British F-35B jets have commenced their deployment to Iceland as part of an air policing mission, marking the first time these advanced aircraft have participated in a NATO air policing deployment.

The mission, involving RAF pilots from 617 Squadron, is aimed at preserving the security of Allied skies through NATO’s permanent peacetime air policing.

This collective task involves the continuous presence of fighter aircraft and crews, ready to react swiftly to potential airspace violations.

Minister for the Armed Forces, Luke Pollard, highlighted the significance of this mission, stating, “The UK is unshakeable in its commitment to NATO. With threats increasing and growing Russian aggression, it is vital that we stand shoulder to shoulder with our allies. This latest air policing mission in Iceland displays the UK’s ability to operate and deter our adversaries across the alliance’s airspace.”

This deployment follows a successful mission in Romania, where six Typhoon fighter jets and over two hundred personnel were stationed at Mihail Kogalniceanu Air Base to defend NATO’s eastern border. In Iceland, four cutting-edge F-35B jets from 617 Squadron will now patrol the airspace, having travelled from RAF Marham.

The F-35B Lightning is a multi-role combat aircraft equipped with advanced sensors, mission systems, and stealth technology. Its stealth capability makes it difficult for enemy radar systems to detect, providing a significant tactical advantage in various operational scenarios.

Group Captain John Butcher, Lightning Force Commander, noted the significance of this deployment in a news release, saying, “This will be the first time that the Lightning Force has deployed to contribute to NATO Air Policing, and will no doubt once again prove the flexibility that this platform offers as it demonstrates its capability to operate from both a land and maritime environment.”

The last time British jets undertook air policing in Iceland was in 2019, when four Typhoon jets conducted 59 training sorties and more than 180 practice intercepts.

Alongside Typhoons and Voyagers, which conduct air policing in the UK through the Quick Reaction Alert Force based at RAF Coningsby, Lossiemouth, and Brize Norton, the RAF points out that it ensures the protection of UK and Allied airspace 24/7, 365 days a year.


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George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison
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Wayne
Wayne (@guest_843110)
1 month ago

Fantastic news

Martin Cutler
Martin Cutler (@guest_843122)
1 month ago

So that’s half the RAF contingent deployed then!
What’s left to defend our sacred Isles?

Last edited 1 month ago by Martin Cutler
Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli (@guest_843126)
1 month ago
Reply to  Martin Cutler

The ASCS force, QRA (N) and (S) on the RAF AD side, as has been for decades.

Peter pan
Peter pan (@guest_843141)
1 month ago
Reply to  Martin Cutler

The US in Lakenheath and others

Brom
Brom (@guest_843148)
1 month ago
Reply to  Martin Cutler

Sigh, we’ve more than four aircraft you know?

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843167)
1 month ago
Reply to  Brom

Martin has a fair point though, we have a paonfully small F-35b force. We can currently field just one squadron. Yes, a second one is forming, but at 5 or 6 aircraft deliveroes a year, it will likely be 2027 or 2038 before both squadrons are fully equipped. We might wonder why F-35s rather than Typhoons to Iceland, given the air defence role. Shortage of Typhoon aircraft? Our minimalist Typhoon force has, on paper, something like 63 front-line aircraft. The MOD variously claims that we have 7 or 8 front-line Typhoon squadrons. We don’t, we have 5. They are down… Read more »

Last edited 1 month ago by Cripes
Hugo
Hugo (@guest_843173)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

Did you pick 64 F35Bs out of the air. We need 74 aircraft to maintain 4 Squadrons, 3 Frontline and 1 training, the spare 27 or so are rotating through maintenance to keep the other squadrons at full strength

Would also point out we haven’t even ordered the 2nd batch of 27 F35Bs yet so fat chance of more typhoons or F35As

Last edited 1 month ago by Hugo
Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843185)
1 month ago
Reply to  Hugo

