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SOF stare
Tech. Sgt. Raymond Sallard, guards his post during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. As part of the exercise, 19 CAA students deployed to a foreign nation to advise and train their air forces in fixed wing and rotary aircraft operations. The four-day exercise is the capstone of 12 weeks of baseline certification training for CAA. The year-long process to become a CAA also includes months of language and flight training. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Field of fire
Tech. Sgt. Joseph Watson, guards his post during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. As part of the exercise, 19 CAA students deployed to a foreign nation to advise and train their air forces in fixed wing and rotary aircraft operations. The four-day exercise is the capstone of 12 weeks of baseline certification training for CAA. The year-long process to become a CAA also includes months of language and flight training. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Strange daze
Tech. Sgt. William Strange, team sergeant, scans the area from the mission control tent during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. As part of the exercise, 19 CAA students deployed to a foreign nation to advise and train their air forces in fixed wing and rotary aircraft operations. The four-day exercise is the capstone of 12 weeks of baseline certification training for CAA. The year-long process to become a CAA also includes months of language and flight training. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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The next step
Tech. Sgt. Britton Adams, team medic (left), talks with his team leader, Maj. Jeff Schmidt, during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. As part of the exercise, 19 CAA students deployed to a foreign nation to advise and train their air forces in fixed wing and rotary aircraft operations. The four-day exercise is the capstone of 12 weeks of baseline certification training for CAA. The year-long process to become a CAA also includes months of language and flight training. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Ready medic
Tech. Sgt. Britton Adams, team medic, watches and waits after his team heard sounds of a firefight west of his camp during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. As part of the exercise, 19 CAA students deployed to a foreign nation to advise and train their air forces in fixed wing and rotary aircraft operations. The four-day exercise is the capstone of 12 weeks of baseline certification training for CAA. The year-long process to become a CAA also includes months of language and flight training. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Pointed authority
Maj. Michael Black, 5th Special Operations Squadron, aims his weapon downrange after his team heard sounds of a firefight west of their camp during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. Major Black and four other 5th SOS Airmen completed the course and earned their air commando badges. They were the first reservists to ever take the course, which prepares Airmen to deploy to partner nations to train personnel to engage in air operations. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Black ops
Maj. Michael Black, 5th Special Operations Squadron, aims his weapon downrange after his team heard sounds of a firefight west of their camp during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. Major Black and four other 5th SOS Airmen completed the course and earned their air commando badges. They were the first reservists to ever take the course, which prepares Airmen to deploy to partner nations to train personnel to engage in air operations. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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CAA team
Tech. Sgt. Randy Hoppock, 5th Special Operations Squadron (front), and Maj. Jeff Schmidt, team leader, watch and wait after their team heard sounds of a firefight west of their camp during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. Sergeant Hoppock and four other 5th SOS Airmen completed the course and earned their air commando badges. They were the first reservists to ever take the course, which prepares Airmen to deploy to partner nations to train personnel to engage in air operations. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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O NEG
Tech. Sgt. Jason Parker scans downrange during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. As part of the exercise, 19 CAA students deployed to a foreign nation to advise and train their air forces in fixed wing and rotary aircraft operations. The four-day exercise is the capstone of 12 weeks of baseline certification training for CAA. The year-long process to become a CAA also includes months of language and flight training. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Black ops
Maj. Michael Black, 5th Special Operations Squadron, guards the control center tent after his team heard sounds of a firefight west of their camp during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. Major Black and four other 5th SOS Airmen completed the course and earned their air commando badges. They were the first reservists to ever take the course, which prepares Airmen to deploy to partner nations to train personnel to engage in air operations. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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CAA NCO
