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1stSgt Carl Pappert
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I was on the Red Flag staff from '81 to '83. Worked with some great folks, put in some long hours and enjoyed every minute of the assignment. Even got to go to Canada for a Maple Flag once. Good memories!!
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A1C Samuel Leggett
A1C Samuel Leggett
7 y
I was at Nellis from Nov '82 - May '84 at the little clinic hospital. I had a dorm mate who was a crew chief with the Thunderbirds. I rarely saw him because he disappeared on things that he couldn't talk about, or was with the Thunderbirds team.
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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Thank you for the great share.
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LTC Stephen F.
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Thanks for sharing Maj Marty Hogan that Red Flag is the Air Force’s top air war training exercise.
"The U.S. military is worryingly dependent on GPS. Our global positioning satellites tell planes where they are, provide targeting info for smart weapons, and support communication and navigation systems. But in a war with a tech-advanced adversary—think China, Russia, or Iran—GPS could become a big liability because it could be jammed, spoofed, or outright destroyed.
So how does the U.S. Air Force train for such a scenario? Simple—just turn it off.
Red Flag is the Air Force’s top air war training exercise, bringing together USAF fighter, bomber, tanker, and ISR squadrons with select allies for coordinated training over the 5,000 square-mile Nevada Test and Training Range (NTTR). For Red Flag 2018, which kicked off last week and will run through February 16, the Air Force will black out GPS, forcing aircrews to execute strike missions without their familiar satellite-based guide."
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