Year in Review

It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.‑ Gen. George S. Patton

sgt. 1st class Tommy folks, jr. 1974-2005 

iraq

sgt. anthony (Gabe) Green 1981-2009 afghanistan

sgt. christopher d. loza 1984-2009 

iraq

sgt. steve morin, jr. 1971-2005 

iraq

capt. Robert vallejo, ii 1980-2008 

iraq

lt. col. Gordon E. oglesby, jr. 1949-2006 

iraq

Texas RemembeRs OuR Fallen

staff sgt. christopher l. Everett 1981-2005 

iraq

sgt. Tomas Garces 1984-2004 

iraq

sgt. 1st class nelson d. Trent 1975-2012 afghanistan

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50  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review

Where can you Find your Texas military forces online?

facebookflickrwww.facebook.com/TexasMilitaryForceswww.flickr.com/photos/texasmilitaryforces

Texas Military Forceswww.txmf.us

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2012 Year in Review  The DispaTch  51

Where can you Find your Texas military forces online?

twitter youtubewww.twitter.com/txmilitaryforce www.youtube.com/TexasMilitaryForces

Texas Military Forceswww.txmf.us

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52  The DispaTch  2012 Year in Review Texas MiliTary Forces


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