Did I pick 64 F-35Bs out of the air? Nope. 64 allows for 3 squadrons of 10 frontline aircraft, rather than 12. Same as the Typhoon squadrons, which are a rather more critical asset. 64 aircraft gives the following (Frontline/total): – Wing commander, 1/2 – Squadron 1, 10/17 – Squadron 2, 10/17 – Squadron 3, 10/17 OEU, 0/3 OCU, 0/8. Total: 31/64 The F-35A has longer range then the B, better rate of climb, almost certainly better top speed, double the munitions load… and is 25% less expensive than the B. It is basically in its best role an interdiction/SEAD… Read more »

PhilWestMids
PhilWestMids (@guest_843205)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

I think our best bet is to replace the T1 typhoon jets with FGR4, I don’t think introducing F35A would be a good move (if we had endless budget it would be a great move), we have F35B integrated within the RAF and FAA and we just need to accelerate further.

Andrew D
Andrew D (@guest_843307)
1 month ago
Reply to  PhilWestMids

I think more FGR4 should be on the card’s I agree.Interesting Spain are up grading they old Typhoons, Germany are buying more new Typhoons and I believe Italy have order more.

Hugo
Hugo (@guest_843271)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

If a war broke out we would almost certainly look to deploy both carriers in conjunction with Nato, 3 squadrons is barely enough for one carrier, deploying 1 squadron to it is barely a token effort but clearly you’re anti carrier so I’m not going to bother discussing it. Also the carrier will only be vulnerable because you decide it can only have 1 squadron. Also F35B is not Short range, what a ridiculous suggestion. There are longer range variants but the F35B cannot be counted as a short range aircraft. Would also point out if any attack where to… Read more »

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843436)
1 month ago
Reply to  Hugo

Hugo, I am intrigued by your concept of both carriers putting to sea with full air wings. There seems a propensity in naval circles to cast a blind eye to one big salient fact, viz: The F-35Bs are a JOINT force, which has to provide a) RAF close air support for the Army’s warfighting division, and b) RAF/FAA carrier aviation. If we eventually have 74 of the blessed Bs, with 36 frontline (3 sqns of 12), it would be reasonable to assume that Army CAS would generally expect to get 18 and the Carriers the other 18. Yet repeatedly we… Read more »

Last edited 1 month ago by Cripes
Hugo
Hugo (@guest_843440)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

They’re only joint because the RAf repeatedly tries to get rid of carrier aviation and in turn destroys the Navies ability to support fixed wing aviation. Also we couldnt support 2 CSGs in the falklands but both carriers sailed in the same group, wouldn’t have had enough aircraft otherwise. I almost certainly could see the same happening in a conflict. Or in conjunction with Nato creating a 2nd CSG, so yes we should be aiming to have enough aircraft for both. Also I never said full airwings, and with only 74 aircraft that’s never going to happen anyway even on… Read more »

Last edited 1 month ago by Hugo
Hugo
Hugo (@guest_843447)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

So those 10 aircraft too much were getting, if we cut those what would you get, because there’s no extra cash lying around to add to that saving, all we’re hearing from this review is cuts, may not even get the 27 F35Bs that were supposed to be contracted this year.

Andrew D
Andrew D (@guest_843304)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

And I believe the A version is cheaper than the F35B.

Hugo
Hugo (@guest_843305)
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

A little but still not worth only getting a handful of them rather than focusing on the existing fleet.

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843391)
1 month ago
Reply to  Andrew D

Indeed it is. The flyaway cost for the A was a bit over £60m, the B £80+m, now I gather £85m.

So for the price of 40 Bs, we could have 52 As instead. And a more capable aircraft too!

Robert Blay
Robert Blay (@guest_843380)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

Your stats about F35A v F35B are way off.

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843404)
1 month ago
Reply to  Robert Blay

No Robert, they’re not. We can go through them line by line if you wish. The big, simple picture is that the B has the handicap of lugging around a heavy lift fan, which impacts heavily on its performance. Combat radius… weapon bay size and limitations… and logically, given.that it has the same engine as the A, but the additional lift fan weight to carry, lower speed and poorer rate of climb, no matter what figures Google tells you. When you compare the mass of orders for the A versus the very limited export sales of the B, it says… Read more »

Robert Blay
Robert Blay (@guest_843415)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

