 Sergeant Jesse Temporelli, a soldier with the Florida Army National Guards, 3rd of the 265th Air Defense Artillery Battalion, described his duties and responsibilities as a 14-Golf Air Defense Battle Management System Operator during an interview depicting his experiences while serving. Hi, my name is Sergeant Jesse Michael Temporelli. I am part of the Charlie Battery, the 3265th, out of Palmetto, Florida, and my job tell is Air Defense Battle Management System Operator, which is a 14-Golf. I went to school in Fort Sill for basic and AIT, AIT for a 14-Golf. There is about 16 weeks, well, four months. We did a lot at hands-on training on the systems, generators, shelters, and radar. We did do a 3-day FTX in the field, which was a pre-relation of all our hands-on training in the classroom. We all used our knowledge and training to push forward as we came provision. Within a day of the 14-Golf, we go over our radar, LMTV, setting it up, march order, and placement. We work on different systems, which are more of a betuling school, but the most important thing is to deliver tracts, air pictured to our vendors. So, being a 14-Golf in the Guard, typically during drill weekend in the AIT, we will go on the field, we'll spin the radar, we'll start afoot enough, we'll review the systems, and we'll just practice our field training exercises as far as going over the system, march order, and placement, and it really keeps us on our skills at 50-Sharp while we get to the port. Ligar has helped me, my family has provided education, dollars of duty, lots of master's degree, is for my health care, the VA system as well, and everyone should be a 14-Golf, and it's probably one of the best careers in one of the getting involved systems. You get a radar, go on some cool deployments, and it is the pure path for you.