[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 145 (Thursday, October 8, 2009)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E2493]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING COLONEL KIMBERLY B. SIEVERS
______
HON. ALLYSON Y. SCHWARTZ
of pennsylvania
in the house of representatives
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Ms. SCHWARTZ. Madam Speaker, I rise today to honor Kimberly B.
Sievers, Colonel, United States Air Force on her retirement from active
duty service on October 1, 2009, after serving for 27 years in uniform
in defense of our country.
In 1982, Colonel Sievers reported to the U.S. Air Force Academy. She
graduated in 1986 and began training as an intelligence officer at
Lowery Air Force Base in Denver, Colorado. She spent the next several
years directly supporting flying operations, providing intelligence and
training to pilots at the fighter squadron level--including the 80th
Tactical Fighter Squadron in Kunsan Air Base, Republic of South Korea,
and the 50th Tactical Fighter Wing in Hahn Air Base, Germany.
Colonel Sievers continued to develop her analytical and leadership
skills at Ramstein Air Base in Germany at both the 7450th Tactical
Intelligence Squadron and the European Command staff, ending her time
at Ramstein as the Team Leader for Intelligence Force Management. She
returned to Korea for a second tour at the operation level, leading the
Intelligence Plans and Manpower section at 7th Air Force and then the
Analyst Element at the 607th Air Intelligence Squadron. From there,
Colonel Sievers moved to the Pacific Air Force staff in Hawaii where
she directed the liaison efforts between the staff and intelligence
elements of all the Air Force squadrons in the Pacific.
Colonel Sievers was then selected to serve in the first of what would
be many future leadership positions, as the Director of Operations for
the Pacific Intelligence Squadron. She spent a year in residence at the
Air Command and Staff College at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery,
Alabama. From there, she was selected to command the Intelligence
Division at the elite USAF Weapons School at Nellis AFB in Las Vegas,
Nevada.
Colonel Sievers was herself one of the very first intelligence
officers to graduate from the Weapons School and only the second ``home
grown'' Intelligence Weapons Officer to command the division. Building
on that experience, Colonel Sievers was selected to command the 93rd
Intelligence Squadron at Lackland AFB in San Antonio, Texas. The 93rd
is the largest intelligence squadron in the Air Force with over 800
personnel.
Following that successful command, the Air Force sent Colonel Sievers
back to school at the National Defense University, here in Washington,
DC. During times of war the best and brightest are needed to lead our
young men and women and the Air Force turned to Colonel Sievers to
serve as the forward Director of Intelligence for the entire Air Force
component under Central Command. Deployed forward to Al Udeid Air Base
in Qatar, Colonel Sievers directed the efforts of all intelligence
personnel supporting combat operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan.
Returning to the U.S., Colonel Sievers utilized her war experience to
help guide the Department of Defense intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance enterprise as the Collection Requirements Division Chief
at the Joint Functional Component Command for Intelligence,
Surveillance and Reconnaissance. This would be her final assignment as
both she and her husband have chosen to retire from active duty.
I am proud to represent Colonel Sievers in the U.S. Congress. She has
forged many new paths within both the intelligence career field and the
Air Force, and has led thousands of men and women in both peace and
war. Our nation is safer because of her dedication. Colonel Sievers is
a unique leader, inspiring those around her to perform at the very
highest levels in pursuit of mission accomplishment, yet at the same
time possessing the compassion to ensure that those in her charge--and
their families--are cared for properly. Madam Speaker, I ask that my
colleagues join me in recognizing and thanking Colonel Sievers for her
exemplary service, leadership, dedication, and sacrifice to our nation.
____________________