Posted on 02/08/2006 5:04:50 PM PST by SandRat
/8/2006 - NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE, Nev. (AFPN) -- Units from across the Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, Australia and the United Kingdom gathered here for the second part of the Red Flag 06-1 exercise, which started Feb. 6.
More than 130 aircraft and 2,500 personnel will fight and support in a simulated air war over the Nellis Test and Training Range during day and night missions, through Feb. 18.
Red Flag exists mostly because of the Nellis Test and Training Range -- a lot of air space out there, a lot of ground space, said Maj. Greg Weart, Red Flag assistant director of operations. We have the ability to put together surface-to-air threats as well as the air-to-air threat environment.
Red Flag also provides pilots the opportunity to experience combat in a non-lethal environment, Major Weart said.
The idea is that if you simulate the pilots first 10 sorties in combat, their chances of survival go up exponentially for combat operations, Major Weart said. There are other simulated exercises but this is the first one and continues to be the one thats most closely focused on those first 10 combat sorties.
For the maintainers supporting the pilots and the aircraft, Red Flag gives them the opportunity to work in simulated wartime conditions. Everything they do is mirrored to air expeditionary force standards, including the stress and strain of getting aircraft in the air and maintaining them for the next mission, said Capt. Carla Torres, officer-in-charge of Red Flag maintenance operations.
The next Red Flag is scheduled for August.
Pistol Packin' Kiran cover this for FNC!
There is an excellent movie about Red Flag currently showing in the US Air Force Museum IMAX.
I've always loved the f4 what a beast.
Red Flag was always a blast. I was a tanker driver, so we'd go up and orbit and give anybody and everybody "a drink" as needed, as necessary. Also.......more than once..........found myself as an intermediary between GCI controllers and 'good guy' aircraft that simply couldn't hear them. I'd get vectors from GCI and pass 'em on........the 'good guys' got more than one kill that way. :)
Helluva lot of fun.........
The F4 was the best fighter that was designed in the 1950's bar none. It flew in Golf War I
I saw this at the Luxor in Vegas. Brought goosepimples for about 20 minutes.
Are they (USAF) still flying the RC (photo) F-4s? If not our bluesuiters, who is?
Steve Richie is a friend. He still flies them (gun ships) at airshows.
No. All the US RECCE birds are gone. The 82nd ATS still flies QF-4s out of Tyndall and Holloman.
If not our bluesuiters, who is?
F-4s are still flown by the Germans, South Koreans, Japanese, Israelis, Greeks, Turks, Egyptians, Spaniards and Iranians.
Steve Richie is a friend. He still flies them (gun ships) at airshows.
Ritchie flies the Collings Foundations' F-4D.
>F-4s are still flown by the Germans, South Koreans, Japanese, Israelis, Greeks, Turks, Egyptians, Spaniards and Iranians.
Anyone still flying them as first line FI aircraft?
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