US Pacific Command’s Valiant Shield 2010 exercise kicked off Sunday, bringing together more than 150 US combat aircraft, along with Marine and Navy at-sea elements to practice joint counterair and countersea concepts near Guam. “It is a rare opportunity to bring together platforms that normally do not regularly exercise together, such as B-52 bombers and carrier strike groups,” said Brig. Gen. John Doucette, 36th Wing commander at Andersen Air Force Base on the island, from which most of the aircraft will operate. This training opportunity helps to ensure that US forces in the Pacific are “capable of an overwhelming and decisive response” in any future regional contingency, he added. Participating aircraft include B-52s, E-3 AWACS, F-15s, F-15Es, F-22s, HH-60 helicopters, KC-10 and KC-135 tankers, Marine Corps AV-8s, and Navy E-2Cs, F/A-18s, and P-3s. The exercise runs through Sept. 21. (Andersen release) (See also Pearl Harbor-Hickam release)
Air Force exercises in the Indo-Pacific may soon get even bigger and more robust, as lawmakers move to invest more than $620 million in such efforts. The bulk of that money, contained in a $150 billion reconciliation package currently making its way through Congress, is $532.6 million for earmarked for…