Sjekk hele denne viktige sken her: https://tinyurl.com/4tc67kxn
June 11, 2024 | By Chris Gordon
RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany—In the span of
roughly eight hours, 37 NATO fighters took off in rapid succession. The
one-on-one fighter competition conducted on June 6 was a first for U.S. Air
Forces in Europe-Air Forces Africa (USAFE-AFA) and the air base here.
The pilots did not know who they would be facing until they encountered
their opponent in close proximity at more than 10,000 feet. They did not know
exactly when they would be flying until they received an envelope at the end of
the morning briefing. By the end of the day, pilots flew 67 sorties against
each other.
“Dissimilar air combat is fundamental for all our air forces,” Deputy
NATO Allied Air Commander Royal Air Force Air Marshal Johnny Stringer told Air
& Space Forces Magazine. “It’s a fantastic test of at one level of just
foundational air combat skills that all of our fighter pilots still need to
possess.”
Air & Space Forces Magazine was granted unusual access to the
exercise, close enough for the reporter to be blasted with jet wash multiple
times on the flight line.
As aircraft, sensors, and weapons have gotten more advanced, the
U.S. and the rest of NATO anticipate that many real-world engagements will be
conducted beyond visual range. But the Ramstein exercise provided pilots with a
chance to hone their basic fighter maneuver skills as
they merged in the sky.
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