The A does not carry more weapons than the B. It can carry larger weapons internally. 2000lb class v the B’s 1000lb class. The RAF/RN doesn’t use the 2000lb Paveway 3 anymore, so matters not. 8 SPEAR 3’s will fit internally once it enters service. Other nations don’t have a fleet of Typhoons in service. F35B does provide SEAD/DEAD capability with its APG-81 radar with electronic attack capability. Soon to be APG-85 radar. Top speed for all F35 varients is the same. M1.6. The F35A does have the best all round agility, but it can’t land on a carrier. The… Read more »

Daniele Mandelli
Daniele Mandelli (@guest_843194)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

The numbers are ridiculous, aren’t they. Too small, no matter how capable.
On F35A, I believe it is Tempest, or F35A, not both.
The Combat Air Budget is not there for both.
The fiddle in removing the last 3 Sqns of GR4s and “replacing them” with in service Typhoons but expanding the Sqns from 5 to 7 has really hit us.
We had 23 Fast Jet Sqns when Labour came to power in 97 and 12 when the Tories came in in 2010.
There is the primary collapse.

Ian Mc.
Ian Mc. (@guest_843208)
1 month ago

That’s because back then, when one dared suggest that somewhere down the line, we’d have to square up to a peer threat again, you would get laughed at. “Assymetric warfare is the future” they all said, including senior military figures around the Western world. See also the drawdown in heavy armour.
Made some sense at the time, but there’s hindsight for you…
Luckily, a proper force of F-35s is capable of completing missions that 30-40 years ago would have taken a huge strike package, twice or three times larger in number. I might even be underselling the Lightning’s capability there.

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843422)
1 month ago

Absolutely. You remind me how savagely combat air was cut under Blair/Brown. Some of it was the continuation of the planned 25% cuts agreed between NATO and WARPAC, but the rest was just plain irresponsible. When I push the need for 20 more Typhoon FGR4s and the purchase of F-35As, I am thinking in terms of the mooted increase.to 2.5% of GDP. I think that is a genuine intention, but it will likely be slow coming and may be a gradual increase, year by year, up to 2035. Anyway, an increase from the current 2.07% of GDP.to 2.5%.would mean a… Read more »

Last edited 1 month ago by Cripes
Steve Martin
Steve Martin (@guest_843251)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

Small comfort I know, but the bonus is the delayed batches will be Block IV software and so have much more available to them.

Enobob
Enobob (@guest_843269)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

We DO have 7 squadrons, with an establishment of 12 a/c per Sqn.

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843386)
1 month ago
Reply to  Enobob

I’m afraid 7 Typhoon squadrons, each of 12 frontline aircraft, is not mathematically possible Enobob. We only have 107 FGR4s, forget the F2s, they are already being run down and will vanish completely in 12 months time. A Squadron of 12 front line aircraft requires 3 as Squadron maintenance reserve, 3 as war reserve and 1.5 as attrition reserve. Total: 19.5 aircraft. If we really had 7 such squadrons, we would need 136 aircraft to start with. But then you have to add: Wing Commander, Lossiemouth – 2 Wing Commander, Coningsby – 2 OEU (trials and tests) – 3 OCU… Read more »

Robert Blay
Robert Blay (@guest_843416)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

The wing Commander of a RAF station does not have 2 Typhoons. Plus, they are called station commanders. Today. 137 Typhoons are in service. 100 in the forward fleet. 37 in the sustainment fleet. 4 T1 jets in the Falklands will remain in service until 2027. 107 aircraft will be in service once all T1 jets are retired. 7 frontline sqns will be maintained. The sustainment fleet will be smaller. £2.35 billion is being spent upgrading the whole Typhoon fleet with 40 jets planned to receive the new Mk2 ECRS radar, with the potential for the T2 aircraft to also… Read more »

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843474)
1 month ago
Reply to  Robert Blay

The Station Commander is a Group Captain who oversees all departments af the base – flying. engineering, admin, RAF Regt etc.

Under the Group Captain, the flying squadrons are commanded by a Wing Commander. The Wingco has always been allocated his/her own aircraft, as they need to be up to speed with the aircraft, its systems, capabilities and issues and may often command in the air.

