NUCLEAR CAPABLE
B-52S TO BE REGULARLY BASED AT RAAF BASE TINDAL
written by Adam Thorn | October 31, 2022
A U.S. Air Force B-52 Stratofortress bomber lands at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam in January 2018
The US will soon regularly base six of its
nuclear-capable B-52 bombers at RAAF Base Tindal.
A report by Four Corners has revealed Washington will build dedicated facilities in the NT, including a ‘squadron operations
facility’ and parking areas for the aircraft.
It comes amid growing tensions with China and
after the US sent six of its B-2 Spirit bombers to train at RAAF Base Amberley
this year.
The upgrades to Tindal that will allow it to house
B-52 are expected to cost $22.5 million and be financed by the US government.
The US Air Force appeared to confirm the plans
telling the ABC, “The RAAF’s ability to host USAF bombers, as well as train
alongside them, demonstrates how integrated our two air forces are.”
The B-52H Stratofortress is a long-range, heavy
bomber that can perform a variety of missions, including nuclear and
conventional bombing alongside maritime surveillance.
The US currently has a fleet of 76, and the
aircraft type has been in operation for more than 60 years. During the first
Gulf War, it dropped 40 per cent of the coalition force’s weapons.
It has an unrefueled combat range in excess of
14,000km.
“The B-52 is capable of dropping or launching the
widest array of weapons in the U.S. inventory,” states the US Air Force’s
website.
“This includes gravity bombs, cluster bombs,
precision-guided missiles and joint direct attack munitions.
“Updated with modern technology, the B-52 is
capable of delivering the full complement of joint-developed weapons and will
continue into the 21st century as an important element of our nation’s
defences.
“The Air Force currently expects to operate B-52s
through 2050.”
It comes after the US sent six of its batwing, B-2
Spirit stealth bombers to Amberley this year to train with RAAF F-35s.
The UFO-like Spirit can also carry nuclear weapons
and is thought to be the most expensive aircraft ever made, valued at around $2
billion each.
Their visit amounted to the biggest-ever
deployment of the US’s most important military jet to Australia, with the
country’s active fleet only numbering 20.
It came as the US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan. China
retaliated by testing ballistic missiles over Taipei for the first time.
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