LANGLEY AIR FORCE BASE, Va. –
EDITOR'S NOTE: Due to the sensitivity of the Air Force ISR mission, the last names of personnel have been removed in this article.
The bustling rush-hour traffic across Langley Air Force Base has quieted to a slow crawl of occasional headlights; the once-packed parking lots now nearly vacant, awash in the amber warmth of street lamps to buffer the darkness of the impending night.
Most of Langley's 18,000 Airmen and civilian personnel have left for the day; their tasks completed. However, the U.S. Air Force's mission never stops, as witnessed by the dedicated personnel who work late into the night to accomplish their objectives.
Airmen working in the 480th Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Wing Operations Center are among these night-shift warriors, working diligently to provide support to the Air Force's ISR mission.
The WOC serves as the hub for all ISR taskings for the Air Force's network of Distributed Ground Systems and exploitation sites around the globe. The Airmen working in the WOC facilitate the processing, exploitation and dissemination (PED) mission, accepting requests for support from U.S. military and coalition partners and determining which exploitation site is best suited to execute the mission.
The sites collect thousands of hours of ISR products, which analysts review, decipher and extract pertinent information to provide to the requesters, giving warfighters "eyes in the sky" information to help them safely accomplish their mission objectives.
During the daytime shift, the 480 ISR Wing command staff works in-house, overseeing the WOC workflow and providing vital directives to the Airmen working in the center. As the base empties in the evening, most of the wing staff retires for the day - but the ISR mission is a worldwide, non-stop operation.
A corps of approximately 20 ISR professionals occupies the WOC during the nighttime hours to manage -- with razor-sharp accuracy -- what is arguably among the Air Force's most critical missions.
"You have one team of 10 to 12 [enlisted] Airmen, a few civilians and one officer, running the exploitation for all the [ISR] sites in the entire world," said U.S. Air Force 1st Lt. Wes, WOC night shift officer-in-charge. "To us, it's just what we do; but, it's truly amazing the scope of operations our Airmen have control."
The Air Force operates thousands of ISR assets, including its DGS sites, the fleet of unmanned aerial vehicles -- commonly referred to as drones - traditional surveillance aircraft, and other equipment to capture information practically anywhere in the world.
Wes said that information needs to be explained, as it is not initially captured in a usable format, especially for warfighters on the battlefield.
"[Warfighters] can't sift through those thousands of hours of feed - the simply don't have the time," he explained. "They need somebody who has the right training to look through that raw information in a calm, cool and collected environment, and give them the information they're looking for. We make that happen."
According to Wes, the advent of drone technology approximately 15 years ago saw ISR missions as somewhat of a luxury to commanders, even an afterthought at times. Now, ISR products are critical, and practically every major operation around the world requires decision makers to have reliable intelligence by way of the Air Force's ISR sites - placing the burden of responsibility on the Airmen of the WOC to continue their attention to detail, vigilance and diligence in arranging the ISR puzzle.
With requests coming in from various U.S. and coalition commanders across multiple fronts on an ever-changing battlefield, the WOC staff needs to be as focused as possible.
"We have assets around the globe, so there's a lot of logistics and a lot could happen," Wes said. "We're making sure our plan is a good as possible, and dynamic -- it is a war, and we need to be able to respond to requirements as they come up so [combatant commanders] can make the decisions in time."
Wes likened arranging the complexities of taking mission requests, finding the right site to execute it, and providing quality control to the puzzle game Tetris - taking the requests in and "making it all fit together."
"The Airmen are brilliant at fitting these missions in the schedule, making it all work and ensuring we maximize the efficiency of our sites," he said.
Senior Airman Kristina, 27th Intelligence Squadron PED Command and Control controller, spends her 12-hour-shifts tucked away in the WOC, scheduling missions for Air Force ISR assets on the other side of the globe. The sterile environment, boasting banks of computers, a wall of large monitors and banks of secret data, can be disorienting at times, she said.
However, understanding the vitality of her contributions to the expanding mission downrange keeps her focused.
"We don't see the cause and effect here because we're physically detached... but I've reached out to our sites and had them explain exactly how we're impacting their duties," she said. "I've been here nearly four years, and have seen [our mission] grow from small to now huge schedules."
Senior Airman Thomas, 27th IS maintenance control center controller, monitors and tracks outages and maintenance that affects the Air Force ISR Agency's communications network and its various assets. His efforts ensure that the mission can be conducted uninterrupted and wing leadership has the ability to foresee what the weapon systems are capable of at any given time.
Thomas echoed Kristina's sentiment, emphasizing how fluid the Air Force's ISR mission is and how that dynamic environment keeps him zeroed in.
"Intelligence is constantly changing. The workload has increased, and from week to week you can be doing something completely different than the week before," Thomas said. "Positive feedback from our sites really makes an impact on us, because that's what affirms why we're doing what we're doing. I look at the feeds from our missions, and it helps me stay vigilant."
Due to the sensitivity of their mission, WOC Airmen are very limited as to what about their jobs they can talk about publicly. As the amount of ISR missions has increased, so has the misconception of what Air Force ISR professionals actually do - something the Airmen called "frustrating."
"Our main point is not to drop bombs; it's to collect information. We'd rather get a hold of the bad guy and figure out more information and avoid collateral damage where we can," Wes said. "You turn on the news and hear about drone strikes and how we indiscriminately use these assets to attack people, and that's simply not the case."
Kristina said the frustration stems not only from those outside the military, but even among fellow Airmen who aren't privileged to the details of her sensitive mission, nor the massive impact of what she does.
"People ask what I do, and all I can really say is 'I make schedules,' and they'll look at me kind of blankly," Kristina said. "Even our partners at the [ISR] sites don't always understand the scope of what we're doing. They may have 10 aircraft to deal with. We are scheduling easily more than a hundred flights around the world at any given time. That puts things into perspective, knowing what I'm doing is impacting such a massive scale of operations across the world. It's really amazing."
"Supported units don't just want intelligence for 10 hours, 12 hours... they ask us to 'soak' the area, monitoring locations for days, even weeks at a time. There can't be a weak link in the chain," Wes said. "[Our Airmen] do a great job, and it's getting better every day."
"With that in mind, the seriousness of our mission never changes from day shift to night shift, and wing leadership expects there will be no loss in terms of proficiency," he continued. "The world has changed; the war has changed, and now ISR is absolutely instrumental in any operation that goes down anywhere in the world."