air force heritage “knowledge bowl” overview video rules of engagement (roe) 10 round...
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Air Force Heritage“Knowledge Bowl”
Overview Video Rules of Engagement
(ROE) 10 Round Heritage Bowl
Rules of Engagement Preparation:• Clear desks of all books, notes, etc.• Knowledge Bowl will consist of ten rounds of
seven questions
Rules:• 4 Players per team – No one can play more
than two rounds in a row• 1 Scorekeeper per team; position will rotate
every round• Remaining team members used as spotters• Rotate team after each round
Rules of Engagement
• Players may not discuss the questions before or after the question is read
• Anyone talking besides the person answering the question will cost their team 5 points
• Correct answers worth 10 points; Incorrect answers lose 5 points
• Instructor will read each question until one of the students raises his/her hand
• If a student interrupts the instructor during the reading of a question, that side forfeits their opportunity to answer the question
Rules of Engagement• Once the instructor has finished reading the
question they will recognize the student who will then have ten seconds to give the correct response
• If time expires or the answer is incorrect, the opposing side will have a chance to answer. If a member of the opposing team is to answer, he/she must stick out his/her hand and be recognized by the instructor. He/she will then have ten seconds to give a correct response
• Players have ten seconds to extend their hand once question is read. Once hand is out, ten seconds to answer question. If no one attempts to answer the question it will be thrown out to everyone for knowledge with no points awarded
Rules of Engagement Scorekeepers responsibilities:
• Each scorekeeper will keep track of both teams scores
• Scores must match at all times. If scores do not match, instructor will stop the Knowledge Bowl until scorekeepers resolve the difference
Spotter’s Responsibilities:• Spotters should be aware at all times to watch for
contestants raising their hands• Instructor has final say on who extended their
hand but will remain impartial and fair throughout
Rules of Engagement
General:• Failure to answer a question with either a
sir/ma’am first, before the answer to a question, also results in a forfeiture of that sides ability to answer the question
ROUND 1
1. Assistant Secretary of War Henry S. Breckenridge testified before the House Military Affairs Committee that military
aviation was simply an additional form of what three things?
Answer:Communication, observation
& reconnaissance
2. Who’s concepts did Brigadier General William “Billy” Mitchell study to formulate his ideas of air
power? Answer:General Hugh Trenchard (Commander of the Royal Flying Corps’ unit in France)
3. How many confirmed kills did
Eddie Rickenbacker amass to earn the
title “Ace of Aces?”
Answer: 26
4. Which piece of legislation
made the Air Service a combatant arm of the U.S.
Army?
Answer: Army Reorganization Act
5. What was the name of the book Brig Gen Billy Mitchell
published in 1930 describing his theory of
strategic bombing?
Answer: “Skyways”
6. What was the name of the German tactics used against Poland and other European countries during the early
years of World War II?
Answer:Blitzkrieg (Lightening War)
7. What two plans were developed by the Air War Plans Division and were
used to fight World War II?
Answer: AWPD-1 and AWPD-42
ROUND 2
1. In what year did the Army officially accept the Wright Brother’s plane, test piloted by Orville Wright and Lt Frank
P. Lahm?
Answer: 1909
2. How many combat
capable aircraft did the Army Aviation Section have
when the United States entered World War I?
Answer:None (0)
3. When did the Armistice of
World War I take effect (day/month/year)?
Answer: 11 November 1918
4. What ship did “Billy” Mitchell sink with his
MB-2 bombers proving air power could be used for the coastal defense of the United States?
Answer: Ostfriesland
5. What school was
responsible for contemplating, developing,
and teaching air power doctrine?
Answer:Air Corps Tactical
School (ACTS)
6. Who was the first person 6. Who was the first person to fly solo, non-stop across to fly solo, non-stop across
the Atlantic Ocean?the Atlantic Ocean?
Answer:Charles A. Lindbergh
7. When did Germany and Italy declare war on the
United States during WWII (day/month/year)?
Answer: 11 December 1941
ROUND 3
1. Which U.S. Army chief signal officer questioned the
merit of the airplane?
Answer: Brig Gen James Allen
2. How did the United States rank among air powers at the beginning of the Great
War?
Answer: 14th
3. Who was the first flyer to earn the Medal of Honor?
Answer:Captain Eddie Rickenbacker
4. How many enemy aircraft did the Air Service destroy
during WWI?
Answer: 781
5. What act replaced the Air Service with the more independent Army Air
Corps?
Answer:Army Air Corps Act
6. What was the main result of Brig Gen Billy Mitchell’s
writings on strategic bombing?
