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Georgia Guard 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron train on heavy equipment operations
U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Joseph Jones, a cable and antenna systems specialist with the 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron (EIS), Georgia Air National Guard, views the progress of a trench he is digging using a trencher with a backhoe attachment during a weeklong training exercise at Robins Air Force Base, Ga., June 11, 2015. More than 80 Airmen were certified in career-field tasks crucial to the unit’s deployed and homeland missions. The 202nd EIS supports the 116th Air Control Wing and is responsible for the fixed-communications infrastructures for 27 other locations, including the 165th Airlift Wing in Savannah, Georgia, and Air National Guard units in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Roger Parsons/Released)
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Georgia Guard 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron train on heavy equipment operations
U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Joseph Jones, a cable and antenna systems specialist with the 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron (EIS), Georgia Air National Guard, digs a trench using a trencher with a backhoe attachment during a weeklong training exercise at Robins Air Force Base, Ga., June 11, 2015. More than 80 Airmen were certified in career-field tasks crucial to the unit’s deployed and homeland missions. The 202nd EIS supports the 116th Air Control Wing and is responsible for the fixed-communications infrastructures for 27 other locations, including the 165th Airlift Wing in Savannah, Georgia, and Air National Guard units in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Roger Parsons/Released)
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Georgia Guard 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron train on heavy equipment operations
U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Ramirez Edmond, a cable and antenna systems specialist with the 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron (EIS), Georgia Air National Guard, removes dirt from a berm using a Bobcat during a weeklong training exercise at Robins Air Force Base, Ga., June 11, 2015. More than 80 Airmen were certified in career-field tasks crucial to the unit’s deployed and homeland missions. The 202nd EIS supports the 116th Air Control Wing and is responsible for the fixed-communications infrastructures for 27 other locations, including the 165th Airlift Wing in Savannah, Georgia, and Air National Guard units in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Roger Parsons/Released)
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Georgia Guard 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron train on heavy equipment operations
U.S. Airmen with the 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron (EIS), Georgia Air National Guard, lift a telephone pole using a medium-profile truck during weeklong training exercise at Robins Air Force Base, Ga., June 11, 2015. More than 80 Airmen were certified in career-field tasks crucial to the unit’s deployed and homeland missions. The 202nd EIS supports the 116th Air Control Wing and is responsible for the fixed-communications infrastructures for 27 other locations, including the 165th Airlift Wing in Savannah, Georgia, and Air National Guard units in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Roger Parsons/Released)
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Georgia Guard 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron train on heavy equipment operations
U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Chymann Lao, a cable and antenna systems specialist with the 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron (EIS), Georgia Air National Guard, digs a trench using a trencher with a backhoe attachment during a weeklong training exercise at Robins Air Force Base, Ga., June 11, 2015. More than 80 Airmen were certified in career-field tasks crucial to the unit’s deployed and homeland missions. The 202nd EIS supports the 116th Air Control Wing and is responsible for the fixed-communications infrastructures for 27 other locations, including the 165th Airlift Wing in Savannah, Georgia, and Air National Guard units in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Roger Parsons/Released)
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202nd Engineering Installation Squadron trains on tower climbing and repelling
U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Batson, a cable antenna technician with the 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron (EIS), Georgia Air National Guard, repels from a tower during a tower climbing and rescue training exercise being conducted during the unit’s annual training at Robins Air Force Base, Ga., June 10, 2015. The 202nd EIS’s enlisted and officer engineers, draftsmen, cable and electronics professionals design and install communications infrastructures. Some of their duties include building antennas, towers, fiber optics, and surveillance equipment, to access control and intrusion detection systems anywhere in the world. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Roger Parsons/Released)
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202nd Engineering Installation Squadron trains on tower climbing and repelling
U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Lentrell Hill, a radio frequency transmission technician with the 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron (EIS), Georgia Air National Guard, repels from a tower during a tower climbing and rescue training exercise being conducted during the unit’s annual training at Robins Air Force Base, Ga., June 10, 2015. The 202nd EIS’s enlisted and officer engineers, draftsmen, cable and electronics professionals design and install communications infrastructures. Some of their duties include building antennas, towers, fiber optics, and surveillance equipment, to access control and intrusion detection systems anywhere in the world. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Roger Parsons/Released)
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202nd Engineering Installation Squadron trains on tower climbing and repelling
