F-15E Strike Eagles assigned to the 336th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron have rotated out of Kadena Air Base, concluding a six-month deployment that included a groundbreaking three-month forward operation to U.S. Navy Support Facility Diego Garcia.
While
stationed at Kadena, the 336th EFS deployed a detachment to the remote Indian
Ocean outpost to establish and operate Detachment 336—marking the first
sustained U.S. fighter presence on the island and a major milestone in the
execution of Agile Combat Employment in the Indo-Pacific.
In response
to an immediate request for forces from the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, 160
Airmen from Kadena, Yokota, and Andersen Air Force Bases deployed on May 13 to
establish Detachment 336. Their mission: to project and sustain forward combat
airpower from one of the most remote and strategically significant locations on
Earth.
“This
wasn’t just a TDY,” said Capt. Jimmy Boulton, 336th EFS, F-15E pilot. “This was
an operational ACE fighter detachment tailor-made for a rapidly developing,
real-world mission. And we weren’t just flying jets; we were building a joint
team locked in on our purpose."
Over the
course of the deployment, Det 336 achieved 24/7 alert operations, installed a
mobile aircraft arresting system, and executed daily sorties, maintaining high
mission-capable rates despite supply chains stretching halfway around the world.
“Our team
had to develop innovative solutions to meet maintenance requirements in a
location without standard fighter infrastructure,” said Master Sgt. Jeremy
McCoy, Det 336 maintenance. “So, we adapted quickly to keep jets and Airmen
ready and in the fight.”
In addition
to flight operations, Det 336 assumed tactical command of joint defense forces,
working alongside U.S. Navy Seventh Fleet, Marine Forces Pacific, and the 609th
and 613th Air Operations Centers. Together, they executed air defense drills,
base security scenarios, and alert responses, establishing a fully integrated,
layered defensive posture.
“We
collaborated in real time with our Navy and Marine partners to develop joint
solutions,” said Capt. Brianna Kretkowski, 336th EFS, intelligence. “Each
mission strengthened our battle rhythm and sharpened our readiness as a unified
force."
Life on the
island also demanded rapid, ground-up innovation. Alongside Anderson Air Force
Base’s 36th Mission Support Group, Det 1, Airmen built and upgraded their tent
city, nicknamed “Thundercove,” transforming it into a resilient base of
operations.
From power
distribution and sanitation to morale spaces and maintenance and operational
headquarters, every improvement was built on-site, enhancing sustainability and
enabling high operational tempo.
“Every
workaround and upgrade was about building momentum,” said Tech. Sgt. Cid
Bartolome, Det 336 civil engineer. “It was about making the location viable not
just for this mission, but for future ones as well.”
By the end
of July, Det 336 had exceeded all mission objectives, demonstrating that a
forward-deployed fighter force can operate, thrive, and command from
non-traditional bases under exceptionally challenging logistical conditions.
“Our work
is already shaping tactics, techniques ,and procedures across the theater,” said
Capt. Boulton.
As the
final Strike Eagles returned to their shelters at Kadena, the scope of the
accomplishment came into full view. This was more than a deployment; it was a
blueprint for flexible, air power-centric combat operations in the Indo-Pacific.
“In
practice, operational ACE required Det 336 to define new organizations, invent
new processes, and—at the individual Airman and team level—aggressively move
towards any and every risk to force or mission,” said Lt. Col. Mitchell Fossum,
commander, 336th EFS. “Our stewardship of the joint defense of Diego Garcia may
soon be catalogued as merely another proof of the United States’ broad
capability to rapidly deploy and reinforce deterrence with effective military
power. To the Airmen of Det 336, however, this mission and the defense of this
exceptional, strategic island was a high calling, and a privilege.”
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