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Northern Agility 22-1 Advances Agile Combat Employment with Historic Highway Landing

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Northern Agility 22-1 Advances Agile Combat Employment with Historic Highway Landing

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Northern Agility 22-1 Advances Agile Combat Employment with Historic Highway Landing
Northern Agility 22-1 Advances Agile Combat Employment with Historic Highway Landing

On June 29, Air National Guard A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft, Air Force Special Operations Command MC-12W, C-145A and U-28A aircraft, along with a C-146A aircraft from the Air Force Reserves, made history by conducting landing, taking off, and performing Integrated Combat Turns (ICTs) on a closed 9,000-foot section of Michigan highway M-28. The temporary landing zone is one of several progressive training scenarios held this week under the Michigan Air National Guard’s exercise Northern Agility 22-1 in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. This is the first time that ICTs, which enable the quick rearming and refueling of a running jet, have ever been conducted on a public highway in the U.S.

An U-28 Draco from the 1st Special Operations Wing, Hurlburt Field, Florida, lands on Michigan highway M-28 during Agile Combat Employment (ACE) training during Northern Agility-1 22 in Alger County, located in the Upper Peninsula of Mich., June 28, 2022.
An U-28 Draco from the 1st Special Operations Wing, Hurlburt Field, Florida, lands on Michigan highway M-28 during Agile Combat Employment (ACE) training during Northern Agility-1 22 in Alger County, located in the Upper Peninsula of Mich., June 28, 2022.(U.S. Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Jason Boyd)

Northern Agility 22-1 demonstrates the U.S. Air Force’s Agile Combat Employment doctrine, which is about being ready to execute missions quickly in unpredictable ways. The landing zone was named “Hawk LZ” in honor of F-16 pilot Maj. Durwood “Hawk” Jones from the Wisconsin ANG’s 115th Fighter Wing, who lost his life in a training accident in Michigan in 2020. Staging and additional training activities for contested logistics, sustainment, and multi-capable Airmen concepts are being held this week at other locations in Alger County including Sawyer International Airport and Hanley Field, Alger County’s local airport.

An CH-47 Chinook, with the 3-328th General Support Aviation Battalion, Selfridge Air National Guard, takes off from Michigan highway M-28 during Agile Combat Employment (ACE) training during Northern Agility-1 22 in Alger County, located in the Upper Peninsula of Mich., June 28, 2022.
An CH-47 Chinook, with the 3-328th General Support Aviation Battalion, Selfridge Air National Guard, takes off from Michigan highway M-28 during Agile Combat Employment (ACE) training during Northern Agility-1 22 in Alger County, located in the Upper Peninsula of Mich., June 28, 2022. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Jason Boyd)

Participating units include AFSOC’s 1st Special Operations Group, Hurlburt Field, Florida and 6th Special Operations Squadron, Duke Field, Florida; the Air Force Reserve’s 119th Special Operations Wing, Duke Field; the Michigan ANG’s 127th Wing, Selfridge ANG Base; the Oklahoma ANG’s 137th Special Operations Wing, Will Rogers ANG Base; and the Maryland ANG’s 175th Fighter Wing, Warfield ANG Base. Additionally, an MQ-9 Reaper from the North Dakota ANG’s 119th Wing, Fargo ANG Base, crewed by Airmen from the Michigan ANG’s 110th Wing, Battle Creek ANG Base were involved.

An C-145A Combat Coyote from the 919th Special Operations Wing at Duke Field, Florida, lands on Michigan highway M-28 during Agile Combat Employment (ACE) training during Northern Agility-1 22 in Alger County, located in the Upper Peninsula of Mich., June 28, 2022.
An C-145A Combat Coyote from the 919th Special Operations Wing at Duke Field, Florida, lands on Michigan highway M-28 during Agile Combat Employment (ACE) training during Northern Agility-1 22 in Alger County, located in the Upper Peninsula of Mich., June 28, 2022. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Jason Boyd)

Additionally, the Kelly Johnson Joint All-Domain Innovation Center teamed with industry partners during Northern Agility 22-1 to demonstrate numerous technologies for augmented reality to enhance the multi-capable Airman concept, rapid integration of the Command & Control ecosystem, Synthetic Aperture Radar, Advanced Threat Detection and Visualization and other capabilities. The Kelly Johnson Joint All-Domain Innovation Center, based at Selfridge Air National Guard Base in Macomb County, Michigan, is a living laboratory where new ideas and technologies are born, tested, and evaluated for the future war fight. Michigan is also home to the National All-Domain Warfighting Center (NADWC), which encompasses nearly 148,000 acres of ground maneuver area and 17,000 square miles of special use airspace, making the state an engine for testing and innovation across the Department of Defense.

Northern Agility 22-1 Advances Agile Combat Employment with Historic Highway Landing
An A-10 Thunderbolt II from the 107th Fighter Squadron, 127th Wing, Michigan Air National Guard (ANG), lands and takes off from a highway during Agile Combat Employment (ACE) training during Northern Agility-1 22 in Alger County, located in the Upper Peninsula of Mich., June 29, 2022. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Master Sgt. David Kujawa)

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