Wing handles key duties in Afghanistan
by Sgt. Richard Williams
Jun 28, 2010 | 384 views | 0 0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print
U.S. Air Force Airmen 1st Classes Nathaniel Wing (left), and Trevon Garner, 455th Expeditionary Maintenance Squadron/AMMO, build 500 lb guided bomb units at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan. Wing is deployed from Royal Air Force Base Lakenheath, England, and is from Calhoun, Ga. Garner is deployed from Royal Air Force Base Lakenheath, England, and is from Fresno, Calif.
U.S. Air Force Airmen 1st Classes Nathaniel Wing (left), and Trevon Garner, 455th Expeditionary Maintenance Squadron/AMMO, build 500 lb guided bomb units at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan. Wing is deployed from Royal Air Force Base Lakenheath, England, and is from Calhoun, Ga. Garner is deployed from Royal Air Force Base Lakenheath, England, and is from Fresno, Calif.
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 U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Nathaniel Wing, 455th Expeditionary Maintenance Squadron/AMMO, works on a 500 lb guided bomb unit at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.
U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Nathaniel Wing, 455th Expeditionary Maintenance Squadron/AMMO, works on a 500 lb guided bomb unit at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.
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BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan — One of the primary missions of U.S. Air Forces Central is to provide close air support to troops on the ground. Close air support keeps ground forces safe by providing armed over watch, or if the situation arises placing bombs on target.

Airman 1st Class Nathaniel Wing of Calhoun and the other Airmen of the 455th Expeditionary Maintenance Squadron ammo flight ensure that if there is a need to release munitions from an aircraft, they are ready to go.

“Our primary mission here is to support the flightline,” said Senior Airman Justin Carroll, deployed from Aviano Air Base, Italy. He said the ammo flight supplies ammunitions for 455th Air Expeditionary Wing assets and assist the with some U.S. Army assets as well.

Master Sgt. Matt Lingelbach, 455th EMXS ammo flight conventional maintenance element chief, said the ammo flight builds and resupplies munitions for wing assets and supplies chaff flares used as counter measures on the aircraft.

“The bombs we currently build are smart bombs,” said Lingelbach, deployed from Royal Air Force Lakenheath, England. As a young Airman, he saw a mixture of smart and dumb bombs being used. Now, as technology has improved, the ability to place bombs on target has also improved.

“I have seen footage from the test range,” he said. “Our newest global positioning system bombs can be guided through the center of a window, and our television guided bomb can be put right on the bad guy’s lap.”

Lingelbach, a Rockford, Ill., native said the extreme accuracy of the munitions they build is important to the mission here because it effectively eliminates targets while greatly reducing civilian casualties and destroying any infrastructure in the surrounding area.

Carroll, a Las Vegas, native sees accuracy in bomb making as an important part of the mission and said, “We have to do what we do right and get the munitions where they need to be so our aircraft can support the troops on the ground.”




“Without us being successful here, the operators in the air can’t be successful. If we don’t build a quality product then they can’t put bombs on target.”

-Master Sgt. Matt Lingelbach
Primarily the 455th EMXG ammo flight build joint direct attack munitions and guided bomb units, said Airman Carroll. He also pointed out they also maintain 20mm shells and the 5.56 and 7.62mm rounds carried by personnel stationed here.

“The job our Airmen do is phenomenal,” said Lingelbach. “This is like the show for us I guess, we train with inert stuff every day but you get here and you are working with live bombs and they don’t come back.”

Lingelbach said it makes him feel good to know the Airmen are getting the training they need at home station and when they get here they can take care of the mission the way it needs to be taken care of.

Carroll said the most important bomb is the one that doesn’t have to be dropped but, when push comes to shove, he and the rest of the team know when they put out a product, the one that works effectively on the battlefield can ultimately save coalition lives.

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