At An Undisclosed Air Base In The Persian Gulf...
Lt. Gen. T. Michael "Buzz" Moseley (right),
Operation Iraqi Freedom's Combined Forces Air Component Commander,
visited the base here recently to update the troops on Operation
Iraqi Freedom and to award a B-1B flight crew the Distinguished
Flying Cross for their actions over Iraq on April 7.
Moseley talked about how succinct the campaign has been, taking
only 22 days to topple Saddam Hussein's regime.
"You knew from the beginning that this thing was going to go
quick because there was no way an opponent can survive what we did
to these guys," Moseley said. "From the very beginning we had a set
of options of how we were going to start it. We took a year to plan
it."
He started out by telling everyone that he loves them and that
everyone supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom here is part of
something bigger than their individual branch of service.
"You don't see Guard, Reservists or active duty, you see
Airmen," Moseley said. "At other bases you see Army, Navy, Marines
and maybe some Coast Guard. Most everybody is dressed in this kind
of uniform (referring to the desert flight suit the general was
wearing) or [Desert Camouflage Uniforms] and you can't really tell
what branch they're with unless you read their uniforms that say
U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Air Force, etc..."

The general said that although major fighting is over, the war
with Iraq is not over.
"We're in a different phase now that is going to be a little
tougher," he said. "The Army has a tough job ahead of them. They've
got to stabilize (Iraq) and make it livable. I've got to tell you
though, it looks a whole lot more livable then it did in the
beginning of March. There's people coming out into the streets;
there's people coming out to the open businesses ... none of that
was possible before March."
Speaking of both Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom,
Moseley said, "You guys are all a part of an operation that I think
is something special on a historic context because you're part of
an operation to take out two rogue regimes. Not bad work. You guys
have been a part of that from the beginning."

General Moseley also talked about how history was made recently
using B-1B Lancers, B-52 Stratofortresses and B-2 Spirit
bombers.
"Who'd have thought that we could have B-1s, B-52s and B-2s all
in downtown Baghdad at the same time hitting multiple targets
simultaneously," Moseley asked. "No other country in the world can
do that."
Speaking of the command and control platforms the Air Force has
at its disposal, Moseley referenced the E-3 Sentries stationed here
supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

"We don't do anything without command and control," he said. "We
have to have our eyes out there, we have to be able to see and
analyze the information and pass that info to the [combined air
operations center] and be able to make decisions based on that
information. That is a sizeable commitment for command and
control.
"No other air force in the world can maintain this type of
connectivity with command and control and deliver the types of
munitions that we're delivering in the conditions that we're all
operating; at the ranges that we're operating from, then the U.S.
Air Force with the partnership of the Navy and Marines," he
said.
He finished his speech talking about combat experience. Between
Operation Desert Storm, Bosnia, Afghanistan, and now Operation
Iraqi Freedom, the Air Force has the most combat experienced Air
Force in the world, he said. The same can be said about the
Navy.

DFC To B-1B Crew That "Bombed Saddam"
General Moseley also presented B-1 flight crew, Lt. Col. Fred
Swan, Weapon System Officer; Capt. Chris Wachter, aircraft
commander; Capt. Sloan Hollis, pilot; and 1st Lt. Joe Runci,
offensive systems operator, the Distinguished Flying Cross for
their actions to destroy a priority Baath Party leadership target
on April 7. The citation accompanying the award read that the
crew's actions marked the beginning of the rapid collapse of the
Iraqi regime and the fall of Baghdad.