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Cook’s in the money


By FLGOFF Melinda Boneham

Leading Aircraftman Brett McMurrugh and his Commander’s Coin.
Leading Aircraftman Brett McMurrugh and his Commander’s Coin.

LEADING Aircraftman Brett McMurrugh, a cook from No. 381 Expeditionary Combat Support Squadron, has received a Commander’s Coin in appreciation of his good cooking and Aussie humour while on deployment.

Working in the combined mess in the Middle East, LAC McMurrugh displayed his usual friendly service and good humour while serving a regular diner in civilian clothes, unaware that he was General Denis Tabbernor, Commander Canadian Joint Task Force South West Asia.

Over several weeks, the two built up a good rapport, with the General often engaging LAC McMurrugh in conversation over meals he had enjoyed.

On his last day as Canadian Commander, GEN Tabbernor approached LAC McMurrugh to thank him for his outstanding meal preparation and his larrikin humour, which he found “refreshing”.

After shaking hands, LAC McMurrugh felt something in his hand – a Commander’s Coin. A limited number of these coins are presented by the Canadian Commander as a reward for outstanding service or significant contribution to operations.

The greatest challenge for Australian cooks in the MEAO field kitchen is managing different culinary tastes, with their coalition partners preferring sweet, fatty foods to spicy ones.

While preparing various dishes, they often slip Vegemite into the mix to boost the flavour, which is proving very popular.

Bronze Star a Shaw reward

By LACW Simone Liebelt

Brigadier General Larry Newman, Coalition Forces Land Component Assistant Chief of Staff, Logistics, presents Wing Commander Greg Shaw with the Bronze Star.
Brigadier General Larry Newman, Coalition Forces Land Component Assistant Chief of Staff, Logistics, presents Wing Commander Greg Shaw with the Bronze Star.

AFTER three months of managing transport operations on a scale never seen in Australia, Wing Commander Gregory Shaw has been awarded a Bronze Star for his work in the Middle East Area of Operations.

WGCDR Shaw was honoured with the US wartime award on August 4 for his service as Deputy Operations Officer of the Coalition’s Joint Movement Centre (JMC) at a camp in the MEAO from February 16 to May 11.

WGCDR Shaw was responsible for overseeing the planning, coordination and tracking of numerous missions for coalition Air Force, Army, Navy and Special Forces in the combat zone.

During the operational build up, he successfully managed the movements of more than 300,000 personnel, 2500 air missions and 250 ships within three major areas of operations – the Persian Gulf, the Horn of Africa and Afghanistan.

WGCDR Shaw said the professional highlight of his deployment was forming part of a large and complex effort that allowed the combatant commanders to prosecute their missions successfully.

“With about 60-70 personnel at the JMC, we executed one of the largest movements of personnel and equipment in history,” he said. “We were all working 20 hours a day, seven days a week for over three months, so everyone got tired, but we all understood the importance of our mission and just kept up the effort.”

The most memorable moments of the deployment for WGCDR Shaw were the first missile launch alert (followed by another half a dozen) and the first train ride from Umm Qasr to Baghdad on the Iraqi railway after the war.

“The railcars had no brakes and were stopped at the stations by gravity and the rail workers throwing rocks under the wheels,” he said. “There are no signals on the line so the train drivers used a token system to detect if there were any other trains on the track. Luckily it’s a relatively flat line.”

WGCDR Shaw believes Air Force training and teamwork while on detachment contributed to his receiving the Bronze Star – a rare honour for Australians.

“I am proud to have been awarded a Bronze Star, but I was only part of a team.

There were also Australian movements staff in the Australian National Headquarters and Movement Control Detachments throughout the MEAO that were responsible for the vast majority of movements issues and they did a fantastic job,” he said.

Intelligent approach
Specialists demonstrate capabilities

By W02 Al Green

Group Captain Pat Cunningham, Senior Intelligence Officer, believes the performance of Intellos in the MEAO is an indication of how far the Air Force specialisation has developed over the past few years.
Group Captain Pat Cunningham, Senior Intelligence Officer, believes the performance of Intellos in the MEAO is an indication of how far the Air Force specialisation has developed over the past few years.
Photo by WO2 Al Green

ONE of the contributors to mission success in Iraq has been the integration of specialised Air Force Intelligence staff into the coalition force structure.

There they proved adaptive in supporting air, sea and ground operations across the Middle East Area of Operations.

For Group Captain Pat Cunningham, Senior Intelligence Officer, this success is an indication of how far the Air Force Intelligence specialisation has developed over the past few years.

“The airmen and women deployed during war-fighting operations and now in support of restoration in Iraq have successfully taken on a broad range of operational intelligence roles from targeting through to force protection,” GPCAPT Cunningham said.

“The array of specialist capabilities was demonstrated clearly in a joint environment and acknowledged as extremely professional by our coalition partners.”

The return for the Air Force, he observes, will be a more experienced and knowledgable Intel specialisation and, importantly, one that can play a full role in all aspects of ADF and coalition operations globally.

For GPCAPT Cunningham, leading the Intellos is just one in a series of personal firsts, having in the past two years being appointed the first Air Force J2 in HQ NORCOM and the first Intello Base Commander (RAAF Darwin).

He was particularly pleased about being able to help Air Force Intellos rise up and exceed the requirement levied on them operationally as they took on an extensive range of intelligence tasking.

“This can only bode well for the Air Force and our ability to meet new challenges,” he said.
“It has been a significant personal experience for me to lead an excellent group of specialists who have value-added to the coalition plan.”


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