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'Higher, Further, Faster': F-16 Viper Team Gets 1st Female Commander

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https://www.military.com/daily-news...-16-viper-team-gets-1st-female-commander.html

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The Air Force has named its first female commander of a single-aircraft demonstration team, as the service looks to leverage the anticipated popularity of an upcoming superhero movie featuring a female fighter pilot to spur recruitment.

Capt. Zoe "SiS" Kotnik was named pilot and commander of the Air Combat Command's F-16 Viper Demonstration Team last week after completing a series of certification flights. The team showcases the F-16V Viper, the latest variant of the Fighting Falcon, at dozens of airshows each year.

In announcing Kotnik's selection on Twitter, the team posted a video and photos framed and lettered like a comic panel.

"In that instant ... She knew she could fly her F-16 higher, further and faster than anyone else," reads text that appears in the images.

The line is a clear nod to the "Captain Marvel" film, which premieres March 8 and features Brie Larson in the role of the titular superhero, whose alter ego Carol Danvers is an Air Force F-16 pilot. Air Force pilots, including Brig. Gen. Jeannie Leavitt, the service's first female fighter pilot, assisted in the production.

A new trailer, aired during the Super Bowl on Sunday, shows Larson's character on the flight line walking beside fellow pilot Maria Rambeau, played by Lashana Lynch.

"About to show these boys how we do it," Lynch says. "You ready?"

Larson's reply, which is partly echoed throughout the 30-second spot: "Higher, further, faster, baby."

In another nod to the movie, the Air Force Recruiting Service included the hashtag #higherfurtherfaster in a post Friday announcing that Leavitt, who heads the recruiting service, hosted dozens of female pilots for an event at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Kotnik was among them.

"Every hero has an origin story," said the post, which included a photo of the women on a foggy tarmac in front of a formation of aircraft. "We asked over 80 female pilots to share theirs."

Kotnik's origin story started in Poynette, Wisconsin, where she was born into a family of aviators. Her uncle was skydiver and airshow hall of fame pilot Charlie Hillard, who in 1972 became the first American to win the World Aerobatic Championships. Her mother was also a private pilot.

But Kotnik's path to becoming a fighter pilot really began when she saw a NASA T-38 Talon supersonic jet trainer pull up at an airshow, she told Live Airshow TV last fall in a video interview. The pilot shut down the engines, popped the canopy and pulled off the flight helmet, revealing a female fighter pilot.

"It was at that moment that I realized, 'Oh my god, that's exactly what I can do,' " Kotnik said.

After graduating from the Air Force Academy in 2011, Kotnik earned her wings in 2013 and learned to fly the F-16C. She's since flown with the 35th Fighter Squadron at Kunsan Air Base, South Korea, and the 55th Fighter Squadron at Shaw Air Force Base, S.C., according to her official biography.

Most recently, at Shaw, she flew missions supporting Operation Noble Eagle -- the air defense mission to prevent another 9/11 -- and served as an instructor pilot training new F-16 wingmen.

She's clocked more than 1,000 flying hours, but before cinching her spot as pilot and commander of the demonstration team for the next two years, she completed off-station training and more than 30 practice missions, then had to prove her skills in four certification flights.

Gen. Mike Holmes, commander of Air Combat Command, certified her Jan. 29.

Now, Kotnik will lead a team of 17 airmen assigned to Shaw's 20th Operations Group as they travel to more than 20 airshows showcasing the F-16's maneuverability to an estimated 10 million spectators each year, the Air Force said.

The Viper team, one of four single aircraft performance teams in the Air Combat Command, is a key part of the service's recruiting efforts. The command also oversees an A-10 Thunderbolt II team and an F-22 Raptor team. Newly added for the 2019 season is an F-35 Lightning II demonstration team. The F-35 previously flew only in the command's heritage formation alongside fighters from previous eras.

Kotnik's team is in preseason training and is slated to perform their first show in Key West, Florida, from March 30-31.

Kotnik said she's looking forward to having the effect on younger generations that the NASA T-38 pilot had on her.

"I know firsthand how impactful airshows can be and what a difference it makes to young people to see just one example of what they too can do," she said. "I hope to be a source of inspiration and motivation they can draw from."
 
