© US Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Adam Keele Two F-35As. US Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Adam Keele
Business Insider: A US F-22 Raptor pilot describes the challenge of going up against F-35 red-air aggressors
* F-35s flown by dedicated red-air pilots joined the Air Force's top air-combat exercise this month.
* Capt. Patrick Bowlds, an F-22 pilot, was one of the blue-air pilots who flew against them.
* "It definitely adds a level of complexity," Bowlds said of the red-air F-35s.
The US Air Force turned up the pressure this month at its premier air-to-air combat-training exercise, for the first time adding F-35 stealth fighters flown by dedicated red-air aggressor pilots - who emulate the tactics of an enemy force - into the mix of threats that blue-air pilots face.
Red Flag, which takes place at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada, started as an air-combat exercise but has evolved to include not just increasingly advanced aerial aggressor threats but also surface-to-air, space, and information threats.
"My job is not to give blue an easy day," Col. Scott Mills, the 57th Operations Group commander and an F-35 aggressor pilot, said in a recent statement.
"My job is to give blue the absolute toughest day that I can. And the way for me to do that is to bring the F-35 into the fight."
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WNU Editor: Apparently the F-35's stealth capability shines when there are multiple events and threats occuring at the same time.
Good news. Hope it will keep it up.
ReplyDeleteIs that plane up to scratch still?
ReplyDeleteIt feels like it's been a decade of bug fixes since it rolled out..