Las Vegas Review-Journal

Squadron comes back after 70 years

Nellis reactivate­s 6th for weapons school

- By Keith Rogers Las Vegas Review-journal

Keeping its century-old skull-and-propeller shoulder patch for its pilots and ground crew, the

U.S. Air Force Weapons School reactivate­d the 6th Weapons Squadron on Tuesday at Nellis Air Force Base as a new home for F-35A Lightning II joint strike fighter jets.

Now with 10 pilots and a few of the $100 million, cutting-edge stealth jets, the 6th Weapons Squadron will have 30 instructor pilots and 24 F-35s by 2023, a rapid advancemen­t considerin­g that just two years ago, on Jan. 15, 2015, the weapons school received its first Lightning II.

F-35s serve as tools to train U.S.

Air Force Weapons School cadres in an instructor course for the aircraft, which is replacing the aging fleet of F-16 and A-10 warplanes. Together with F-22 Raptors, the F-35 will provide air superiorit­y for the Air Force.

Overall, Nellis will have 36 F-35AS for testing and training, counting those assigned to the weapons school and a tenant unit, the 422nd Test and Evaluation Squadron.

The timing of 6th Weapons Squadron’s reactivati­on “couldn’t be more critical” as Air Force leaders steer developmen­t of the fifth-generation fighter jet, said Col. Michael R. Drowley, commandant of the U.S. Air Force Weapons School.

“With the instabilit­y and aggression that we’ve seen from our adversarie­s and competitor­s, that leadership is more critical now than ever,” he told a throng of airmen and families inside the F-35 hangar at the base.

In introducin­g the squadron’s new commander, Lt. Col. Michael “Double” Blauser, Drowley said, “We’re heading into uncharted waters, and every day will require steadfast leadership to ensure our fifth-generation capabiliti­es are as lethal and dominating as possible.

“The marching orders are pretty simple,” Drowley said. “Lead every second of every day. The weapons school is counting on you. The Air Force is counting on you. Your nation is counting on you. … Ensure we are ready to fly, fight and win.”

Blauser said that among the challenges he faces is integratin­g the F-35’s capability with the suite of U.S. military aircraft.

“We’re still working with our test partners, the training bases, to really unlock the true potential of what the F-35 can do. We’re learning more every day,” Blauser said.

He said the F-35 is a “force enabler.

It makes everyone else in the battlefiel­d more effective.”

The F-35A can fly at 1½ times the speed of sound, fire air-to-air missiles and drop GPS- and laser-guided bombs, and it has a 25 mm cannon. Cameras on the aircraft give pilots a 360-degree view on their helmet visors.

Drowley said it’s “perfect that a squadron that ushered in air power 100 years ago will take us into the future.”

Contact Keith Rogers at krogers@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0308. Find him on Twitter: @Keithroger­s2

▶ reviewjour­nal.com/airforcef3­5

 ?? Morgan Lieberman ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Lt. Col. Michael Blauser approaches his wife with a bouquet Tuesday at Nellis
Air Force Base during an activation ceremony for an F-35A Lightning II aircraft.
Morgan Lieberman Las Vegas Review-journal Lt. Col. Michael Blauser approaches his wife with a bouquet Tuesday at Nellis Air Force Base during an activation ceremony for an F-35A Lightning II aircraft.
 ?? Keith Rogers ?? Las Vegas Review-journal The skull-and-propeller shoulder patch for the 6th Weapons Squadron dates back to 1917.
Keith Rogers Las Vegas Review-journal The skull-and-propeller shoulder patch for the 6th Weapons Squadron dates back to 1917.

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