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News from the Oklahoma National Guard

NEWS | Feb. 25, 2026

Oklahoma Army National Guard deploys for fire suppression mission

By Leanna Maschino

An Oklahoma Army National Guard UH-60 Black Hawk flies over the 702 Fire in Blaine County, Oklahoma, after dropping more than 600 gallons of water on the fire, July 16, 2022. The Oklahoma National Guard is supporting the Oklahoma Forestry Services and local fire departments from the air using a UH-60 Black Hawk and a LUH-72 Lakota.
SLIDESHOW | 2 images | 220716-A-RH707-788 An Oklahoma Army National Guard UH-60 Black Hawk flies over the 702 Fire in Blaine County, Oklahoma, after dropping more than 600 gallons of water on the fire, July 16, 2022. The Oklahoma National Guard is supporting the Oklahoma Forestry Services and local fire departments from the air using a UH-60 Black Hawk and a LUH-72 Lakota.


OKLAHOMA CITY– At the request of Oklahoma Emergency Management and authorization of Governor Kevin Stitt, members of the Oklahoma Army National Guard are responding to wildfires in northwest Oklahoma utilizing UH-60 helicopters and ground hand crews.

"The Oklahoma National Guard stands ready and equipped with both aerial and ground capacities to support our partner agencies in the state,” said Brig. Gen. Bob Walter, assistant adjutant general for Oklahoma. “We have been in continuous communication with the Office of Emergency Management, the Department of Public Safety and Forestry Services for close coordination.”

The buckets used by OKARNG helicopter crews hold up to 660 gallons of water that can be dropped directly on fires or in areas where incident commanders and firefighters want to prevent spread. In addition to aerial support, the Oklahoma National Guard is also providing ground support.

“We have two wildland firefighting crews of eight to ten red-card certified firefighters on State Active Duty working for the incident command,” Walter said.

In the past two years, the Oklahoma National Guard Wildland Firefighting program has trained 130 red card certified Guardsmen and currently has 80 certified and on hand within the state.

Once a request for support is submitted through OEM and approved by the Governor, planners with the Oklahoma National Guard’s Domestic Operations Office begin working with local incident commanders and develop a plan on how to best support firefighting operations.

“I’m very thankful for the National Guard and the expertise that they have to be part of this response,” said Oklahoma Secretary of Agriculture,Blayne Arthur. “We appreciate the opportunity to work collaboratively with them.”

Video by Sgt. Haden Tolbert
From scrap paper to state-of-the-art: Oklahoma National Guard unveils new Wellness Center
Oklahoma National Guard
Feb. 19, 2026 | 1:04
Oklahoma National Guard leadership held a ribbon-cutting ceremony, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026, for the Oklahoma National Guard Wellness Center, a nearly 35,000-square-foot facility at the Oklahoma City Military Complex in Oklahoma City. Amenities within the wellness center include a fully equipped workout space for resistance training and agility, indoor and outdoor meditation spaces, a chapel, conference rooms, classroom spaces, and a teaching kitchen. The facility also houses OKNG programs and services, including Behavioral Health, Chaplain, Equal Employment Opportunity, Family Programs, Holistic Health and Fitness (H2F), Integrated Primary Prevention, Resilience, Suicide Prevention, Substance Abuse Prevention and Risk Reduction, and Sexual Assault Prevention and Response.
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