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First female Viper demo team pilot relieved of command after two weeks
By: Stephen Losey   9 hours ago
F-16 Viper demonstration team, was relieved of command Monday.

“Col. Derek O’Malley, 20th Fighter Wing commander, relieved Capt. Zoe Kotnik from command Feb. 11 due to a loss of confidence in her ability to lead and command the Air Combat Command F-16 Viper demonstration team,” said Col. Allen Herritage, director of public affairs at ACC, in a statement. “The Viper demonstration team is working to minimize impacts on scheduled performances and looks forward to inspiring crowds around the country during the upcoming season as soon as a new commander is selected.”

Herritage would not comment further on what led to Kotnik’s removal, citing privacy concerns.

The 20th, which is located at Shaw Air Force Base in South Carolina, said in an email to Air Force Times that Kotnik declined to comment. Capt. Alannah Staver, a spokeswoman for the wing, said that Kotnik is no longer performing with the team, but “will continue to serve in a non-supervisory role in the 20th Fighter Wing."

In a statement on Shaw’s Facebook page, O’Malley alluded to “mistakes” on Kotnik’s part, but expressed hope that she will continue to serve in the Air Force.

“We have thousands of airmen across our Air Force serving our country, and not one of them is perfect,” O’Malley said. “As good people, like Capt. Kotnik, make mistakes, I want them to have the opportunity to learn from them without being under public scrutiny and to continue to be a part of this great service. They’ll be better for the experience, and in turn, we’ll be better as an Air Force.”

“In these types of situations, I never forget that we’re dealing with real human beings, that I care deeply about, and that we are charged to take care of,” O’Malley continued. “This will be a difficult time for Capt. Kotnik, but she’s surrounded by wingmen that will help her every step of the way.”

Kotnik, an F-16C pilot whose call sign is “SiS,” was certified as the Viper team leader by ACC commander Gen. Mike Holmes on Jan. 29. She graduated from the Air Force Academy in 2011, earned her wings in 2013, and has more than 1,000 flying hours in military aircraft. She deployed to Kunsan Air Base in South Korea for a year, from February 2015 to February 2016. She also has flown air defense missions in support of Operation Noble Eagle.


Air Force’s F-16 Viper Demonstration Team commander is the real Captain Marvel
On Monday, the Air Force made Capt. Zoe “SiS” Kotnik the first female pilot to command the F-16 Viper Demo Team.

By: Joshua Axelrod
The Viper team is a single-ship demonstration team that performs precision aerial maneuvers to show the F-16′s capabilities at air shows and other events such as the Super Bowl, as well as flying in Air Force Heritage Flight formations. In addition to being the first woman to head the Viper team, Kotnik is also the first female single-ship tactical demonstration pilot in the Air Force.

HW5SGU2IV5BFDGFSDYDDJ54AH4.JPG

Capt. Zoe Kotnik, then an F-16 pilot with the 55th Fighter Squadron out of Shaw Air Force Base, S.C., clips on her mask in her Fighting Falcon prior to a sortie in November 2017 at Eglin AFB, Fla. (Samuel King Jr./Air Force)
Kotnik’s selection garnered a great deal of press and social media attention. The Viper team posted a tweet last month announcing her selection that nodded to the advertising campaign for the Marvel Studios movie “Captain Marvel,” which depicts a superhero who starts out as a female Air Force fighter pilot.




F-16 Viper Demo Team@ViperDemoTeam

https://twitter.com/ViperDemoTeam/status/1090249070411685889

Breaking news!@ACC_Commander , commander of @Air Combat @USAF_ACC, has certified @usairforce Capt. Zoe "SiS" Kotnik as the new #ViperDemoTeam pilot.

She is also the Air Force's first female single-ship tactical demonstration pilot!


Kotnik’s first show as part of the Viper team’s 2019 schedule was to be at an air show at Naval Air Station Key West in Florida, on March 30 and 31, according to ACC’s website.

O’Malley said that Maj. John “Rain” Waters, who was last season’s Viper demo pilot, has resumed command of the team.

https://www.airforcetimes.com/news/...per-demo-team-pilot-relieved-after-two-weeks/
 
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