Australia
training preps F-35 pilots for long-range battles that could end in dogfight
By
SETH ROBSON
STARS AND STRIPES • September
2, 2022
A Marine Corps F-35B Lightning II stealth fighter
takes off from Royal Air Force Base Tindal in Australia’s Northern Territory,
Thursday, Sept. 1, 2022. (Seth Robson/Stars and Stripes)
RAAF TINDAL, Australia – Precision-guided missiles
mean today’s fighter pilots can engage targets long before they’re close enough
to see.
During Pitch Black drills in Australia’s Northern
Territory, U.S. and Australian pilots are honing the skills they need to carry
out long-range missile strikes. The 21-day exercise involving 17 nations and
hundreds of airmen ends Thursday.
But they’re also using the opportunity to sharpen
their ship-to-ship air combat abilities, otherwise known as dogfighting.
That means performing in real life the kind of
aerobatic maneuvers filmed for “Top Gun: Maverick,” now playing at the theater
on Royal Australian Air Force Base Tindal.
Training for dogfights means the aircraft are
relatively close, Capt. Brandon Howard, an F-35B Lightning II pilot with Marine
Fighter Attack Squadron 121, told Stars and Stripes on a dusty road near
Tindal’s runway Thursday.
“Any air-to-air engagement in the modern arena
runs the risk of collapsing down into a visual engagement,” said Howard, who
has been flying from Tindall for the past month.
F-35B Lightning II stealth fighters from Marine
Fighter Attack Squadrons 121 and 242 are flying this month out of Royal Air
Force Base Tindal in Australia’s Northern Territory. (Seth Robson/Stars and
Stripes)
Australia’s F-35As can fly 1.6 times the speed of
sound and pull 9 Gs in a turn, which makes the pilot feel like they weigh nine
times their normal weight, according to David, a 28-year-old RAAF flight
lieutenant from Brisbane, Australia.
Australian F-35A pilots are only authorized to
provide first names to the media, he said by phone Friday from RAAF Darwin.
“The F-35A has a long-range stealth game plan but
we still train dogfighting,” he said. “That’s some of my favorite training.”
The stealth jets carry only four missiles, but
their cockpits have much larger display screens in the cockpit than older
fighters, giving their pilots a wider view and allow them to pinpoint their
adversaries more easily, David said.
“Yesterday we flew a mission where the Australians
were flying with (South) Korean F-16s,” he said. “The F-35s would stay at the
back and allocate targets to the F-16s.”
The Marine Corps deployed 12 F-35Bs – capable of
short landings and vertical takeoffs – to Pitch Black from Marine Fighter
Attack Squadrons 242 and 121, both based at Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni,
Japan.
They spent two weeks training with Australian
F-35As from the Tindal-based No. 75 Squadron ahead of Pitch Black, Howard said.
The Australian jets are operating out of RAAF
Darwin during the exercise, he said.
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