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Tactical Air Command
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==== Red Flag Aggressor training ==== [[Image:F16C Aggressor.jpg|300px|thumb|right|F-16C aggressor aircraft during Red Flag 06-1]] The [[57th Wing|'''57th Fighter Weapons Wing''']] at [[Nellis AFB]], [[Nevada]] began giving Regular Air Force units some of the most intense combat training ever achieved through the '''[[Red Flag (USAF)|Red Flag]]''' program, beginning in 1976. This would later expand to include the [[Air Force Reserve]], the [[Air National Guard]], aviation squadrons of the [[U.S. Navy]] and [[U.S. Marine Corps]] (augmenting their [[Naval Fighter Weapons School]] / [[TOPGUN]] program), and various [[NATO]] and Allied nations. The origin of Red Flag was the unacceptable performance of U.S. Air Force pilots and weapon systems officers in air combat maneuvering (ACM) (air-to-air combat) during the Vietnam War in comparison to previous wars. Air combat over North Vietnam between 1965 and 1973 led to an overall exchange ratio (ratio of enemy aircraft shot down to the number of own aircraft lost to enemy fighters) of 2.2:1. In fact, for a period of time in June and July 1972 during Operation Linebacker, the ratio was less than 1:1. The aggressor units at Red Flag were originally equipped with readily available [[T-38 Talon]] aircraft loaned from the [[Air Training Command]] ([[Air Training Command|ATC]]) to simulate the [[Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21|Soviet Union's MiG-21]]. [[Northrop F-5]] Tiger II fighters, painted in color schemes commonly found on Soviet and Warsaw Pact aircraft, were added shortly thereafter and became the mainstay until the F-16 was introduced in the mid/late 1980s. The Red Flag exercises, conducted in four to six cycles per year by the [[414th Combat Training Squadron]] evolved into very realistic large scale aerial war games, the purpose being to train pilots and navigators/weapon systems officers/electronic warfare officers and air battle managers from the U.S., NATO and other allied countries for real combat situations. This includes the use of "enemy" hardware and live ammunition for bombing exercises within the [[Nevada Test and Training Range]] (NTTR).<ref name="multi3"/>
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