What is WESP and the meaning of it. Well WESP stands for Weapons
Evaluation
System
Program. It is an air-to-air training also know as Combat Archer
located at Tyndall AFB, Florida. The 53rd Weapons Evaluation Group at
Tyndall AFB is the host unit for the exercises. The meaning of Combat Archer
(WESP) is to exercise and evaluates the total air-to-air weapon system
capability of Air Force combat aircraft. For these pilots who normally fly
with training weapons at home, live-firing their weapons first at Combat
Archer instead of in combat provides confidence.
This exercise trains pilots to experience what they actually would see in
combat. During standard training flights, pilots go through all the steps to
fire a missile without firing a single missile, so there's no way to clearly
validate whether the shot would have hit the target. Since pilots rarely get
the opportunity to engage in actual air-to-air combat this is truly a unique
opportunity to teach that extra skill.
The average pilot may get the opportunity to fire one air-to-air missile in
20 years of training. "Some pilots may shoot one or two more, but rarely.
Part of the reason this type of training is so hard to come by is that it
requires a very large area, free from both ground and air traffic, to
conduct the training safely. Combat Archer is uniquely set up to afford us
this training and ensure the training is accomplished safely. Not only does
Combat Archer give aircrews the confidence from live firing weapons, but it
gives Air Force weapons system managers a forum to verify system
performance, capabilities and limitations. The program ensures the weapons
work the way the manufacturer says they will work. For example, the newest
F-15E Strike Eagles – the E-210, which are 1997 and 1998 models – fired live
missiles for the first time during this Combat Archer.

Combat Archer tests the weapons systems of every Air Force combat aircraft
platform and evaluates aircrews from more than 40 different units each year
who fire AIM-7, AIM-9 Sidewinder and AIM-120 AMRAAM missiles. The explosives
in the missile warheads are removed and replaced with telemetry packages
that track the weapons’ flight path. The telemetry provides data to program
managers. Aircrews shoot at targets that include MQM-107D “Streaker”
subscale drones and unmanned modified F-4 aircraft. The drones, which are
downed over the Gulf of Mexico are recovered by the 82nd Aerial Targets
Squadron’s own navy, a sub-unit of the 53rd WEG at Tyndall, and reused.
Although the main mission was to shoot live missiles, the Eagle drivers also
tested their warfighting skills against dissimilar aircraft platforms, such
as F-16 Fighting Falcons. Combat Archer also provided aircrews, maintainers
and support airmen the chance to prepare and deploy as a team before AEF
deployments.