Steven Rix
02/08/2005
Le “president” pakistanais avait affirme que l’organisation Al Qaeda avait ete neutralisee il y a 1 semaine de cela et puis ils sont toujours operationnels dans le moyen-orient. Je penche de plus en plus sur l’hypothese d’operations dirigees a partir de l’Iran.
Si les USA vont attaquer l’Iran? J’etais dans une base militaire US il y a 3 jours et je peux vous confirmer que les USA sont en train de renforcer leur armee de l’air avec des bases en Irak et le moyen orient. A peu pres 100 avions veut partir en Irak dans les prochains jours et ca n’a rien a voir avec l’Irak evidemment. Il y avait ici une operation “blue flag” (recherchez sur google) avec des pays du Moyen-Orient ou c’etait la premiere fois que la technologie americaine a ete exportee sur differents acteurs de la region tels que l’Arabie Saoudite, le Kuwait, Jordanie…etc
Je pense en fait pour un control du Moyen-Orient sans exclure une future attaque en Iran, mais ce n’est pas imminent encore.
L’Irak est un terrain pour construire des bases americaines. Un expert US de l’Otan m’a dit en fait qu’il y aurait un retrait des troupes US en Irak mais ce retrait ne se fera pas sans l’envoi de materiel plus modernise pour controler la region. On verra bien comment ca va se preciser.
Steven Rix
02/08/2005
Il y a a peu pres 350 personnes de l’armee de l’air qui vont etre envoyees en Irak et que j’ai rencontre mais leur mission n’a pas ete devoilee. Toutefois j’ai trouve leurs travaux qui en fait rassemblent plus de 2,000 personnes. Ces 350 et quelques personnes ont eu une promotion et vont etre envoyes en Irak. Leurs travaux consistait dans 2 differents types de combat de simulation:
About 2,000 joint troops, led by 9th Air Force, are participating at the two locations with controllers here simulating a higher headquarters, while participants at Nellis work to win simulated battles in the fictitious countries of Nevidah and Califon.
The exercise is designed primarily as a joint training exercise to prepare Airmen to fight in the air operations center. Directed by Air Warfare Center officials, the exercise was largely written by the 505th Exercise Control Squadron staff, with 9th AF players deploying to the operations center.
After 11 months of preparation, Lt. Gen. Walter Buchanan III, commander of 9th AF and Exercise Combined Forces Air Component, his air operations center staff and Blue Flag planners are breaking new ground with several milestones for the exercise.
The start of the exercise accurately portrayed the chaos of war as an early morning lightning bolt actually struck a building near the operations center just as players and controllers prepared to start the air campaign. Power and communications were temporarily disrupted as technicians brought backup power online and re-established network connections to controllers here. Within an hour, operations were restored and the simulated campaign continued.
What separates this Blue Flag exercise from others weve conducted is the number of firsts that are taking place, said Col. Gary Crowder, 505th Command and Control Wing vice commander. From the outset, one of General Buchanans primary goals was to fully integrate coalition players into the combat operations and combat plans cells on the CAOC floor—something weve never attempted in such depth.
Coalition participants at Nellis include Egypt, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Pakistan, the United Kingdom and Australia.
This is significant in that weve purposely built the exercise architecture in such a way that these players can work on our systems, share procedures and tactics and most importantly, receive training that theyve never before been able to take part in, Colonel Crowder said.
Training goals during the exercise are designed to challenge all participants in a realistic, real-time theater air and ground campaign. Commanders and staff officers are tested with high-tempo operations in the air operations center environment to prepare them for the critical first days of an engagement.
During a typical day, the operations center staff must plan and execute about 680 simulated sorties while responding to enemy aircraft and missiles, propaganda, insurgents and network attacks. Missions are flown by controllers on workstations here, with progress and results reported back to the center as if an aircraft had actually conducted the mission.
Enemy progress also appears on screens at the center, challenging participants to focus on the big-picture view of the battle versus simply thinking about their units singular mission.
It is this focus on the command and control of the battlespace which makes Blue Flag unique.
Because of its excellence in integrating operational and tactical training exercises ( Nellis ) is the perfect location to simulate the complexities of an actual campaign, said Col. Michael Rollison, 505th Operations Group commander. Blue Flag 05-02 is the very first Blue Flag exercise to be conducted at ( the Nellis operations center ), a move that underscores a broader effort to conduct more operational level training at this facility.
The exercise is scheduled to end July 28.
http://i-newswire.com/pr38236.html
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