TACP Enable C2 and Sensing Capabilities During Bamboo Eagle 25-1

Two U.S. Air Force Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) team members assigned to the 19th Air Support Operations Squadron conduct operations during a Bamboo Eagle (BE) 25-1 exercise at an island in the North Pacific, Feb. 13, 2025. TACP teams provided distributed ground-based Command and Control (C2) capabilities to create a more resilient, diverse communication and C2 structure for the exercise. BE 25-1 provides Airmen, allies and partners a combat-representative, dynamic environment to conduct testing, tactics development, and advanced training. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Brianna Vetro)

U.S. Air Force Special Warfare (AFSPECWAR) Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) teams from the 93d Air Ground Operations Wing enabled critical Command and Control (C2) and sensing capabilities for exercise Bamboo Eagle (BE) 25-1 across America and islands in the Pacific Ocean, Feb. 10-14, 2025.

The employment of Integrated Sensing and Effects Teams (ISET), Lead C2 teams, Distributed C2 teams, and Mission Command provided a robust and resilient employment model playing a critical role in the exercise. TACP facilitated real-time data passage critical to feeding and closing long range kill chains achieving kinetic and non-kinetic effects, which are essential in future operations.

“TACP’s C2 expertise was invaluable to the success of this exercise,” said Lt. Col. Alex Rich, BE 25-1 exercise manager. “They supported mission accomplishment and provided capabilities we need in future operations.”

Around 60 TACP and Special Warfare Mission Support Airmen employed diverse waveforms from numerous distributed operating locations to ensure C2 resiliency in an exercise designed to stress Airmen and their equipment in an advanced, non-permissive and modern battlefield environment.

The exercise emphasized real-time planning and execution, requiring AFSPECWAR Airmen to be agile and creative in their application of target acquisition and distributed C2 capabilities.

“The character of warfare has changed requiring TACP to evolve and solve joint and coalition force problems. We are more than cleared-hot, yet our roots in that role have uniquely enabled us to operate at the tactical edge, survive, and more importantly connect the joint force to not only employ effects at the right place and time, but give our leaders decision advantage,” said Lt. Col. Ralph Johnson, 19th Air Support Operations Squadron Commander. “I cannot be more proud of my team, they’ve committed completely to the process of getting better daily in the lead up to these exercises and it has shown.”

Contingencies and adversarial capabilities provide simulated enemies a vote in combat-replicative exercises like BE 25-1 which highlights a need for C2 resilience and diverse methods for mission accomplishment. C2 employment in the Air Force’s Agile Combat Employment scheme of maneuver creates unique challenges that require a flexible and adaptive force structure and Airman.

“TACP are comfortable with ambiguity and adapting to unique and complex scenarios, it’s what we’ve been doing since our inception,” Maj. Zachary Van Cleef, 19th ASOS Assistant Operations TACP Officer explained. “As top tier integrators and force multipliers, TACP will prove to be an essential asset in any future conflict.”

As these complex C2 challenges continue to evolve, so do Joint Force solutions to these problems.

“Our team prepared for this exercise along with RED FLAG-Nellis for over six months,” Van Cleef said. “They filled both a C2 and real-time forward edge targeting gap that proved pivotal to the success in BE 25-1. At the squadron, our team culture and commitment enable us to stay ready and yield high-level results wherever, whenever.”

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  • By Capt. Christian Little
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An antenna is set up by a Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) team during Bamboo Eagle (BE) 25-1 at an island in the North Pacific, Feb. 7, 2025. TACP teams provided distributed ground-based Command and Control (C2) capabilities to create a more resilient, diverse communication and C2 structure for the exercise. BE 25-1 is a USAF Warfare Center-directed live-fly exercise designed to create a combat-representative environment, generating combat air power while moving and sustaining the expeditionary air base in a dynamic environment. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Brianna Vetro)
A U.S. Air Force Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) team member assigned to the 19th Air Support Operations Squadron conducts communications during a Bamboo Eagle (BE) 25-1 exercise at an island in the North Pacific, Feb. 11, 2025. TACP teams provided distributed ground-based Command and Control (C2) capabilities to create a more resilient, diverse communication and C2 structure for the exercise. BE 25-1 provides Airmen, allies and partners a combat-representative, dynamic environment to conduct testing, tactics development, and advanced training. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Brianna Vetro)
Two U.S. Air Force Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) team members assigned to the 19th Air Support Operations Squadron take down an antenna during a Bamboo Eagle (BE) 25-1 exercise at an island in the North Pacific, Feb. 11, 2025. TACP teams provided distributed ground-based Command and Control (C2) capabilities to create a more resilient, diverse communication and C2 structure for the exercise. BE 25-1 provides Airmen, allies and partners a combat-representative, dynamic environment to conduct testing, tactics development, and advanced training. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Brianna Vetro)
U.S. Air Force Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) team members assigned to the 19th Air Support Operations Squadron prepare for night operations during a Bamboo Eagle 25-1 exercise at an island in the North Pacific, Feb. 13, 2025. TACP teams provided distributed ground-based Command and Control (C2) capabilities to create a more resilient, diverse communication and C2 structure for the exercise. The objective of exercises with speed and scale is to demonstrate the Department of the Air Force preparedness for complex, large-scale military operations, demonstrating the ability to operate in a contested, dynamic environment against high end threats on short notice. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Brianna Vetro)
A U.S. Air Force Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) team member assigned to the 19th Air Support Operations Squadron prepares for night operations during a Bamboo Eagle 25-1 exercise at an island in the North Pacific, Feb. 13, 2025. TACP teams provided distributed ground-based Command and Control (C2) capabilities to create a more resilient, diverse communication and C2 structure for the exercise. BE 25-1 provides Airmen, allies and partners a combat-representative, dynamic environment to conduct testing, tactics development, and advanced training. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Brianna Vetro)
A U.S. Air Force Tactical Air Control Party (TACP) team member assigned to the 19th Air Support Operations Squadron conducts operations during a Bamboo Eagle (BE) 25-1 exercise at an island in the North Pacific, Feb. 13, 2025. TACP teams provided distributed ground-based Command and Control (C2) capabilities to create a more resilient, diverse communication and C2 structure for the exercise. BE 25-1 provides Airmen, allies and partners a combat-representative, dynamic environment to conduct testing, tactics development, and advanced training. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Brianna Vetro)

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