A-10 Warthogs deploy to Guam with aim to keep
adversaries guessing
By
WYATT OLSON
STARS AND STRIPES • November
1, 2022
A row of A-10C Thunderbolt IIs at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, Oct. 23, 2022. (Courtney Sebastianelli/U.S. Air Force)
U.S. Air Force
A-10 Thunderbolts arrived on Guam last week for a dynamic force employment
operation that aims to foster unpredictability in overseas deployments, the
service said in a news release Wednesday.
The attack planes,
part of the 23rd Air Expeditionary Wing, flew from Moody Air Force Base, Ga.,
to Andersen Air Force Base.
“The United States
is committed to being ready to execute missions quickly in unpredictable ways
and rapidly respond to adversary moves within and across theaters of operation,”
the release said.
The Air Force did
not disclose the exact number of A-10s deployed to Guam. A photo posted on
Andersen’s Facebook page showed four of the aircraft — complete with their
hallmark paintings of jagged teeth on their nose cones — lined up at the base.
Dynamic force
employment “is designed as a way for Pacific Air Forces to exercise their
ability to generate combat air power from dynamic force elements while
continuing to move, maneuver, and sustain these elements in
geographically-separated and contested environments,” the Facebook post states.
The A-10,
nicknamed “Warthog” for its aggressive maneuverability and those teeth, are
designed for close air support of ground forces. It is highly effective against
tanks and other armored vehicles and can operate at low speeds and altitude.
An Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II pilot calculates air time and determines status of aircraft upon arrival at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, Oct. 23, 2022. (Courtney Sebastianelli/U.S. Air Force)
The aircraft
arrived about a week after the Air Force deployed an undisclosed number
of B-1B
bombers from South Dakota to Guam for a bomber task force
mission.
Bomber task force
missions are intended to demonstrate the B-1B’s “ability to rapidly deploy
anywhere, anytime, and provide lethal precision global strike options for
combatant commanders,” the Air Force said in an Oct. 21 news release.
The American
territory of Guam is of growing importance to America’s defense, according to
the updated National
Defense Strategy publicly released last week.
“Guam is home to
key regional power projection platforms and logistical nodes and is an
essential operation base for U.S. efforts to maintain a free and open
Indo-Pacific region,” the document states.
“Within the
context of homeland defense, an attack on Guam or any other U.S. territory by
any adversary will be considered a direct attack on the Unite States, and will
be met with an appropriate response,” the document states.
A $1 billion
effort to establish a comprehensive, integrated missile
defense system for Guam is underway, an endeavor some lawmakers
regard as urgent given North Korea’s stepped-up missile testing and China’s
military ambitions in the region.
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