Exercise with extra brrrt:
US military adds 10 Warthogs for Europe drills
By
JENNIFER H. SVAN
STARS AND STRIPES • May
2, 2023
An A-10 Thunderbolt II attack aircraft waits to
taxi April 9, 2021, on Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo. Ten of the aircraft are
expected to join the ongoing Defender 23 exercise in Europe. (Bob Jennings/Air
Force)
An iconic U.S. attack aircraft may soon be spotted
in European skies despite its pending retirement from active service.
Ten Air Force Reserve Command A-10C Thunderbolt II
jets are slated to join Defender 23, a U.S. Army-led exercise involving
American forces, NATO allies and partners.
Designed to destroy Soviet tanks during the Cold
War, the plane is nicknamed the Warthog for the guttural sound its cannon
makes.
On Tuesday, U.S. Air Forces in Europe-Air Forces
Africa announced the A-10s’ participation in the two-month exercise, which
kicked off April 22.
USAFE did not say when the A-10s, assigned to the
442nd Fighter Wing at Whiteman Air Force Base, Mo., were due to arrive or how
long they will remain in Europe.
Defender 23 is expected to involve nearly 9,000
U.S. troops and 17,000 counterparts from 26 nations, according to the Pentagon.
The exercise has been in the works for two years
and is designed to demonstrate the U.S. military’s ability to rapidly deploy
combat troops and equipment to deter aggression and defend the Continent, the
Pentagon said last month.
It comes as Russia steps up attacks in Ukraine, more than a year after its full-scale invasion of the country.
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