B-1 Bombers Are Deploying To Norway For The First Time With An Eye On Nearby Russia And The Arctic
The
U.S. Air Force is preparing to deploy bombers to Norway for the first time. A
detachment of B-1Bs, accompanied by more
than 200 personnel, is set to arrive at the country’s Ørland Main Air Station
in the near future as the U.S. military intensifies its focus on
the strategically important Arctic region.
U.S.
European Command (EUCOM) announced today that an advance team was about to head
to Ørland ahead of B-1Bs touching down, but did not say specifically when the
bombers would arrive. There are reports that
the aircraft could make their way across the Atlantic later this week, while
the first airmen have already arrived in the
country. The aircraft and airmen assigned to this Bomber Task Force (BTF) will
all come from the 7th Bomb Wing at Dyess Air Force Base in Texas.
NORWEGIAN ARMED FORCES
A B-1B from the 28th Bomb Wing accompanied by Royal Norwegian Air force
F-35A fighters during a BTF deployment last year.
“Operational readiness and our ability
to support allies and partners and respond with speed are critical to combined
success,” Air Force General Jeff Harrigian, commander of U.S. Air Forces in
Europe and Africa, said in a statement. “We value the enduring partnership we
have with Norway and look forward to future opportunities to bolster our
collective defense.”
The BTF
is also of note in relation to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. According to
EUCOM, the deployment is “in keeping with force health protection measures
aligned with the Department of Defense, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, and Norwegian policy.” This means all Air Force personnel will be
medically screened in Texas prior to arriving in Norway and will undergo a
10-day quarantine. Only last week, the Norwegian government canceled a military exercise after
a spike in coronavirus cases, leaving 1,000 U.S. Marines in Norway, where they
had arrived earlier this month.
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U.S.
Air Forces Europe (USAFE) routinely hosts a variety of U.S. aircraft, including
BTF deployments. However, bombers have almost exclusively operated out of RAF
Fairford in England, which serves as a dedicated bomber forward operating
location in Europe, in the past. That being said, there have been efforts to
expand the number of operating locations in
the region for U.S. bombers in recent years.
While
Ørland is located just over 300 miles from the Arctic Circle, the deployment
signals the Air Force’s increasing commitment to working alongside NATO allies and other partners on
Russia’s northwest borders as well as its ability to work in the High North.
The Norwegian base is otherwise home to the Royal Norwegian Air Force’s
expanding F-35A stealth fighter fleet and also periodically hosts NATO E-3A Airborne Warning and Control
System (AWACS) aircraft from Geilenkirchen Air Base in Germany.
Last
July, the Air Force announced a new Arctic Strategy that
calls for an increased presence in the region to counter the threat posed by
Russia. The wider region has been identified as a potential flashpoint, as
climate change sees a scramble to secure the potential wealth offered by
natural resources, as well as new maritime trade routes that are no longer
constrained by year-round sea ice.
“The Arctic is among the most
strategically significant regions of the world today — the keystone from which
the U.S. Air and Space Forces exercise vigilance,” said Secretary of the Air
Force Barbara Barrett. “This Arctic Strategy recognizes the immense
geostrategic consequence of the region and its critical role for protecting the
homeland and projecting global power.”
23RD BOMB SQUADRON/PUBLIC
DOMAIN
Six B-52H Stratofortresses in formation in Norwegian airspace on August
22, 2020, while en route to RAF Fairford.
Until now, bomber missions over the
Arctic have been staged out of RAF Fairford, while on other occasions nonstop
missions have been flown from airbases in the United States. The upcoming
deployment to Ørland will bring these aircraft much closer to the operating
area and send a powerful signal to Moscow.
Moreover,
there is a significant value in the ability to deploy bombers to different
locations from the perspective of distributed operations. Having only one base
in the region where bombers are sent regularly is predictable and makes those
assets vulnerable. The War Zone has, in the past, also examined
the increased risks posed to established bases. Despite that, we still don’t
know if U.S. bombers will become a regular feature at Ørland and whether the
base has the facilities required to support them for longer periods.
Placing
bombers in Norway, albeit on a temporary basis, is clearly in line with this
new posture. The first BTF in Ørland also continues the U.S. military’s
expanding relationship with its Norwegian counterpart, which last summer
included high-profile joint maneuvers by
six B-52H Stratofortress bombers, flying from RAF Fairford, together with
Norwegian F-35As and F-16 fighter jets. Similar missions were flown the previous year, too,
again involving B-52s and F-16s.
U.S. AIR FORCE/AIRMAN 1ST
CLASS DUNCAN C. BEVAN
A fully armed Royal Norwegian Air Force F-16 over the Barents Sea
region during a Bomber Task Force deployment in November 2019.
