From Air Force Airman to Space Force Guardian 

by | Mar 2, 2021 | News

By Tammy Cario 

Recently, two former Airmen were sworn into the Space Force at the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center.  

Former Air Force Staff Sgts. James Taylor (third from the left) and Isaac Pringle (fourth from the left) join Chief Master Sgt. Matthew Robinson (first on the left) and Senior Master Sgt. Martha Burkhead (second from the left), all staff members assigned to the 517th Training Group on the Presidio of Monterey, in showing off their new patches after switching over to become Space Force Guardians, the name of service members serving in the Department of Defense’s newest branch of the military.

Former Staff Sgts. James Taylor and Isaac Pringle joined Chief Master Sgt. Matthew Robinson and Senior Master Sgt. Martha Burkhead, all staff members assigned to the 517th Training Group on the Presidio of Monterey, in switching over to become Space Force Guardians, the name of service members serving in the Department of Defense’s newest branch of the military. 

Taylor, a military training leader, was excited to learn about job opportunities in the Space Force. “When I heard about the job, I thought it was awesome and decided to try my luck,” he saidDue to the differences in rank titles, Taylor’s new rank is now sergeant, although he will maintain his rank as an E-5. 

Air Force cadre came out in strength to the ceremony, where Taylor, the last of the Air Force members to be sworn in, officially enlisted into the Space Force. 

“This is the first MTL (Military Training Leader) and first Cougar who will be joining the Space Force,” said Lt. Col. Joseph Ladymon, speaking about the mascot of the 314th Training Squadron.   

Headquarters for the Space Force is at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colorado. It is unclear how troop movement to the different location will go forward. As Robinson pointed out, “It’s complicated to move 16,000 troops,” the anticipated total number of Space Force Guardians once the branch is fully built up.

The Space Force patch worn by a newly sworn-in Guardian currently stationed at the Presidio of Monterey.

Chief Master Sgt. Heath Jennings, a former DLIFLC graduate, is currently in a Space Force position while still an Airman assigned to Space Command out of Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, working in an intelligence leadership position. Because his position often brings confusion, Jennings is quick to explain the difference between the Space Force and Space Command. 

“United States Space Force is a new military service that grew out of the Air Force,” explained Jennings. As a result, there are now five military branches – Navy, Marines, Army, Air Force and Space Force. Space Command, on the other hand, is a newly formed combatant command that is one of 11 that falls under the DoD“There is some confusion because Space Command and Space Force were established under President Donald Trump and both were created within a year of each other,” he said. 

While the placement of the headquarters for Space Command is currently under review and won’t be out until 2023, the former Secretary of the Air Force, Barbara Barrett, announced in Jan. 2021 that Redstone Arsenal, in Huntsville, Alabama, was the preferred location. Redstone Arsenal is also where the Army’s Space and Missile Defense Command and Army Strategic Forces Command, the Army Aviation and Missile Command, the Defense Intelligence Agency’s Missile and Space Intelligence Center and Missile Defense Agency operations are located. For now, the provisional headquarters will remain at Peterson AFB until 2026.

Jennings, whose application to be a Guardian is still pending, pointed out that the Space Force and Space Command “both have high levels of excitement associated with them.” So much so that when each of the former Airmen were sworn in, Robinson brought along what he calls their mascot, a plastic green alien named Buddy. Buddy’s presence only added to the energy of excited anticipation that was in the air for the four intelligence professionals who swore to protect and defend the United States – on the ground or up in space. 

As for Taylor, once his time as an MTL is done, he will go back to doing cable and satellite communication maintenance. For now, his name and rank, once embroidered in Air Force gold, is now changed to dark blue with a Space Force patch on his shoulder. While he wouldn’t elaborate further on encountering aliens in spaceall Taylor would say is, “The universe is entirely too big for us to be the only life forms.” 

Edits:

Chief Master Sgt. Jennings has since been accepted and sworn into Space Force

In a prior edition, it said that Space Force was slated to move to Redstone Arsenal. The article has been changed to reflect that it is actually Space Command that is slated to move.

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