• A pilot from No. 77 Squadron boards an F/A-18A Hornet A21-36 aircraft prior to an air-sea integration mission at Andersen Air Force Base.
Defence
    A pilot from No. 77 Squadron boards an F/A-18A Hornet A21-36 aircraft prior to an air-sea integration mission at Andersen Air Force Base. Defence
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RAAF aircraft and more than 150 personnel have deployed to Guam to join exercises with the RAN and the US.

An Air Task Unit made up of F/A-18A Hornets, EA-18G Growlers, an E-7A Wedgetail and a KC-30A Multirole Tanker Transport will conduct advanced air-sea integration drills with five RAN warships.

The ships are part of a Joint Task Group conducting a regional deployment through Southeast Asia, before participating in exercise RIMPAC off Hawaii.

Minister for Defence Linda Reynolds said training of air and sea forces is an important progression in the joint force capability.

“Some of our most advanced capabilities including the EA-18G Growler and the Guided Missile Destroyer, HMAS Hobart, will be able to integrate in a combined air and sea environment,” Minister Reynolds said.

“This deployment demonstrates Defence as a capable force, with an ability to conduct complex and extended deployments at sea and in the air organically and with our regional partners.”

The transit to RIMPAC provides Navy an opportunity to practice joint warfare.

Training will include an E-7A Wedgetail aircraft working alongside the maritime elements, to generate an overall air and sea picture.

They will also conduct maritime air defence and air combat exercises with US Air Force partners and the Australian Joint Task Group.

“Exercising as a joint force across air and sea allows the Navy and Air Force to understand each other’s warfighting activities, to fight better in the maritime environment, make decisions quickly and fully employ their forces across multiple domains,” Minister Reynolds said.

The Air Task Unit will return to Australia in late July 2020.

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