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Refueling keeps Red Flag flying

Refueling

Two F-16 Fighting Falcons receive fuel from a KC-135 Stratotanker above the Nevada Test and Training Range, February 14, 2018. The aircraft are participating in Red Flag-Nellis 18-1, which stresses combat readiness capabilities and interoperability between coalition partners from the Royal Air Force and Royal Australian Air Force. (U.S. Air Force photo by 2nd Lt. Daniel de La Fé)

A KC-135 Stratotanker

A KC-135 Stratotanker taxis to the parking ramp at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, February 13, 2018. The Red Flag Tanker Task Force supports Red Flag-Nellis 18-1, the premier international air-to-air combat exercise, by providing in-air refueling capabilities to nearly 90 coalition aircraft daily. (U.S. Air Force photo by 2nd Lt. Daniel de La Fé)

Four aircraft

Four KC-135 Stratotankers deployed to Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, receive routine maintenance following the day’s missions during Red Flag-Nellis 18-1, February 13, 2018. The Red Flag Tanker Task Force consists of aircrews, maintainers, intelligence personnel and all the equipment required to support the four aircraft for the duration of the exercise. (U.S. Air Force photo by 2nd Lt. Daniel de La Fé)

NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE, Nev. –The Red Flag Tanker Task Force with air mobility assets from three bases descended on the Las Vegas skies in support the international training exercise, Red Flag-Nellis 18-1.

The RFTTF consists of personnel, aircraft and equipment from McConnell Air Force Base, Fairchild AFB, and Royal Air Force Mildenhall. The task force has provided air refueling capabilities and airlift support throughout the exercise, which continues through Friday.

Nearly 90 aircraft with roughly 2,500 supporting personnel are participating in Red Flag, and Air Mobility Command’s fleet of four KC-135 Stratotankers, alongside an RAF KC-30 Multi Role Tanker Transport, are responsible for delivering in-air refueling capabilities to the international coalition.

“Tankers are critical to achieving success at Red Flag,” said Col. Richard Dickens, Red Flag 18-1 Air Expeditionary Wing commander and 4th Operations Group commander at Seymour Johnson AFB, North Carolina. “We are facing scenarios for an extended period of time, and without air refueling, we wouldn’t have the endurance to continue our mission.”

The RFTTF supplies fuel to fighter and bomber assets practicing a variety of maneuvers over the Nevada Test and Training Range during day and night operations. Tanker capabilities extend the range and the amount of time these assets can remain on the range.

“If we don’t have the gas, then these people don’t have full time to play,” said Maj. Brad Ragan, RFTTF Detachment commander.

The RFTTF launched more than 40 air refueling missions in the first two weeks of Red Flag. Each sortie supplied an average of 64,000 pounds of fuel to coalition aircraft training and operating in the simulated combat environment.

“We’re here to maximize everyone else’s effects,” according to a briefing from RFTTF Intelligence Tactics Team. “It’s about the effects we are trying to produce. That is the point of Red Flag.”