Adjr, ABAT '06, is assuming command of a squadron at Kadena AFB Okinawa. Good duty station?
Any place in command is a good duty station.airplane driver said:
Adjr, ABAT '06, is assuming command of a squadron at Kadena AFB Okinawa. Good duty station?
For good reason.airplane driver said:
He is an 04 and should make Ltcol next year. He just spent a year on an AF Fellowship at Lawrence Livermore labs. Before that he was on staff at PACCOM in Seoul. Mrs Ad and I are proud of his career.
on behalf of the Marine Corps, you are welcome.PanzerAggie06 said:
On a side note. There is a very vocal subset of Okinawans who really want the US to get off their island. They constantly protest and make waves anytime something negative happens involving a US service member. As such the US leadership on the island often, in my opinion, overreacts and goes draconian. Thus, you will see curfews and limitations on drinking in public, etc. I was stationed near Tokyo but spent a fair amount of time in Oki. Its fairly annoying to be a college-educated adult and commissioned officer and still have, what many saw as, a bedtime.
This is the most Air Force answer to a question about a duty station I have ever seen.GAC06 said:
An '06 already commanding a squadron? That seems fast.
Kadena has a decent golf course. Lots of good scuba/snorkeling around Oki.
Generally true, but airbases in Hawaii, Alaska and Guam are all OCONUS and are all AFBs or JBs, and our bases in UK are RAF X, not AB. So AFB is an indicator of an AF base on US soil, but not strictly CONUS vs OCONUS.Aggie@state.gov said:
AFB = CONUS
AB = OCONUS
Which squadron?airplane driver said:
Adjr, ABAT '06, is assuming command of a squadron at Kadena AFB Okinawa. Good duty station?
I have been out of town and just saw your question. He is in command of 18th Component Sqdn.Rock1982 said:Which squadron?airplane driver said:
Adjr, ABAT '06, is assuming command of a squadron at Kadena AFB Okinawa. Good duty station?
Why's that? The restrictions?TheCougarHunter said:
Definitely hit up Crayz Chicken n Waffles. It's about 5 minutes drive from the Kadena main gate.
T&P for anyone getting Futenma, or any of the Marine bases on that island for that matter. Kadena is great though.
18th Component Maintenance Squadron. Big job indeed.airplane driver said:I have been out of town and just saw your question. He is in command of 18th Component Sqdn.Rock1982 said:Which squadron?airplane driver said:
Adjr, ABAT '06, is assuming command of a squadron at Kadena AFB Okinawa. Good duty station?
airplane driver said:I have been out of town and just saw your question. He is in command of 18th Component Sqdn.Rock1982 said:Which squadron?airplane driver said:
Adjr, ABAT '06, is assuming command of a squadron at Kadena AFB Okinawa. Good duty station?
Irish_Man said:
My dad lived there in the 60's, my grandfather was stationed there as an SR71 pilot.
I'm sure it's been cleaned up since my dad was there but when he lived there the aftermath of wwii was still all around. Burned out tanks, you could go in caves and see the white outline of Japanese soldiers on the walls from where the flame throwers hit them. He also said Japanese skeletons were everywhere and they'd put them in each other's sleeping bags as jokes when camping. Also issues with unexploded ordnance.
All that to say i know nothing.
I think the SR71 units did short rotations through Kadena. Meaning a few planes would stay for a few months and then rotate out and another unit would rotate in.ravingfans said:Irish_Man said:
My dad lived there in the 60's, my grandfather was stationed there as an SR71 pilot.
I'm sure it's been cleaned up since my dad was there but when he lived there the aftermath of wwii was still all around. Burned out tanks, you could go in caves and see the white outline of Japanese soldiers on the walls from where the flame throwers hit them. He also said Japanese skeletons were everywhere and they'd put them in each other's sleeping bags as jokes when camping. Also issues with unexploded ordnance.
All that to say i know nothing.
funny thing is the SR71 was never stationed at Kadena, but had regularly scheduled "Emergency Landings" there when my dad was stationed there in the 60's. We could watch but not photograph, but the local Japanese had cameras rolling all the time catching all the action...
IDAGG said:I think the SR71 units did short rotations through Kadena. Meaning a few planes would stay for a few months and then rotate out and another unit would rotate in.ravingfans said:Irish_Man said:
My dad lived there in the 60's, my grandfather was stationed there as an SR71 pilot.
I'm sure it's been cleaned up since my dad was there but when he lived there the aftermath of wwii was still all around. Burned out tanks, you could go in caves and see the white outline of Japanese soldiers on the walls from where the flame throwers hit them. He also said Japanese skeletons were everywhere and they'd put them in each other's sleeping bags as jokes when camping. Also issues with unexploded ordnance.
All that to say i know nothing.
funny thing is the SR71 was never stationed at Kadena, but had regularly scheduled "Emergency Landings" there when my dad was stationed there in the 60's. We could watch but not photograph, but the local Japanese had cameras rolling all the time catching all the action...