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US F-35As train with B-2s to avoid surface to air missiles

written by Adam Thorn | January 15, 2021

Ten US Air Force F-35As took part in a unique training exercise to avoid surface to air missiles alongside two B-2 Spirit stealth bombers.

The Panther Capstone mission took place at Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri and featured personnel from the 63rd Fighter Squadron “Panthers” and 509th Bomb Wing.

Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Diller, 509th BW program manager and B-2 pilot, said, “This was a first-time event for Whiteman’s B-2s integrating with Luke’s F-35s. As the number of F-35s increase, the understanding and interoperability between the various platforms must increase. What better way to facilitate this than at the capstone event at the F-35 schoolhouse?”

The 63rd Fighter Squadron (FS), known colloquially as the Panthers, trains students to become F-35 pilots, they often use virtual simulations to replicate B-2s for this training, but this mission offered training for students using real-world assets instead.

Captain Sean Gossner, 63rd FS instructor pilot and flight commander expanded on the comments made by Lt Col Diller, saying, “The F-35 was built to be able to escort low observable (LO) assets like the B-2 into highly defended territory in order for them to be able to hold targets at risk. We finally got to practice this with real B-2s for the first time at Luke Air Force Base with the Panthers.”

“Typically, we train for LO escort by using simulated assets that are not actually airborne with us, which leads to various training limitations. To be able to bring together everything with 10 F-35s and two B-2s against a robust air threat picture and surface-to-air missile threat picture was incredible training for us.”

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The Panthers are a US-only B-course squadron at Luke AFB, which hosts five partner nations for training, this opened the doorway for taking training with a B-2 from a virtual environment to reality.

Capt Gossner said, “We’re really the only ones [here] with the ability to integrate with the B-2 in this capacity. One of the biggest benefits to this are the relationships that we’ve built with the B-2 pilots. We had the ability to go out to Whiteman Air Force Base to mission plan with them to understand how they think about threats and the tactical problems and then share with them how we think about the same issues.”

Of the 10 F-35 pilots, six were instructors and four were students who were preparing to graduate.

Capt Gossner added, “Our B-coursers who are graduating are going to graduate as fully mission ready wingmen. With this being such a core part of our mission, we really wanted to put the emphasis on such a high-end training to prepare our B-course graduates for the fights that they are going to be in and that could be as soon as they get to their new units.”

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