Answer:They had a profound impact on the
development of air doctrine, especially among the instructors and students at the Air
Corps Tactical School (ACTS)
7. How many B-17s did the Air Corps
have upon entering World
War II?
Answer: 14
ROUND 4
1. What was the name of the joint (American/British) strategic bombardment
operation conducted against Germany in 1943?
Answer: Combined Bomber Offensive
2. On 14 October 1943, what city did the AAF attack with two groups of B-
17 bombers attempting to destroy Germany’s ball bearing production
capability?
Answer: Schweinfurt
3. Who was the Chief of the Army Air Forces during
World War II?
Answer: General Henry H. (“Hap”) Arnold
4. What fighter, fitted with drop tanks, provided support to the B-
17 Flying Fortress and the Consolidated B-24 Liberator
enabling the Eighth Air Force to take control of the air?
Answer: P-51 Mustang
5. What battle is considered the turning point of the war
in the Pacific?
Answer: Battle of Midway
6. What was the name of the B-29 that dropped the first
atomic bomb on “Hiroshima”?
Answer: “Enola Gay”
7. What acronym is used when referring to the group of women
fliers who ferried aircraft such as the B-17, B-26, P-51, P-47, and C-54
to Europe?
Answer: W.A.S.P. (Women’s Air Force Service Pilots)
ROUND 5
1. Who led the 18 April 1942 attack from the USS Hornet
against the Japanese mainland?
Answer: Lieutenant Colonel James H. Doolittle
2. What legislation did President Truman sign on 26
July 1947 establishing the Department of Defense and
creating the United States Air Force?
Answer: National Security Act
3. In what year did the Berlin Airlift take place?
Answer:1948
4. What was the kill-to-kill ratio during the Korean
War?
Answer:10:1 (792:78)
5. What campaign during the Vietnam War, utilizing the B-52, was designed to destroy the North’s will
to resist and force Hanoi to negotiate in good faith?
Answer: Linebacker II
6. What does the acronym ICBM stand for?
Answer: Intercontinental Ballistic Missile
7. What are the three components
of the nuclear triad?
Answer:Bombers, Submarines & Missiles
ROUND 6
1. What was a key technological advancement
of the Korean War?
Answer: The Korean War saw the first full introduction of the jet fighter by both participants
2. How many aircraft were either damaged or
destroyed during the Combined Bomber
Offensive?
Answer: 198
3. What advantage did the F-86 Sabrejet have over the
enemy during the Korean War?
Answer:Superior training and the
aggressiveness of its pilots
4. US leaders threatened the use of what weapon at the end of the Korean War?
Answer:Tactical Nuclear Weapons
5. What was the name of the operation that airlifted over 200
million tons of supplies into Germany after World War II?
Answer: “Operation Vittles”
6. What was the name of the atomic bomb dropped on
Nagasaki?
Answer: “Fat Man”
7. Who was the first commander of the Strategic Air Command?
Answer:General Curtis LeMay
ROUND 7
1. Who was responsible for developing the first liquid
fueled rocket in the 1920s?
Answer:Dr. Robert Goddard
2. What was the name of the first orbiting satellite launched
by the Soviet Union on 4 October, 1957?
Answer: Sputnik
3. Who was the first man in space?
Answer:Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin
4. What was the name of the United States’ first
intercontinental ballistic missile?
Answer:Atlas
5. Who was the first American to orbit the earth?
Answer:John Glenn
6. Which space program tested man’s ability to
survive in space?
Answer:Mercury Program
7. Who said, “I believe that this Nation should commit itself to achieving this goal, before the decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and safely returning him to
earth?”
Answer: John F. Kennedy
ROUND 8
1. Who was the first American to walk in space?
Answer: Maj Edward H. White II
2. Which space program tested our ability to work in
space?
Answer: Project Gemini
3. Who were the first three men to reach the moon?
Answer:Lt Col Michael Collins
Neil Armstrong
Col Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin
4. Which space program represented manned space
flight to the moon?
Answer: Project Apollo
5. In what year did man land on the moon?
Answer: 1969
6. What was the name and year of the last Apollo
mission?
Answer: Apollo 17/1972
7. Who piloted the first space shuttle?
Answer: John Young & Capt Robert Crippen
ROUND 9
1. The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait occurred in what
year?
Answer:1990
2. The USAF transport fleet was complemented for the first time by the extensive activation of which
organization during Desert Shield/Desert Storm?
Answer: Civil Reserve Air Fleet (C.R.A.F.)
