Games success
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By
Lt Cameron Jamieson
While 1.5 billion people worldwide enjoyed the opening ceremony for
the Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games the ADF completed its own record-breaking
performance.
Under the guise of Operation Acolyte, 1000 members of Joint Task Force
636 patrolled the skies, land and the waters of Melbourne while others
assisted with ceremonial and general support to help ensure the opening
was safe, secure and successful.
F/A-18 aircraft patrolled the night sky as tactical assault troops stood
to.
More troops remained at high readiness, prepared to support the Victoria
Police and emergency services across the city.
The commander of Operation Acolyte Brig Andrew Smith said he was pleased
with how the task had been accomplished without any impact on the spectacle
and grandeur of the opening night.
"I'm proud of how our people are working together," Brig Smith
said.
"Given the complexity of the operation and the force composition,
they have performed as a remarkably seamless team. The ability of the
three Services and our civilian partners to work together has allowed
things to go along very smoothly."
Although the size of the ADF committed to the 2000 Sydney Olympics was
larger, it is believed that this is the first time the ADF has provided
this combination of complex assets on this scale under a single task
force command.
"We are working in a post-9/11 world, and while Operation Gold
was a bigger-sized force, there is now an additional level of support
that we need to provide in cooperation with our Victorian Government
partners," Brig Smith said.
Brig Smith said the best part of his command so far had been the ability
to get out and visit the troops under his command during their training
phase.
"I could sense their anticipation and see the thoroughness of their
training, and it was great to see it all come together," he said.
"I could share their enthusiasm, and their eagerness to move into
the mission."
Operation Acolyte's 2,600-strong troop commitment will continue until
the games are over on 26 March. Brig Smith said that while his team
would remain focused on their task, he hoped the people in Melbourne
would have little cause to notice them.
"While security is 95 per cent of our task, it's important to remember
that the Commonwealth Games is not a security operation," he said.
"It's a sporting carnival and cultural event that is based on friendship
across the Commonwealth. That's what we want people to remember about
the games. So, while we are working we want people to be focussed on
enjoying the games."