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Fighters from Around the World Join Big Exercise in Australia

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Largest Air Combat Exercise Ever

Australia’s Pitch Black air combat exercise started this week. It is the biggest one since it began in 1981. This year, there are about 140 aircraft and over 4,000 people from 20 countries. The event runs from July 12 to August 2 at Royal Australian Air Force bases in Darwin and Tindal in the Northern Territory.

U.S. F-22 Raptors Join the Exercise

The U.S. Air Force sent six F-22 Raptors from the 27th Fighter Squadron at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia, to Tindal. This is the first time the F-22A has joined this exercise. In 2022, the Raptors were in Tindal but did not participate in the joint fighter training.

U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Austin Diaz starts up a system to supply air to an F-22A Raptor during Exercise Pitch Black 2024 at RAAF Base Tindal, Australia, July 15.
U.S. Air Force photo by Tech Sgt. Andrea Posey

New Countries Join the Training

This year, 16 countries are sending aircraft for combat training, and four are sending people to watch and help. For the first time, the Philippines, Spain, Italy, and Papua New Guinea are sending aircraft and people. Fiji and Brunei are also joining for the first time. The Philippines sent FA-50PH Fighting Eagle aircraft, which landed in Darwin last week.

“We’ll walk away with a stronger partnership,” said Australian Air Commodore Pete Robinson, who is leading the exercise. Countries like France, Germany, India, Indonesia, South Korea, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, and the United Kingdom are also participating, along with Canada and New Zealand.

Fighters from Around the World Join Big Exercise in Australia
Fighters from Around the World Join Big Exercise in Australia

Italy’s Participation

Italy is also new to the exercise. They sent six F-35A and F-35B aircraft, four Eurofighters, a KC-767 refueling aircraft, and an E-550 Early Warning aircraft, along with about 400 air force members. Germany, France, and Spain will continue to show their presence in the region through their mission called Pacific Skies. This mission includes five exercises, starting with Arctic Defender in Alaska. They will also participate in the Rim of the Pacific exercise in Hawaii and other exercises in Japan and India throughout August.

NATO’s Increased Focus on Indo-Pacific

This year’s Pitch Black exercise allows NATO members to train with partner nations in the region. Concerns over China’s military ties with Russia have led NATO to focus more on Indo-Pacific partnerships. At its 75th summit in Washington D.C. last week, NATO members called on China to stop supporting Russia’s war effort.

“What happens in Ukraine today can happen in Asia tomorrow,” said outgoing NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on July 11. The training will put advanced fighter jets in complex scenarios, focusing on large force employment, offensive counterair, and ground operations. “We’ll see the complexity rise throughout the exercise,” explained Robinson. “It starts simple, but in the last week, it gets quite complex, building on lessons learned over the three weeks.”

Jess Layt
Jess Layt
Hi! I'm a pop culture obsessive and write film and TV content across ACM.

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