

Snowgun wrote:Maybe they just pick the branch for college benefits and then get slated to do these other jobs because they can't fly like tom cruise?
Snowgun wrote:Doesn't compute with me either. Why would you be in the airforce if you A) didn't fly B) didn't work on things that fly C) facilitated the Flying of things from land while they were flying D)Made things that fly E) Managed people who do the previous things?
westberg wrote:Maybe he is one of these guys.
http://www.baseops.net/basictraining/usaf_specops.html
Air Force Special Operations
Mission: Provides the air component of U.S. Special Operations Command, deploying specialized airpower and delivering special operations combat power.
Responsibilities: Provides direct action, unconventional warfare, special reconnaissance, foreign internal defense and counter-terrorism support to unified commands.
Organizations
16th Special Operations Wing — Hurlburt Field, Fla. (MC-130E/H, AC-130H/U, MH-53J, MC-130P, MH-60G)
352nd Special Operations Group — RAF Mildenhall, England (MH-53J, MC-130P, MC-130H)
353rd Special Operations Group — Kadena AB, Japan (MC-130H, MC-130P; MH-53J’s are located at Osan AB, South Korea)
720th Special Tactics Group — Hurlburt Field, Fla.
18th Flight Test Squadron — Hurlburt Field, Fla.
USAF Special Operations School — Hurlburt Field, Fla.
Air Force Special Operations Command's Combat Controllers are Battlefield Airmen assigned to special tactics squadrons. They are trained special operations forces and certified Federal Aviation Administration air traffic controllers. The mission of a Combat Controller is to deploy undetected into combat and hostile environments to conduct special reconnaissance, establish assault zones or airfields, while simultaneously conducting air traffic control, fire support, command, control, and communications and forward air control. They deploy with air and ground forces in support of direct action, such as drug cartel, counter-terrorism, foreign internal defense, humanitarian assistance, and combat search and rescue. Combat Controllers employ all-terrain vehicles, amphibious vehicles, weapons and demolitions in pursuit of their objectives, which may include obstacle destruction.
Holland&Holland wrote:meddin wrote:unless that was just the producers staging drama...
Bingo!
DeanC wrote:Also still not sure why they included another cowboy mounted shooter. Those guys don't even use live ammo. Just primer only rounds that pop balloons at close range.
DeanC wrote:Also still not sure why they included another cowboy mounted shooter. Those guys don't even use live ammo. Just primer only rounds that pop balloons at close range.
Snowgun wrote:DeanC wrote:Also still not sure why they included another cowboy mounted shooter. Those guys don't even use live ammo. Just primer only rounds that pop balloons at close range.
+1
Cowboy mounted shooters are seeming more and more like poseurs....but they do make good TV.
westberg wrote:Snowgun wrote:DeanC wrote:Also still not sure why they included another cowboy mounted shooter. Those guys don't even use live ammo. Just primer only rounds that pop balloons at close range.
+1
Cowboy mounted shooters are seeming more and more like poseurs....but they do make good TV.
I would guess the horse is the key in Cowboy Mounted Shooting. Maybe they should add a horse on the next show.
DeanC wrote:Also still not sure why they included another cowboy mounted shooter. Those guys don't even use live ammo. Just primer only rounds that pop balloons at close range.
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