Page 63 - North Atlantic and Nordic Defense
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North European and North Atlantic Defense: The Challenges Return

            “We will be doing things differently going forward. It is an interactive learning process that we are setting up
            and it is foundational in character. We’re generating generation’s worth of relationship building, and
            networking between the communities.  We are doing that over an extended period of time.”

            “For about three years we have been embedding people within the USN’s organization. There are friendships
            that are being forged, and those relationships are going to take that growth path for collaboration forward
            for generations to come.


            "When you can ring up the bloke that you did such and such with, have a conversation, and take the effort
            forward because of that connection. That is a not well recognized but significant benefit through the
            collaborative program that we’re working at the moment.”

            “We are shaping integration from the ground up. And we are doing so with the Australian Defence Force
            overall.”

            I visited RAF Lossiemouth as well where the Brits are standing up their P-8 base.

            With the sun setting of the Nimrod, the RAF kept their skill sets alive by taking Nimrod operators and putting
            them onboard planes flying in NATO exercises, most notably the Joint Warrior exercises run from the UK.

            This has been a challenge obviously to key skill sets alive with no airplane of your own, but the US and allied
            navies worked collectively as the bridge until the Brits get the new aircraft.

            http://www.sldinfo.com/keeping-skill-sets-alive-while-waiting-for-a-replacement-aircraft-from-nimrod-to-p-
            8/

            And the base being built at Lossiemouth will house not only UK aircraft, but allow Norwegians to train, and
            the US to operate as well.

            Indeed, what was clear from discussions at Lossie is that the infrastructure is being built from the ground up
            with broader considerations in mind, notably in effect building a 21st century MDA highway.

            The RAF is building capacity in its P-8 hangers for visiting aircraft such as the RAAF, the USN, or the
            Norwegian Air Force to train and operate from Lossiemouth. In many ways, the thinking is similar to how
            building the F-35 enterprise out from the UK to Northern Europe is being shaped as well.


            http://www.sldinfo.com/the-p-8-coming-to-raf-lossiemouth-shaping-the-infrastructure-for-uk-and-nato-
            defense-in-the-north-atlantic/

            In effect, an MDA highway being built from Lossie and the F-35 reach from the UK to Northern Europe are
            about shaping common, convergent capabilities that will allow for expanded joint and combined operational
            capabilities.

            At this is not an add on, but built from the ground up.












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