As well
as joint exercises in the air and on the ground, in the
future, this relationship could potentially also see U.S. Navy submarines
operate from a cavernous naval base built
under a Norwegian mountain. This would be one initiative to help counter increased Russian submarine activity in
the nearby Barents Sea and the Arctic region. Navy submarines are already
active in the region anyway, however, and last summer the U.S. Navy took the
unusual step of releasing a number of pictures of the first-in-class USS Seawolf surfaced
in a fjord near Tromsø, Norway. This very rare public appearance in
Scandinavia seems to have been intended, at least in part, to send a message to
the Russian government about American underwater capabilities in the region.
Among
other U.S. military activities directed toward the Arctic, the iteration
of Exercise Trident Juncture held
in October and November 2018 tested the ability of NATO to defend Norway and
was clearly intended to address the resurgent Russian threat. For the first
time in more than two decades, the U.S. Navy sent an aircraft carrier,
USS Harry S. Truman, into the North Sea to
support the exercise.
U.S. MARINE CORPS/SGT.
AVERI COPPA
U.S. Marines with 2nd Tank Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, advance on
an objective defended by opposing Spanish forces during Exercise Trident
Juncture in Norway, November 2018.
The
Arctic strategy extends closer to home, too, where the U.S. military is also
embarking on a significant overhaul of its assets in Alaska. This includes a
huge new Air Force F-35 wing at Eielson Air Force Base, which you can read all
about here.
For its
part, Russia established a new Northern Fleet Joint Strategic Command in 2014,
which is responsible for the Arctic, North Atlantic, and Scandinavian regions.
It includes the Northern Fleet, assets of which are concentrated on the Kola
Peninsula, as well as military garrisons, and airbases. Russian military
aircraft are now more frequently operating from forward-located airfields in
the High North, facilities that you can read more about in this previous
article. The particular long-range conventional strike capabilities offered by
the B-1 — in the form of the AGM-158 Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff
Missile, or JASSM, and the AGM-158C Long-Range Anti-Ship Missile,
or LRASM — would lend themselves particularly to any kinds of missions tasked
with holding Northern Fleet targets at risk.
If a crisis or conflict should break
out in the Arctic or North Atlantic region, U.S. airpower would be expected to
play an important part. This upcoming B-1 deployment to Norway will not only
help train for any such eventuality but hopefully serve to dissuade potential
aggression in this increasingly contested part of the world.
U.S. B-1 Lancer Bombers To Operate From Orland Air Base During Upcoming First Ever Norway Deployment
The B-1 Lancer bombers from Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, are about to deploy to Norway for Bomber Task Force mission.
For the first time, an expeditionary B-1 Lancer bomber squadron from Dyess AFB, will deploy to Ørland Air Force Station, in central Norway, as part of an upcoming BTF (Bomber Task Force) mission. The deployment will be supported by more than 200 U.S. Air Force personnel, part of an advance team for the scheduled missions that will be flown in the coming weeks.
Upon arrival in Norway, all USAF personnel, who were screened prior to depart, will immediately practice a ten-day COVID-19 Restriction of Movement (ROM).
According to U.S. European Command, the “training for the U.S. Air Force personnel will include a variety of areas ranging from operating in the high north to improving interoperability with allies and partners across the European theater.”
“While details of specific missions or numbers of events are not discussed as part of routine operational security standards, U.S. Air Forces in Europe routinely host a variety of U.S. aircraft and units across the theater in support of USEUCOM objectives,” says the official release on the EUCOM website.
Noteworthy, B-1s have already operated in the region last year, although as part of long-range round-trip missions from CONUS (Continental US) bases: on May 20, 2020, two B-1B Lancers from the 28th Bomb Wing, Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota, conducted a mission to the Nordic region. The mission, one in a series of long-range strategic Bomber Task Force missions to Europe, was worth of note for at least a couple of interesting details: first, it marked the first time B-1s flew over Sweden to integrate with Swedish Gripens while conducting close-air support training with Swedish Joint Terminal Attack Controller ground teams at Vidsel Range; second, the B-1s integrated with Royal Norwegian Air Force F-35s to fly tactical sorties and conduct a low-approach over Ørland Air Station, Norway, the home of the RoNAF’s recently operational F-35 fleet.
Ørland is an important air base operated by the Royal Norwegian Air Force. The air station is the RNoAF F-35 MOB (Main Operating Base) hosting the Lightning-equipped 332nd Squadron. The base also hosts search and rescue helicopters and a FOL (Forward Operating Location) of the NATO E-3A AWACS fleet.
From there, the BONEs (as the B-1s are dubbed by their aircrews) will probably launch sorties over the Arctic Circle a region whose strategic importance and value were reaffirmed with the “extended duration mission” flown there also by the B-2 Spirit stealth bombers deployed to RAF Fairford, UK, in 2019 and 2020.
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