Author Topic: B-52 bombers demonstrate their long reach in mock bombing run from US to Australia  (Read 699 times)

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rangerrebew

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B-52 bombers demonstrate their long reach in mock bombing run from US to Australia 
 
 
This story was published:  23 hours ago August 04, 2015 8:13AM
 
 TWO B-52 bombers flew 44 hours non-stop from Louisiana to the Northern Territory on a simulated bombing run last month — all to deliver a message to China. 
 
The lumbering, 1950s vintage dinosaurs lifted off from the Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana, United States, on July 1.

Their mission: to be BAAD.

That’s military speak for yet more military speak: “bomber assurance and deterrence”.

Translated, it means sending a message to Australia and the nations of South East Asia that the United States is willing and capable of assisting its allies.
 
 
Heavy load ... A B-52 Stratofortress from Barksdale Air Force Base drops live ordnance over the Nevada Test and Training Range. Two such aircraft recently engaged in a bombing run on an Australian test range after taking off from the US. Source: US Air Force Source: Supplied
   

It was also a demonstration — to China — of the US military’s continued global reach amid soaring tensions in the South China Sea over that nation’s island-base building campaign on disputed territory.

“These flights are one of the many ways the US demonstrates its commitment to a stable and peaceful Indo-Asia Pacific region,” US Navy Admiral Cecil D Haney said in a statement.
 

The simulated attack run — which saw the Delamere weapons testing range in the Northern Territory plastered with inert dummy bombs — was initially given a low public profile.
 
Most attention at the time was directed towards the military exercise Talisman Sabre, a joint US/Australian war game aimed at practising “mid intensity, high end” combat — including special forces, amphibious landings, parachute attacks, sea and air combat and urban occupation.
 

But the B-52 test run has again ignited interest in the role such nuclear-capable super bombers will play in Australian/US defence relations after suggestions they would be based here were denied by Prime Minister Tony Abbott earlier this year.

That suggestion was blamed on US assistant secretary of defence David Shear “misspeaking” when he testified before the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee on May 13 that heavy bombers and surveillance aircraft would be deployed to Australia.

“The United States has no plans to rotate B-1 bombers or surveillance aircraft in Australia,” a US Embassy spokesman in Canberra asserted at the time.
 
   

“The United States and Australia continue to explore ways to strengthen our alliance and more effectively respond to shared challenges, both regionally and around the world.

“With respect to US force posture initiatives in Australia … we are currently exploring a range of options for future rotations with our Australian counterparts, and the specifics of future force posture cooperation have yet to be finalised.”

At the time, China had expressed “serious concern” at such a move — asserting that the nation would “resolutely uphold its territorial sovereignty”.

http://www.news.com.au/national/b-52-bombers-demonstrate-their-long-reach-in-mock-bombing-run-from-us-to-australia/story-fncynjr2-1227468948636
« Last Edit: August 04, 2015, 08:55:25 pm by rangerrebew »