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Featured Anatolian Eagle 2021 - JF-17 To Pitch Against Rafale and Vipers

The main goal of Anatolian Eagle is to improve the capabilities of national and foreign elements, test new tactics and techniques, develop joint and combined operational procedures, and maximize mission effectiveness by increasing mutual support between the participating forces. The training scenarios take place over a two-week period. In the first week, two daily missions are flown, called Eagle 1 and Eagle 2.

Eagle 1 starts at 07:30 hrs (LT) and lasts until about 09:00 hrs, Eagle 2 lasts from 14:30 hrs until 17:30 hrs. Three main elements are involved; Red Force, Blue Force and White HQ. The latter is tasked with the preparation of the training scenarios and submits the Air Tasking Orders to the teams. The main missions are:

Combat Air Patrol (CAP), Fighter sweep and Fighter escort.
Air-to-ground
Suppression/destruction of Enemy Air Defences (SEAD)
High value asset protection
Reconnaissance
Close Air Support (CAS)
Slow mover protection
Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR)



Turkey: exercise Anatolian Eagle 2021
Andrea Avian
Military Excercises
9 July 2021 3 min read

A Turkey more far away from NATO is the impression that emerges after our visit to the Anatolian Eagle exercise 2021. No NATO aircraft was partecipating in the exercise, except the obeservers.
Estabilished in 2001, the Anatolian eagle viewed in its history the partecipation of several NATO air Units, and the 2021 edition had been the first one without.
Anatolian Eagle training center, located in 3rd main jet base in Konya, in the central part of Turkey, is a high level tactical training center, providing realistic combat training opportunities to Turkish air wings and allied countries in a high threat environment, more sophisiticated then the unit level trainings on aspects such as the size of airspace, tactical ranges, threat emitters and number of partecipants.
The Anatolian eagle training is not only an important step taken in meeting the training requirements of Turkey, allies and friendly countries but also taking the initiative to contribute the international reliance and cooperation by sharing the resources it possesses, gifted by its unique geographic situation.
The 2021 edition took place from 21 June to 2 July in Konya air base. The paricipants were Turkish air force with 38 F-16C/D of the 113rd ,132nd , 151st, 152nd, 181st and 191st Squadron, 1 KC-135 of 101st Squadron, 1 E-7T of 131st Squadron and 1 ANKA-S of 302nd Squadron, Turkish Navy partecipated with 2 fregates and 2 fast attack crafts, Azerbaijan air froce with 2 MiG-29 S and 2 Su-25K, Qatar air force with 4 Rafale and Pakistan air force with 5 JF-17 Thunder, 1 E-3 AWACS by NATO and Bangladesh, Belarus, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Georgia, Iraq, Sweden, Kosovo, Lebanon, Hungary, Malaysia, Nigeria, Romania, Tunisia, Ukraine, Oman, Jordania and Japan as observers.

The international Anatolian Eagle exercise is carried out every year in Konya, except in 2020 due to covid pandemic, in a realistic combat environment to improve the capabilities of turkish and allied elements, testing new tactics and techniques, developing joint and combined operational procedures and maximize mission effectiveness by increasing mutual support between forces.
With training aids such as Air Combat Maneuvering Instrumentation (ACMI) System and the post-mission analysis system, which are used to evaluate the training performance simultaneously or in a very short time, Anatolian Eagle provides an advanced joint training environment to the participants to increase their combat readiness level.
The exercise area covers Lake Tuz and its surroindings with a size of 300×400 Km, enabling participants to employ their flight tactics without any limitations and without being affected by civilian air traffic. Since its estabilishment, a total of 43 training editions (24 international and 19 national) and about 24.000 sortie flights have been accomplished with the participation of 15 countries.
The objectives of the training were to increase the operational level of the pilots and air defense personnel in a most realistic environment, to develop joined and combined operational procedures, to decrease the attritions to a minimum level and to increase mission effectiveness to a maximum level in a real operational environment, to give a chance to fighter pilots to execute their planned tactics to employ in large force compositions, to provide a forum to exchange ideas and lessons learnt and to train the partecipants as they fight and teach them how to survive.

Anatolian Eagle exercie enhanced the training level of the participants creating a realistic combat theatre within a specific scenario: Blue forces conduct COMAO attacks against the targets on the Red land defended by the SAM systems and fighter aircraft simulating aggressor tactics.
In the AE operation center, all airborne aircraft, threat systems, AWACS and GCI cross telling can be visualized on real-time basis and post-mission assessments can be made in realistic way. In the context of the training, electronic warfare test and training range in Konya with a wide array of threat emmiters, integrated with recognized air pictures and air combat maneuvering instrumentation system (ACMI) are used to expose aircrews to a higher threat environment.
In addition to the sufrace-to-air assets, fighters of of the Red forces will gave to Blue force hard times in a simulated war environment and compel them to stay away from target area in order to let them get the best training in a realistic scenario.
 
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It was reported by Taiwanese media not Chinese.

can you point us to the place where it talks about Thunders vs rafales? its more than 2 hour video and I'm not 'bout to watch all of it.
 
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It's true. Bvr engagements.
Must be restrictive RoEs using the MICA.
This is straight-up MiG-21bis beating F-15 stuff.
More importantly - while the aspect of the Qatari standard and Indian standard being different aren’t wrong, its not a huge difference and unless the Qatari pilots were completely asleep during their training I find it very hard to believe - but, stranger revelations have occurred.
@Raider 21
 
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Must be restrictive RoEs using the MICA.

More importantly - while the aspect of the Qatari standard and Indian standard being different aren’t wrong, its not a huge difference and unless the Qatari pilots were completely asleep during their training I find it very hard to believe - but, stranger revelations have occurred.
@Raider 21
doubt they had restrictive rules of engagement; the whole purpose of air exercises is to slug it out and check their systems's and sensors' performance to their maximum; otherwise how would they know the real time war performance?
 
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doubt they had restrictive rules of engagement; the whole purpose of air exercises is to slug it out and check their systems's and sensors' performance to their maximum; otherwise how would they know the real time war performance?

Yes and no, from what I've known about past exercises a lot of functions like the radar are dumbed down during these exercises to hide it's true capabilities etc. But I'm sure something must be gained -- but it's kept under wraps.
 
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