The new F-35
from Italy, the Netherlands, USA and Norway will fly out of Ørland Air Base as
part of the exercise which is the largest this year in northwestern Europe.
Photo: Ole Andreas Vekve / Norwegian Armed Forces
With 150 fighter jets and support
planes, 14 nations ready for massive Nordic air force drills
Finland, Sweden and Norway are once
again gearing up for the bi-annual cross-border Arctic Challenge Exercise, this
year with a more powerful deterrence role than ever.
By
Thomas Nilsen
May 09, 2023
FINLAND IS IN CHARGE THIS
YEAR AS THE PLANES NOW START TO ARRIVE AT THE FOUR DIFFERENT MILITARY AIR BASES
IN THE THREE COUNTRIES. KICK-OFF IS MAY 29 AND THE EXERCISE WILL SEE DAILY
COMBAT TRAINING IN THE SKIES UNTIL JUNE 9. PLAYGROUNDS FOR THE WAR GAMES ARE
FROM NEAR THE BORDER WITH RUSSIA IN THE EAST TO THE COAST OF THE NORWEGIAN SEA
IN THE WEST.
“This is unique in the world.
A large contiguous area with few inhabitants where we can train together,” says
spokesperson for the Norwegian Air Force, Sigurd Tonning-Olsen, in a phone
interview with the Barents Observer.
2023 is the first year Ørland
Air Base near Trondheim is the operational center for the Norwegian
contribution to the exercise. With the phase-out of F-16, Bodø Air Base inside
the Arctic Circle was closed last year and most of the new
F-35s fly out of Ørland.
14 nations are set to
participate with fighter jets. In addition, NATO will deploy a few AWACS
aircraft as command and radar control platforms.
In Sweden, Kallax Air Base in
Luleå participates, while Rovaniemi and Pirkkala in Finland take part.
In total, a record high 150
aircraft and nearly 3,000 personnel participate.
“The Belgian Air Force is
already here at Ørland preparing and training with its F-16s,” says
Tonning-Olsen. “Fighter jets from the Netherlands will come next week,” he
adds.
The United States and Italy will arrive with F-35 and the Czechia joins with JAS Gripen planes. About 50 planes are bound to fly from Ørland Air Base, of which 6 to 10 are Norwegian F-35. Other participating nations distribute their fighter jets and support aircraft at the bases in Sweden and Finland.
F-35 take-off at Ørland Air Base. Photo: Ole Andreas Vekve / Norwegian Armed ForcesThe Nordic nations already have
about 40 joint training sessions annually, and talks are underway about a joint
air force command now as Finland has joined NATO and Sweden is on the doorstep
into the Alliance.
“Strategic role”
Defense analyst with the
Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI), Per Erik Solli, says the
Arctic Challenge Exercise was originally designed as a tactical training arena
when initiated 10 years ago, but “now has an additional strategic role.”
Solli, himself a former F-16
pilot with years of experience in the skies above the Arctic Circle, points to
the rapidly changing security landscape in Europe.
“The Russian war against
Ukraine resulted in Finland and Sweden’s decision to join NATO, and a need for
a more robust regional deterrence mechanism to balance Russia.”
“ACE 23 is now an important
event to demonstrate the alliance’s ability to stage multinational defense of
the high north if required, he says to the Barents Observer.
“This year’s event is the
largest ever,” Solli says. In 2017 and 2019, about 100 aircraft took
part, while the number was lower in 2021 due to the pandemic with about 70 planes.
Per Erik Solli was F-16 pilot from 1985 to 1994. Photo: Onar Digernes Aase / Norwegian Armed Forces
Additional to the host
countries Finland, Sweden and Norway, participating nations are Denmark, Great
Britain, Canada, Germany, France, Italy, Switzerland, the Netherlands, the
Czech Republic, Belgium and the United States.
Two fighting sorties daily
Sigurd Tonning-Olsen says
there will be two sorties, deployments, every day. One in the morning and one
in the afternoon. “In the first part of the day, we will fly along the west
coast, from the Ålesund area north to Helgeland, about Brønnøysund.”
This will be the fighter jets
flying out of Ørland. Meanwhile, the morning session for the aircraft based in
Finland will have training in the skies between Sodankylä and Kajaani in the
north, and in the area between Tampere, Oulu and Vasa further south, the
Finnish Air Force informs.
Sodakylä is home to Finland’s
Arctic Jaeger Brigade, located some 110 kilometers from the border with Russia.
“The Arctic Challenge Exercise
has established itself as a Nordic exercise concept that offers participants
the opportunity to jointly develop the cooperation of the 4th and 5th
generation fighter jets and advanced anti-aircraft systems,” says Commander of
the exercise Colonel Henrik Elo.
He adds that thanks to the
wide area “We are able to train in tactically challenging situations with a
large number of planes. The exercise gives the Finnish Air Force excellent
experience in planning, leading and implementing large-scale air operations.”
Finland last year decided to
replace its current fleet of F/A-18 with F-35, of which the first will arrive at Lapland Air Command
in Rovaniemi in 2026.
No strategic bombers
“There are no plans to
involve strategic bombers,” says Sigurd Tonning-Olsen. In the final stage of
Arctic Challenge Exercise 2017, American B-52 made sorties over Norway.
In March this year, a pair of
American B-52 bombers made headlines with a unique mission.
First flying inside the Arctic Circle over Tromsø and Andøya, northern Norway,
the planes continued south over Denmark. Over Poland, mid-air refueling took
place before the two planes flew east of Sweden, into the Gulf of Finland and
then over the Baltic States in what was the most comprehensive all-around
Scandinavia and Baltics ever seen by the B-52.
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