Procurement planning has always allowed for a second aircraft in reserve, but with the MOD continually fiddling with numbers, who knows from week to week.

Enobob
Enobob (@guest_843433)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

WE DO have 7 operational Typhoon squadrons, and they each have an establishment of 12 aircraft. I don’t know where you get your totally fictitious numbers from but they bare no resemblance to the modern RAF and smack of a 1950’s Hunter squadron, if they smack of anything! No Wing Commander flying of an RAF station has had aircraft allocated to them since the 50’s and your percentages are pure fantasy, they are NOT worked out like that! I don’t know what your background is but as some one with recent intimate involvement in contractor support to the RAF I… Read more »

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843478)
1 month ago
Reply to  Enobob

The RAF never talks about the Trenchard system, whereby 50% of the aircraft are not in frontline roles. I probably shouldn’t either, though some of the wild claims about squadron numbers and strengths are way wide of reality.

Let me just say you are misinformed. If you can explain why we are ordering 74 F-35Bs to equip 3 squadrons and set out how the Wing is configured, we could have a useful discussion.

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843584)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

The RAF’s MOD website states that we have 6 operational Typhoon squadrons. It does not say 7, as some posters here keep telling us. They get to that figure by including the Aggressor training squadron, 1X(B). They fly the Tranche 1 F2s but borrow FGR4s from the so-called Sustainment fleet for overseas postings. Basically, it’s another squadron number plate without the aircraft numbers to sustain it in any conflict. Classic MOD double counting. Where does this 7th squadron confusion come from? It is the Qatar training squadron, which in reality is an RAF flight with Qatari pilots, training here. It… Read more »

Last edited 1 month ago by Cripes
Bell
Bell (@guest_843287)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

purely out of interest the US Military lost 8540 fixed & Rotary wing, in the Vietnam war, with near total air superiority.

Jon
Jon (@guest_843300)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

If we are sending 24 F-35s to the Pacific next year with the CSG, they’ll need as much training and practice as we can get. That probably requires real, overseas deployments, as well as running newbies through the mill.

Enobob
Enobob (@guest_843268)
1 month ago
Reply to  Martin Cutler

4 jets out of a force of over 30 deployed to Iceland. Yes, you are right, that only leaves the rest of 617 Sqn, 207 Sqn and 809 Sqn with Lightning and 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, 11, 12, 29 and 41 Sqns with Typhoons! What a hysterical over reaction.

AlbertStarburst
AlbertStarburst (@guest_843284)
1 month ago
Reply to  Martin Cutler

I’m also concerned about the UK’s lack of front-line aerodromes and the concentration of what remains of the RAF’s front-line aircraft into so few locations: Marham, Lossiemouth, Waddington, and Coningsby.

Fen Tiger
Fen Tiger (@guest_843314)
1 month ago

Back to Wick!

AlbertStarburst
AlbertStarburst (@guest_843396)
1 month ago
Reply to  Fen Tiger

Yeah Wick!

Lets not forget the WWII heritage there. For example the sad loss on 4 December 1941, Sqn Ldr Alastair Taylor DFC with two bars and his navigator, Sgt. Sidney Horsfall, were killed in the Trondheim-Bergen area, becoming the first 1 PRU casualties

I believe they were hit by flak, and rather than let the new dH Mosquito aircraft fall into NAZI hands they turned out to sea rather than crash land. True heros!

Marked
Marked (@guest_843365)
1 month ago

The RAF dusted off cold War plans to deploy to regional airports etc a couple of years back. If tensions were sky high I have no doubt we would see flights deployed in various locations, probably moving around regularly too in order to complicate any attack plans.

Marked
Marked (@guest_843363)
1 month ago
Reply to  Martin Cutler

Numbers may be small but at least they are getting some real world experience of deploying and the operating challenges that brings. Its better than sitting at home twiddling their thumbs.

Leh
Leh (@guest_843769)
1 month ago
Reply to  Martin Cutler

Awesome, just a few more of the typical ‘Britain no money no jets’ comments for a full house.

