Tennessee Air Guard Makes History Piloting an Unmanned Aircraft During Exercise Whisky Fury

  • Published
  • By Tech. Sgt. Anthony Agosti, Master Sgt. Jeremy Cornelius, Airman 1st Class Matthew Gunn, Senior Airman Yonette Martin and Master Sgt. Mark Thompson
  • 118th Wing

As part of exercise Whiskey Fury, designed around the Air Force’s new Agile Combat Employment model, members from the 118th Operations Group piloted the MQ-9 to a successful take-off and landing on June 7. There are additional planned training flights to Arnold Air Force Base, Tennessee, and Ft. Campbell, Kentucky, with the Civil Air Patrol trailing the airplane per Federal Aviation Administration regulations.


Key to the success of this exercise is a state-of-the-art technology called Satellite Launch and Recovery (SLR), which fundamentally changes how MQ-9s are flown and supported.


“What SLR does is take forward deployed crews out of the equation,” said Lt. Col. John Woods, assistant director of operations, 118th Operations Support Squadron. The result of this new technology is that equipment and the overall support footprint are significantly reduced. “The airplane is still being flown through the satellite, but based on an auto take-off and landing profile we’ve built into it that basically allows the aircraft to go and land on its own. It knows exactly where it is and where the runway is.” 
Woods added it is important to know the pilot is always in command and in the loop. “We can take over at any point as a factor of safety,” he said.


With the first objective of the exercise met: flying an MQ-9 from California to Tennessee successfully without using forward-deployed crews, a second goal is training. “For the past ten years, we haven’t had the ability to do local training here, so that is a huge benefit,” said Woods. Training includes taking off from Smyrna daily to fly to Ft. Campbell and Arnold AFB to practice take-offs and landings. “Initially, we’ll be working with our Army partners to work on close air support, convoy overwatch, and other federal missions,” he said. “We’re also going to do tests and evaluations on how to refuel the MQ-9 and set up a forward arming and refueling point.”


The visual of an MQ-9 flying in U.S. civilian airspace could be alarming to some not familiar with its domestic operations capabilities, but Woods explained the MQ-9 integrates exceptionally well into this role, providing instant assessment and awareness to commanders, governors, and federal leadership during natural disasters, for example. “It’s such a good platform for cameras, sensors and could become an airborne cell tower if there’s a natural disaster,” said Woods. “It can stay airborne for over 24 hours, and the payload that we can carry to support Tennesseans – and anyone affected nationally – is huge.”


Woods, who piloted the MQ-9 from California to Tennessee, recognized the many support layers to make this exercise successful. “To be the first to land it [MQ-9] here in Tennessee was a phenomenal experience, and I’m completely humbled and honored, but I did not do that alone,” he said. “The fact that the MQ-9 touched down the first time as smoothly as it did is a credit to everybody in the operations group as well as the wing. Our targeting group came up with the coordinates. Our mission support group got the equipment from California. Security forces is guarding the airplane.”  He added that the 163rd Attack Wing, March Air Reserve Base, California, provided the aircraft and maintenance personnel as part of the exercise. 


Col. Ted Geasley, 118th Wing commander, was present during the June 7 MQ-9 landing in Smyrna and credits the California Air National Guard with laying the foundation for this successful exercise. “They’ve been using this [MQ-9] in a domestic response capability for the California wildfires for quite a while, he said. “The rest of us are taking the lessons they learned, and now we want to apply them.”