An official website of the United States government
Here's how you know
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

New Jersey, Pennsylvania Air Guard Collaborate on Exercise

  • Published
  • By Senior Master Sgt. Andrew Merlock,
  • 177th Fighter Wing - New Jersey Air National Guard

ATLANTIC CITY AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, N.J. – Civil engineer Airmen from the 177th Fighter Wing, New Jersey Air National Guard, and the 171st Air Refueling Wing, Pennsylvania Air National Guard, participated in the Piney Devil Prime Base Engineer Emergency Force (Prime BEEF) exercise at the 177th Fighter Wing.

Last month’s exercise included classroom lectures and taskings to test the participants’ ability to provide the engineering support required to establish an airbase and bed down people and aircraft.

“We’re a Prime BEEF squadron. Our job is to go repair bases and fix bases. If it’s not there, we’re going to make it,” said Lt. Col. Lucas Smith, commander of the 177th Civil Engineer Squadron. “So, as a Prime BEEF team, we have to do a 96-hour training event roughly every four years. This exercise allows us to provide Prime BEEF training to the members that were excused from last year’s training in Alaska and the members that are new to our squadron.”

During the exercise, Airmen also erected a Disaster Relief Beddown System tent and traveled to the Warren Grove Range on UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters to perform land navigation and simulated combat exercises.

“They have to leave the base and do land navigation through the pinelands to find somebody, with a compass and a map,“ said Smith. “They’re going to be in an unfamiliar environment and have to deal with the weather and fatigue. They’re going to be competing against opposing forces and another team that’s trying to do the same thing, and if the teams bump into each other, we’ll see who wins.”

In addition to the practical exercises, Airmen briefed a simulated base commander on their plan for the initial set-up of an airbase. 

Col. Brian Cooper, 177th Maintenance Group commander, served as the simulated base commander and provided feedback after the briefing.

“It was an awesome, collaborative effort,” said Cooper. “These are great exercises with different Air National Guard units because it enables them to learn and work together in a great training environment to bring more realism to what we will be doing in the future with agile combat employment as a deployed combat wing.”