3. What was the name of General Schwarzkoph’s
original offensive campaign plan?
Answer: “Instant Thunder”
4. What was the second planned phase of the
four-phased air campaign plan in Iraq
designed to do?
Answer: Suppress the Iraqi air defenses in the Kuwait Theater of Operations
5. What was the third planned phase of the
four-phased air campaign plan in Iraq
designed to do?
Answer: Isolation and destruction of Iraqi forces in the Kuwait Theater of Operations
6. How many NATO countries participated in
Operation ALLIED FORCE?
Answer: 14
7. What was the name of the military operation launched
against Taliban and Al-Qaeda forces on 7 October
2001?
Answer:Operation ENDURING
FREEDOM
ROUND 10
1. On what date the United States drop the first nuclear
weapon on Japan?
Answer:6 August 1945
2. How long did OPERATION LINEBACKER II last during the
Vietnam War?
Answer: 11 days
3. What was the name of the defensive perimeter established by U.S. and South Korean forces in a
small corner of the Korean Peninsula during the early days of
the Korean War?
Answer: “Pusan Perimeter”
4. On what date did the Soviet Union lift
the blockade of West Berlin?
Answer: 12 May 1949
5. What was the name of the World War I battle that saw General Billy
Mitchell field 1,500 planes?
Answer: Battle of St Mahil
6. In what year did the B-17 fly for the first time?
Answer: 1935
7. How long did it take U.S. and UN Forces to establish air dominance in Korea?
Answer:They never established
air dominance.
ROUND 11
1. True or False. Perhaps the most important lesson learned during Kosovo war operations was that common effort can overcome widely different objectives?
Answer:True
2. True or False. The unconditional and safe return of all refugees and displaced persons and unhindered access to them by humanitarian aid organizations was a key objective established by NATO in April 1999?
Answer:True
3. Which of the following was not a key strategic objective of Operation ALLIED FORCE?
Answer:Continuously engage in humanitarian missions to ensure the well-being of refugees
4. True or False. One of the key lessons learned from Operation ALLIED FORCE was that smart platforms were superior to older platforms with smart weapons?
Answer:False
5. Which of the following was a major event leading to the war on terrorism?
Answer:The attacks by Al Quaeda on the U.S. homeland on September 11, 2001
6. During Operation ENDURING FREEDOM US forces used Strategic Attack to…
Answer:Bomb Taliban headquarters and leadership
7. How was Counterair used in Operation ENDURING FREEDOM?
Answer:To destroy airfields and air defense nodes
8. How were Information Operations used in Operation ENDURING FREEDOM?
Answer:C-130 “Commando Solo” aircraft transmitted radio broadcasts
9. How was Airlift used in Operation ENDURING FREEDOM?
Answer:C-130s delivered Special Operations Forces to remote areas in Afghanistan
ROUND 12
1. How was Airlift used in Operation ENDURING FREEDOM?
Answer:Special Operations troops were re-supplied by C-17 and C-130 airdrops.
2. How was Special Operations Employment used in Operation ENDURING FREEDOM?
Answer:Special Operations forces rode on horses while utilizing new technology including GPS and laser range finders.
3. How was Counterland used in Operation ENDURING FREEDOM?
Answer:B-52 and B-1 aircraft loitered while waiting for targets to engage.
4. How were Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance resources used in Operation ENDURING FREEDOM?
Answer:Unmanned Aerial Vehicles demonstrated new technology
5. Which of the following is a lesson learned from Operation ENDURING FREEDOM?
Answer:Airlift and Air Refueling were stretched too thin.
6. Which of the following was an objective of Operation IRAQI FREEDOM?
Answer:To disarm Saddam Hussein’s regime and prevent future terrorist attacks
7. How was Strategic Attack used in Operation IRAQI FREEDOM?
Answer:Strategic Attack was used to bomb homes of key military leaders.
8. List the current USAF Concept of
Operations Answer:Homeland Security CONOPSSpace and Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance CONOPSGlobal Mobility CONOPS Global Strike CONOPS Global Persistent Attack CONOPS Nuclear Response CONOPS The Agile Combat Support CONOPS
9. True or False. One of the key lessons learned from the GWOT is that new tactics and high-tech munitions have replaced older, conventional tactics and munitions.
Answer:False
TIEBREAKER
8. How much cargo did Allied Forces deliver to Berlin on Easter
Sunday, 1949?
Answer:13,000 tons
Summary Video Rules of Engagement
(ROE) 10 Round Heritage Bowl