Posted on 11/23/2005 8:52:33 PM PST by SandRat
11/23/2005 - WASHINGTON -- More than 90 Airmen stood next to Soldiers when the first bluesuiter graduated from the U.S. Army Intelligence Centers interrogator school at Fort Huachuca, Ariz.
The Airmen -- with youth ministers and Scout leaders in their midst -- graduated Nov. 10. The Airmen volunteered after the Army asked the Air Force to help it meet its continuing need for qualified interrogators.
[I volunteered for this] because I wanted to go out, talk to the bad guys and really make an impact by getting information and details needed to fight the global war on terrorism, said Will, from Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.
The graduation wont be the last Airmen will attend at the school. The Air Force will recruit more volunteers for the course next year. The Air Force Personnel Center and the Air and Space Expeditionary Center will release information on how to volunteer to military personnel flights and deployment managers.
Training with the Army was a new experience for most of the Airmen. Though they learned many lessons in the classroom setting, they learned others by strapping on heavy equipment and setting out into the desert.
Training with Soldiers has definitely been eye-opening, said Jeffrey, from Ramstein Air Base, Germany. It was different than I expected, and not in a negative way.
He said the physical standards are not what most Airmen would expect.
We went on long marches through the mountains -- fully armed -- as part of our field training, he said. But [all the Airmen] adapted well to it.
Fitting into a different military culture provided a common ground for the Airmen to branch out and establish relationships with their Army brethren. It was a process made easier by the support they received, said the commander of the 314th Training Squadron at Fort Huachuca. He was Airmens commander during training.
There is a difference in culture being an Air Force unit on an Army post -- as to be expected, he said. But its been a very good experience. Ive been very pleased with the support weve gotten from the Army -- from field training to providing equipment.
The commander said the Army is helpful and enthusiastic about having Airmen becoming a part of the team.
The Airmen interrogators are looking forward to their upcoming deployments, even though they will extend past the Air Forces usual four-month rotation.
However, its a job they are anxious to do, said Neil, from Andrews AFB, Md.
When you get right down to it, its the person-to-person contact that yields the most information in the field," he said. "What we get from interrogating cant be gained from satellites.
The need for interrogators will continue. And Airmen in all career fields are eligible to attend the course.
We look for seasoned Airmen -- senior airman and up -- who are good analytical thinkers and very involved with what they do, the squadron commander said.
He said the first graduates are some of the best out there, and that theyve already proven themselves as joint team players.
The Army asked for Air Force support, so were certainly providing that, he said. The focus was integrating the Air Force with the Army as a coordinated team, which we were very successful in doing.
Editors note: Due to the sensitivity of the interrogators mission, rank and last names are not used.
And I know several of them!
The focus was integrating the Air Force with the Army
Army Air Corp?
Of course they did. They needed some people that understood words that had more then two syllables.
AIR FORCE! We're the smart ones, send the officers out to fight.
Good old Fort Hoochie coochie. I was there in 84. Lot of MI guys and a school there for signal corps too.
Thanks for the pic Cute MP :)
Way to go! So proud of all of you!!! Keep up the great work and continue to make the name of our Armed Forces proud!! The more of us out there making a difference in this world, the better!
There is a difference in culture being an Air Force unit on an Army post -- as to be expected...
I think a few of us Army guys were stationed on Air Force bases. I know of Goodfellow (but is Goodfellow really an AFB?), Misawa, etc., and can say the culture "shock" works both ways.
I worked at Rudow and remember visiting the AF guy at his work site in the loft of some cavernous building at Tempelhof airport. He said, for all their fancy equipment, they got their best intercept dangling a wire out the window :-)
I spent a Thanksgiving at Goodfellow back in '74 after DLI. From an Army guy, all I can say is ....Man, Zoomies know how to put out a spread!
It's no worse the AF (straight out of basic, no less) going to the Presidio of Monterey... It took me months before I referred to the BX as the BX; I kept calling it the PX.
But what was a real eye opener was being assigned to Yongsan Army Garrison and being virtually embedded with an Army unit.
I quickly learned that Army Finance is just as screwed up and AF Finance... it's just that Army Finance is a little bit slower.
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