By Army Sgt. 1st Class Jose Ibarra DoD News, Defense Media
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WASHINGTON, March 27, 2018 — Airpower has been a key factor
as Operation Inherent Resolve continues to achieve milestones in the fight
against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, a senior OIR officer told Pentagon
reporters via satellite from Baghdad today.
“Coalition airpower in support of the Iraqi security forces
has been extremely successful in the destruction of ISIS in Iraq,” said Air
Force Brig. Gen. Andrew A. Croft, deputy commander for air in OIR’s Combined
Joint Forces Land Component Command. “From the herculean effort in Mosul to the
rapid victories in Tal Afar, Hawaijah and westward through the Euphrates River
valley, the coalition supported the Iraqis by, with and through strategy,”
Croft said.
The strategy has been “wildly successful,” he added,
enabling Iraqi security forces to reclaim their territory from a “barbaric
enemy” and allowing coalition forces to minimize their footprint in Iraq.
Coalition bombs dropped in Iraq and Syria last week were the
lowest total since the beginning of OIR in 2014, an indication that ISIS is
totally fragmented, Croft said, though some ISIS remnants are still in Iraq.
Train, Advise, Assist
The coalition’s job now is to enhance these capabilities
within the Iraqi aviation enterprise through its train, advise and assist
mission,” Croft said. A coalition aviation and training team, or CAAT, stood up
in February to leverage the U.S. and coalition forces already deployed to Iraq,
the general told reporters.
“We will do this by working with pilots, technicians and
planers to increase the effectiveness in areas such as basic and advance flight
training support to Iraqi ground forces, medical evacuation, aircraft
maintenance and logistics,” he explained.
The Iraqis already have achieved several milestones since
the CAAT stood up, Croft said, including reopening their air force academy in
late February. Iraqi forward air
controllers conducted a live-fire exercise in early March, he added, calling in
training airstrikes from coalition aircraft for the first time.
By midsummer, he said, the CAAT will be an air force wing
manned by about 350 U.S. members and 100 to 120 coalition members.
“Instead of bringing people in, we repurpose current airmen
that are doing jobs in support of combat operations,” the general said. “As
those combat operations drop off, we repurpose those airmen into that training
environment.”
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