U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Justin Janes, an airfield systems apprentice with the 202nd Engineering Installation Squadron (EIS), Georgia Air National Guard, repels from a tower during a tower climbing and rescue training exercise being conducted during the unit’s annual training at Robins Air Force Base, Ga., June 10, 2015. The 202nd EIS’s enlisted and officer engineers, draftsmen, cable and electronics professionals design and install communications infrastructures. Some of their duties include building antennas, towers, fiber optics, and surveillance equipment, to access control and intrusion detection systems anywhere in the world. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Master Sgt. Roger Parsons/Released)
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116th Civil Engineering Squadron at Camp John Hope
Air National Guard Senior Master Sgt. John Bell, a 116th Civil Engineering Squadron explosive ordnance (EOD) disposal technician, explains the EOD robots and weapons systems to Air Force Junior ROTC cadets at Camp John Hope in Fort Valley, Ga., June 3, 2015. The demonstration was part of the Houston County Joint AFJROTC Cadet Summer Leadership Program that provided more than 100 cadets from five local high schools an overview of various Air Force career fields. (Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Julie Parker/Released)
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116th Civil Engineering Squadron at Camp John Hope
Air National Guard Senior Airman Kyle Campbell, a 116th Civil Engineering Squadron explosive ordnance disposal technician, helps an Air Force Junior ROTC student try on a bomb suit to experience the weight of the protective outerwear at Camp John Hope in Fort Valley, Ga., June 3, 2015. The demonstration was part of the Houston County Joint AFJROTC Cadet Summer Leadership Program that provided more than 100 cadets from five local high schools an overview of various Air Force career fields. (Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Julie Parker/Released)
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Deployed JSTARS E-8C mission surpasses 100,000 combat flying hours supporting USCENTCOM
An E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System returns from a mission at Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar, May 1, 2014, after reaching a milestone of 100,000 flying hours to include more than 88,000 hours in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility since 2001. The JSTARS mission is to provide ground commanders with intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance air power to boost force protection, defensive operations, over-watch and combat search and rescue missions throughout the AOR. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Jared Trimarchi/Released)
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Minuteman
The Minuteman statue stands proudly in front of the 116th Force Support Squadron, Robins Air Force Base, Ga., May,26, 2015. Now as a symbol of the National Guard, minutemen were once members of teams of select men from the American colonial partisan militia during the American Revolutionary War. They provided a highly mobile and rapidly deployed force that allowed the colonies to respond quickly to the threat of war. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Julie Parker/Released)
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Georgia Guard combat communications and air control squadrons join forces for air war exercise
Surveillance technicians from the 117th Air Control Squadron, Georgia Air National Guard, monitor radar data emitted from aircraft flying in the Sentry Savannah 15-2 exercise from an operations module at The Air Dominance Center, Savannah, Ga., May 11, 2015. Sentry Savannah is a National Guard Bureau sponsored training event with a focus on Joint Dissimilar Air Combat Training and 5th Generation Fighter Integration. It offers a chance for fighter pilots to participate in war simulations that depict what they would face in real-world scenarios. During the exercise the 283rd CBCS provided NIPR, SIPR, and voice services to the 117th Air Control Squadron air battle execution site and extended service to their deployed radar site. Working together the two units provided vital data to help the fighter pilots complete their missions. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by the 116th Air Control Wing Public Affairs/Released) (A portion of the photo is blurred and the names of the military members have been withheld for security purposes)
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Georgia Guard combat communications and air control squadrons join forces for air war exercise
An RF transmission superintendent, right, with the 283rd Combat Communications Squadron (CCS) from Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia Air National Guard, discusses satellite transmission data information obtained from a Theater Deployable Communications System with two Airmen from the 117th Air Control Squadron during the Sentry Savannah 15-2 exercise at The Air Dominance Center, Savannah, Ga., May 10, 2015. Sentry Savannah is a National Guard Bureau sponsored training event with a focus on Joint Dissimilar Air Combat Training and 5th Generation Fighter Integration. It offers a chance for fighter pilots to participate in war simulations that depict what they would face in real-world scenarios. During the exercise the 283rd CBCS provided NIPR, SIPR, and voice services to the 117th Air Control Squadron Air Battle Element and extended service to their deployed radar site. Working together the two units provided vital data to help the fighter pilots complete their missions. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by the 116th Air Control Wing Public Affairs/Released) (Names of military personnel have been withheld for security purposes)
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Georgia Guard combat communications and air control squadrons join forces for air war exercise
