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U.S., Australian forces conclude joint exercises by Ed Adamczyk Washington DC (UPI) Sep 04, 2020 The U.S. Marine Corps and Air Force concluded a major training exercise with the Australian Defense Forces in August, the Marines announced on Friday. The U.S. forces joined a combined task force in Australia's Northern Territory, involving four B-1B Lancers, two B-2 Spirit stealth bombers, four F-15C Eagles and about 1,200 Marines for international interoperability exercises. The Marine Rotational Force-Darwin, which has been involved in the annual training since 2012, is now a "highly capable force that provides significant opportunities to enhance interoperability with the Australian Defense Force," a statement by the Australian Defense Department statement said. Marines practiced target location, confirmation and damage assessment, and used an RQ-21A unmanned aerial vehicle to conduct surveillance and reconnaissance of one target. A simultaneous simulated strike was conducted with Australian Army forward air controllers in Tiger armed reconnaissance helicopters. Air Force bombers provided air-to-ground low-pass coverage while U.S. Marines called in coordinated, rapid-air strikes, including live munitions dropped on targets in a demonstration of the B-2 Spirit's precision strike capabilities. "It's imperative that the U.S. Marine Corps and Australian Army work together," said Australian Army Sgt. Aaron Costes, a JTAC [joint terminal attack controller] with the 102nd Coral Battery of the Royal Australian Artillery. "It's such a feat that we can infill and have an aircraft come in from such long distances." The B-1s arrived from Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, and the B-2s, deployed from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri to Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, flew about 4,000 miles to join the proceedings. KC-135 Stratotankers of the Kadena Air Base, Japan, also flew to Darwin, Australia, to support the bomber presence.
Palau invites US military to build bases as China seeks regional clout Koror, Palau (AFP) Sept 4, 2020 The tiny Pacific nation of Palau has urged the United States military to build bases on its territory - which lies in a region where Washington is pushing back against growing Chinese influence. US Defense Secretary Mark Esper visited the island nation last week and accused Beijing of "ongoing destabilising activities" in the Pacific. Palau President Tommy Remengesau later revealed he told Esper the US military was welcome to build facilities in his country, an archipelago about 1,500 kilometre ... read more
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