Tech. Sgt. Randy Hoppock, 5th Special Operations Squadron, prepares for battle after his team heard sounds of a firefight west of their camp during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. Sergeant Hoppock and four other 5th SOS Airmen completed the course and earned their air commando badges. They are the first reservists to ever take the course, which prepares Airmen to deploy to partner nations to train personnel to engage in air operations. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Lead by example
Lt. Col. Rodrigo Vial, 5th Special Operations Squadron, scans the area after his team heard sounds of a firefight west of their camp during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. Colonel Vial and four other 5th SOS Airmen completed the course and earned their air commando badges. They were the first reservists to ever take the course, which prepares Airmen to deploy to partner nations to train personnel to engage in air operations. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Black ops
Maj. Michael Black, 5th Special Operations Squadron, guards the control center tent after his team heard sounds of a firefight west of their camp during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. Major Black and four other 5th SOS Airmen completed the course and earned their air commando badges. They were the first reservists to ever take the course, which prepares Airmen to deploy to partner nations to train personnel to engage in air operations. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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On alert
Maj. Jeff Schmidt, team leader, and Capt. Robert Rennell, intelligence officer, react to the sound of a firefight west of their camp during the Combat Aviation Advisor course’s Raven Claw exercise May 24 at Duke Field, Fla. As part of the exercise, 19 CAA students deployed to a foreign nation to advise and train their air forces in fixed wing and rotary aircraft operations. The four-day exercise is the capstone of 12 weeks of baseline certification training for CAA. The year-long process to become a CAA also includes months of language and flight training. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Entry control
Combat Aviation Advisor students walk past soldiers toward their first meeting with the “simulated” partner-nation base leadership during the Raven Claw exercise, May 23 at Duke Field, Fla. As part of the exercise, 19 CAA students deployed to a foreign nation to advise and train their air forces in fixed wing and rotary aircraft operations. The four-day exercise is the capstone of 12 weeks of baseline certification training for CAA. The year-long process to become a CAA also includes months of language and flight training. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)
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Feedback
Master Sgt. Vicki Patterson, a local Reserve recruiter from the Eastern Regional Recruiting Squadron, poses a question to Chief Master Sgt. Dwight Badgett, the command chief for Air Force Reserve Command, following his mass briefing at Duke Field May 6. Chief Badgett, the command’s top advocate for more than 60,000 Reserve and active-duty AFRC enlisted members, visited the 919th Special Operations Wing May 5-6 to thank its enlisted Airmen them for their service, respond to their feedback and brief them on force development and other career enhancement programs and topics. (U.S. Air Force photo/Adam Duckworth)
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Chief's view
Chief Master Sgt. Dwight Badgett, the command chief for Air Force Reserve Command, delivers remarks during a mass briefing for Duke Field enlisted reservists at Spectre Hall May 6. Chief Badgett, the command’s top advocate for more than 60,000 Reserve and active-duty AFRC enlisted members, visited the 919th Special Operations Wing May 5-6 to thank its enlisted Airmen for their service, respond to their feedback and brief them on force development and other career enhancement programs and topics. (U.S. Air Force photo/Adam Duckworth)
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Top chief
Chief Master Sgt. Dwight Badgett, the command chief for Air Force Reserve Command, speaks to reservist Airmen at Duke Field’s NCO Leadership Development Course May 6. Chief Badgett, the command’s top advocate for more than 60,000 Reserve and active-duty AFRC enlisted members, visited the 919th Special Operations Wing May 5-6 to thank its enlisted Airmen them for their service, respond to their feedback and brief them on force development and other career enhancement programs and topics. (U.S. Air Force photo/Dan Neely)
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From the top
Chief Master Sgt. Dwight Badgett, the command chief for Air Force Reserve Command, speaks to reservist Airmen at Duke Field’s NCO Leadership Development Course May 6. Chief Badgett, the command’s top advocate for more than 60,000 Reserve and active-duty AFRC enlisted members, visited the 919th Special Operations Wing May 5-6 to thank its enlisted Airmen for their service, respond to their feedback and brief them on force development and other career enhancement programs and topics. (U.S. Air Force photo/Dan Neely)
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Asking the chief
Senior Airman Aaron Celestin, a 919th Maintenance Squadron integrated avionics systems apprentice, asks a question during the briefing at Duke Field’s NCO Leadership Development Course May 6 by Chief Master Sgt. Dwight Badgett, the command chief for Air Force Reserve Command. Chief Badgett, the command’s top advocate for more than 60,000 Reserve and active-duty AFRC enlisted members, visited the 919th Special Operations Wing May 5-6 to thank its enlisted Airmen for their service, respond to their feedback and brief them on force development and other career enhancement programs and topics. (U.S. Air Force photo/Dan Neely)
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