A client systems journeyman with the 283rd Combat Communications Squadron (CCS) from Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia Air National Guard, terminates the end of a Cat-5 cable for a Theater Deployable Communications System during the Sentry Savannah 15-2 exercise at The Air Dominance Center, Savannah, Ga., May 8, 2015. Sentry Savannah is a National Guard Bureau sponsored training event with a focus on Joint Dissimilar Air Combat Training and 5th Generation Fighter Integration. It offers a chance for fighter pilots to participate in war simulations that depict what they would face in real-world scenarios. During the exercise the 283rd CBCS provided NIPR, SIPR, and voice services to the 117th Air Control Squadron Air Battle Element and extended service to their deployed radar site. Working together the two units provided vital data to help the fighter pilots complete their missions. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by the 116th Air Control Wing Public Affairs/Released) (Name of military member has been blurred and withheld for security purposes)
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Georgia Guard combat communications and air control squadrons join forces for air war exercise
A cyber transport journeyman with the 283rd Combat Communications Squadron (CCS) from Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia Air National Guard, installs an RJ-45 head on a Cat-5 cable for a Theater Deployable Communications System during the Sentry Savannah 15-2 exercise at The Air Dominance Center, Savannah, Ga., May 8, 2015. Sentry Savannah is a National Guard Bureau sponsored training event with a focus on Joint Dissimilar Air Combat Training and 5th Generation Fighter Integration. It offers a chance for fighter pilots to participate in war simulations that depict what they would face in real-world scenarios. During the exercise the 283rd CBCS provided NIPR, SIPR, and voice services to the 117th Air Control Squadron Air Battle Element and extended service to their deployed radar site. Working together the two units provided vital data to help the fighter pilots complete their missions. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by the 116th Air Control Wing Public Affairs/Released) (Name of military member has been blurred and withheld for security purposes)
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Georgia Guard combat communications and air control squadrons join forces for air war exercise
A U.S. Air Force cyber systems operator with the 283rd Combat Communications Squadron (CCS) from Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia Air National Guard, connects cables during set up of a Theater Deployable Communications System during the Sentry Savannah 15-2 exercise at The Air Dominance Center, Savannah, Ga., May 8, 2015. Sentry Savannah is a National Guard Bureau sponsored training event with a focus on Joint Dissimilar Air Combat Training and 5th Generation Fighter Integration. It offers a chance for fighter pilots to participate in war simulations that depict what they would face in real-world scenarios. During the exercise the 283rd CBCS provided NIPR, SIPR, and voice services to the 117th Air Control Squadron Air Battle Element and extended service to their deployed radar site. Working together the two units provided vital data to help the fighter pilots complete their missions. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by the 116th Air Control Wing Public Affairs/Released) (Name of military member withheld for security purposes)
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Georgia Guard combat communications and air control squadrons join forces for air war exercise
A cyber transport craftsman with the 283rd Combat Communications Squadron (CCS) from Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia Air National Guard, organizes cables during set up of a Theater Deployable Communications System during the Sentry Savannah 15-2 exercise at The Air Dominance Center, Savannah, Ga., May 8, 2015. Sentry Savannah is a National Guard Bureau sponsored training event with a focus on Joint Dissimilar Air Combat Training and 5th Generation Fighter Integration. It offers a chance for fighter pilots to participate in war simulations that depict what they would face in real-world scenarios. During the exercise the 283rd CBCS provided NIPR, SIPR, and voice services to the 117th Air Control Squadron Air Battle Element and extended service to their deployed radar site. Working together the two units provided vital data to help the fighter pilots complete their missions. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by the 116th Air Control Wing Public Affairs/Released) (Name of military member withheld for security purposes)
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Georgia Guard combat communications and air control squadrons join forces for air war exercise
An Airman from the 283rd Combat Communications Squadron (CCS) from Dobbins Air Reserve Base, Georgia Air National Guard, transports a Theater Deployable Communications System to a location alongside the flightline during the Sentry Savannah 15-2 exercise at The Air Dominance Center, Savannah, Ga., May 8, 2015. Sentry Savannah is a National Guard Bureau sponsored training event with a focus on Joint Dissimilar Air Combat Training and 5th Generation Fighter Integration. It offers a chance for fighter pilots to participate in war simulations that depict what they would face in real-world scenarios. During the exercise the 283rd CBCS provided NIPR, SIPR, and voice services to the 117th Air Control Squadron Air Battle Element and extended service to their deployed radar site. Working together the two units provided vital data to help the fighter pilots complete their missions. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by the 116th Air Control Wing Public Affairs/Released) (Names of military personnel withheld for security purposes)
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116th Air Control Wing, 116th Civil Engineering, Ga. Air National Guard
U.S. Air Force civil engineers from the 116th Civil Engineer Squadron, Georgia Air National Guard, install a hot water heater at Camp William Hinds Boy Scout Camp, Raymond, Maine, April 22, 2015. The squadron, from Robins Air Force Base, Ga., spent two weeks at the camp as part of the Innovative Readiness Training program where they are the lead unit that kicked off a project to construct a new dining facility for the Boy Scout camp. The two week deployment provided the opportunity for the squadron to get real-world training similar to the way they will be deploying in the future. The Airmen set up nine tents, installed an entire electrical grid, renovated electrical, plumbing and HVAC systems on two shower shave trailers, and worked with the duration staff to ensure materials and equipment are on site to continue the mission for future rotations. (Contributed photo/Released)
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