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Royal Air Force arrive in the US in large scale RED FLAG exercise.
A large Royal Air Force (RAF) detachment of over 300 personnel have arrived in the United States to take part in Exercise RED FLAG, a major exercise that will test the RAF detachment in complex Combat Air Operations.
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For this iteration of the exercise the British Typhoons will join with combat aircraft from the United States Air Force and the Royal Australian Air Force (Picture source: RAF)
The deploying RAF detachment is formed from Typhoons from RAF Lossiemouth based 1 (Fighter) Squadron and RAF Coningsby based 41 Test and Evaluation Squadron and supported by Voyagers from 10 Squadron and 101 Squadron based at RAF Brize Norton, together with ground support personnel from across the RAF.
For this iteration of the exercise the RAF Typhoons will join with combat aircraft from the United States Air Force and the Royal Australian Air Force. During the exercise the three air forces will face simulated ground based air defence systems, aggressor aircraft that will simulate a peer adversary, and cyber and space-based threats as combat missions are planned conducted and debriefed.
Group Captain Barrett, the RAF Detachment Commander for the exercise, has been a regular fixture on the RAF Exercise Programme since the late 1970s and this exercise will be based at the United States Air Force’s Nellis Air Base in Nevada. The objective of the exercise for participants is to develop capabilities in a high threat and contested environment against a near peer adversary.
The exercise will last until mid-February, seeing the RAF aircraft integrating with the United States Air Force and Royal Australian Air Force aircraft as the operations become more complex. The exercise therefore allows common procedures to be developed tested and practiced together thereby allowing future air operations to be conducted together in a collation more effectively.
The exercise will last until mid-February, seeing the RAF aircraft integrating with the United States Air Force and Royal Australian Air Force aircraft as the operations become more complex. (Picture source: RAF)