Posted on 06/24/2010 8:25:20 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
UAEs top guns spread their wings
Hassan Hassan
Last Updated: June 23. 2010 9:48P
ABU DHABI // The Emirati fighter jets locate their target, lock on, drop their payloads and wait for the blast, which doesnt come.
The dramatic scene is not from actual combat, but from a new documentary called Desert Falcons that follows 140 fighter pilots and maintenance staff during two weeks of aerial combat games called Red Flag held in Nevada last year.
While there is no pouting Tom Cruise playing Maverick, the film, which premiered to hundreds of military men in the auditorium of the Emirates Palace hotel last night, is the UAEs own version of Top Gun.
It shows the pilots being put through their paces, and makes for an impressive display of UAE aerial firepower.
The exercises are designed to train pilots from the US and its allies the elite of the elite in realistic war scenarios, including dogfights and bombing exercises. Fewer than 30 countries have been invited to Red Flag.
Red Flag is about gaining experience and meeting pilots of different nationalities and learning new combat skills and ways to strength and improve our Air Force, Capt Saeed al Zaabi of the UAE Armed Forces, who took part in the exercises, said last night.
The training programme, similar to the US navys aerial combat training school known as Top Gun, made famous by the eponymous film, is designed to stretch pilots to the limit and train them to work in co-operation with other air forces. It is held at Nellis Air Force Base, just north of Las Vegas
OK guys, today is our day, Col Tareq al Bannay is seen telling the pilots in one scene at the start of the training. We are the first from the UAE to have been invited to Red Flag. In the next two weeks, we have to take in as much as we can.
I stress this is a training so do not violate the rules, adds one US Air Force officer to all the pilots.
In Red Flag exercises, conducted on a 40,000-square-kilometre training range, a Blue Team of pilots plays the role of the allies, and a Red Team of top US pilots play the aggressors.
The Emiratis flew F-16 Desert Falcons Block 60, which are among the most advanced F-16s ever built.
In a dramatic sequence, the UAE fighters are attacked and have their radars scrambled by enemy planes, which then appear to vanish into the sky.
They surrounded us and then disappeared, said Col Tareq al Bannay. This is what actually happens during war, so a pilot should be fully aware of what is happening around him.
A short time later, however, the UAE pilots get their revenge and defeat a number of enemy fighters.
Once you take off and you feel the roar of the engine, you feel your blood is rushing through your veins, said one of pilots, Major Hassan al Anazi. And once it hits your head, it is a rush. It better than any other thing Ive experienced in life.
The screening was attended by Sheikh Khaled bin Mohammed bin Zayed, who represented the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed.
Col Tareq al Bannay added at the screening: I would definitely make sure that people in the UAE know, whether they were local citizens or non-citizens, there are people up there protecting you. You can sleep safe, drive and have fun, you have a safer sky.
hhassan@thenational.ae
An F16 participating in the Red Flag training exercise.
Image Credit: Supplied
I’ve always found the saddlebags to really frig up the sexy lines of the F-16, but it’s gotta remain current and competitive.
Do jets training at Red Flag take of with warloads like this one is carrying? I wonder about the JDAM in the photo.
Blue = training.
Well they probably want to load them down so they are realistic. Like if they are assigned to play at bombing something you want them to manuver like they have a load of bombs and not like they are ‘clean’.
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