OKNG visits Azerbaijan as part of State Partnership Program

By Tech. Sgt. Brigette Waltermire, 137th Special Operations Wing Public AffairsMarch 21, 2022

Members of the Oklahoma National Guard and the Azerbaijan Peacekeeping Brigade gather for a group photo at the conclusion of a joint partnership strategic planning and unit training management event March 3, 2022, in Baku, Azerbaijan. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Brigette Waltermire)
Members of the Oklahoma National Guard and the Azerbaijan Peacekeeping Brigade gather for a group photo at the conclusion of a joint partnership strategic planning and unit training management event March 3, 2022, in Baku, Azerbaijan. (U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. Brigette Waltermire) (Photo Credit: Tech. Sgt. Brigette Waltermire) VIEW ORIGINAL

BAKU, Azerbaijan – Four members of the Oklahoma National Guard (OKNG) visited the Peacekeeping Brigade of Azerbaijan Armed Forces during a State Partnership Program (SPP) engagement March 1-4.

Two Oklahoma Army National Guardsmen and two Oklahoma Air National Guardsmen conducted a strategic planning and unit training management event in the first of a series of engagements planned between Oklahoma Joint Force Headquarters and the Peacekeeping Brigade. This visit enabled the OKNG to better understand the Peacekeeping Brigade military doctrine, which the Guard will use to tailor future engagements to enhance the Azerbaijan military decision-making process.

“The Oklahoma National Guard previously helped the Azerbaijan Armed Forces with their OCC (operational capabilities concept) battalion,” said Lt. Col. Dale Moss, State Partnership Program director with the Oklahoma Army National Guard. “It’s a NATO-certified battalion that they are currently trying to grow into a brigade with the 2nd Battalion, and we are here to help them achieve their NATO certification by focusing on staff development leading up to that evaluation.”

The strategic planning unit training management presentations by the OKNG highlighted the workflow and structure the U.S. Army uses to monitor training and readiness.

“This initial event is important for our partnership and has been a wonderful experience, but it has also set up the series by finding the key objectives for the Peacekeeping Brigade,” said Lt. Col. Ben Nicholls, senior plans officer for the Oklahoma Army National Guard. “Moving forward, it is critical for us to create a years-long training plan for these echelons of the Peacekeeping Brigade. We have to develop strong international partnerships and help successfully execute operations, exercises and training focused on achieving those objectives to really get to the core of meeting OKNG and partner nation commander training objectives, as well as combat command lines of effort.”

This intent meets a priority for Army Gen. Daniel Hokanson, chief of the National Guard Bureau and member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He stressed in a recent article how important the National Guard has been in sustaining and strengthening U.S. relationships with partners and allies for over 30 years under the SPP. He said that strong partnerships, in conjunction with a high state of readiness, help the National Guard contribute to America’s resilience.

“Through the strengthening of these relationships and the interoperable capabilities acquired in long-term training, we can reach and maintain readiness levels in our state partnership that are able to overcome any mission at home and abroad,” Nicholls emphasized.

In addition to the strategic planning and unit training management conducted with members of the Peacekeeping Brigade, the Guardsmen were hosted by military commanders for a tea ceremony in recognition of the many years of partnership between Azerbaijan and Oklahoma.

One commander noted he met Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt and the adjutant general of Oklahoma (TAG) during an official visit in July 2021. The capstone event of the visit was the signing of a memorandum of understanding between Oklahoma State University and Azerbaijan State Agricultural University to develop academic programs and student and faculty exchanges. Exchanges between Azerbaijan and state universities have included Oklahoma State University for its agricultural program and the University of Oklahoma for its medical program.

“I enjoyed seeing the exchange program formalized this past July — just before I started at the embassy (in 2010) was when OSU engaged with the Azerbaijan agricultural program to start doing exchanges,” said Moss, referencing the three years he spent in Azerbaijan as bilateral affairs officer for the U.S. Embassy in Baku. “It was also the first time the Oklahoma Guard met with the Peacekeeping Brigade, and when they confirmed their interest in the mil(itary)-to-mil(itary) events we could support to gain that NATO certification.”

The 2021 trip to Azerbaijan was a whole-of-government approach, with representatives from Oklahoma industry and government engaged with their counterparts in agriculture, economy, business, and education. This visit was a direct mil-to-mil engagement.

“The inroads we develop during visits like this go far beyond the classroom environment – they are of great strategic value to the mission of the U.S. Embassy in Azerbaijan, and they support U.S. European Command’s lines of effort,” said Maj. Randy Dunning, bilateral affairs officer stationed at the U.S. Embassy in Baku. “This has never meant as much as it does today with what we are seeing in Eastern Europe. We must be ready to support countries formerly under control of the Soviet Union, like Azerbaijan, as they turn to the West for military and civilian partnerships and development.”

The partnership between Oklahoma and Azerbaijan will soon enter its 20th year, making this trip a milestone in Oklahoma’s involvement with the State Partnership Program. In addition, this is the first joint SPP event since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

“This visit really honed in on the Guard side of the partnership program and how we can help meet objectives at multiple levels,” said Moss. “The SPP overall is tactical-level engagements that support strategic objectives. The third pillar of the National Defense Strategy is supporting our allies and partners, and this really directly gets after that strategic initiative.”

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