Give it a rest.

dwightstrut
dwightstrut (@guest_843165)
1 month ago

Is someone able to confirm for me that our F35 fleet has AMRAAM while we’re waiting… and waiting… and waiting… for LM to provide Block IV software? It scares me to think we might be sending up a CAP with only ASRAAM.

Hugo
Hugo (@guest_843174)
1 month ago
Reply to  dwightstrut

Yes we have Amraam, why wouldn’t we

dwightstrut
dwightstrut (@guest_843181)
1 month ago
Reply to  Hugo

FFBNW? It’s common Treasury shortsightedness. I did try to find out and the closest I got was this: https://www.dsca.mil/press-media/major-arms-sales/united-kingdom-aim-120d-advanced-medium-range-air-air-missile-amraam#:~:text=WASHINGTON%2C%20July%2010%2C%202018%20%2D,estimated%20cost%20of%20%24650%20million.

So, potential sale approved, but do we actually now have deployable AMRAAM for our F35s?

Spyinthesky
Spyinthesky (@guest_843177)
1 month ago
Reply to  dwightstrut

AMRAAM is one of the relatively few weapons currently carried by F-35s generally, whether ours actually do should be a given but good question. If not it leaves Paveway, ASRAAM (presumably) and what else? Not exactly playing to an ultra expensive Stealth fighters strengths.

dwightstrut
dwightstrut (@guest_843183)
1 month ago
Reply to  Spyinthesky

Exactly. The biggest weakness in our F35 fleet is not the lack of numbers; it’s the lack of the weapons those planes are supposed to be there to deliver.

BobA
BobA (@guest_843254)
1 month ago
Reply to  Spyinthesky

Not only do we have Aim120 for F35, but the most up to date version AIM120D. UK to spend $650 million on 200 AIM-120D AMRAAM missiles (ukdefencejournal.org.uk)

Although – 200 missiles I suspect is not a high number…

Marked
Marked (@guest_843367)
1 month ago
Reply to  Spyinthesky

In order to deploy weapons our stealth jets need to get close enough to a target that they can be detected. Kind of defeats the bloody object!

Rowan Maguire
Rowan Maguire (@guest_843244)
1 month ago
Reply to  dwightstrut

We bought 200 AIM-120D variant AMRAAMs about 5 years ago, likely for interim use on the F-35 until Block 4 is finally integrated allowing for Meteor. We also have other types of AMRAAM from years past stocked up – although lots of the old, old ones have been sent to Ukraine for NASAMS ammunition.

But no, the British F-35b for all it’s short comings is not without BVR capability.

Robert Blay
Robert Blay (@guest_843382)
1 month ago
Reply to  Rowan Maguire

F35B It has F22 levels of air dominace capability. But people don’t seem to be able to grasp that.

Cripes
Cripes (@guest_843454)
1 month ago
Reply to  Robert Blay

I know Robert, but these pesky export customers keep selecting the A version for their air power, not the B, which has only got a few orders specifically for naval use.

Everybody else is obviously wrong, we know best in the UK!

Or not, as the case may be.

Robert Blay
Robert Blay (@guest_843468)
1 month ago
Reply to  Cripes

We are buying the B, because we have aircraft carriers. Most nations don’t. F35B and the QE class is the best bang for our buck. F35B/Typhoon is a deadly combination. Maybe we should celebrate the fact we can put 5th generation capability to sea rather than moan about it. We could not buy a more capable aircraft to put on our carriers. The fleet is growing, the capability is the best money can buy, and we have come a long way from the subsonic Harrier.

Last edited 1 month ago by Robert Blay
Luke
Luke (@guest_843184)
1 month ago

“This will be the first time that the Lightning Force has deployed to contribute to NATO Air Policing”.
Surely he must mean the British Lightning Force? Dutch F35A’s have been active on several NATO Air Policing missions in Poland and Bulgaria since 2022.

George
George (@guest_843350)
1 month ago

Bring back Tornadoes and jaguars aswell.

Graham Moore
Graham Moore (@guest_843360)
1 month ago

Perhaps of interest is that Iceland has no standing army and no air force but has a Coast Guard (which also operates land-based AD radars) rather than a conventional Navy.

In lieu of a standing army, under the Foreign Ministry they have a Crisis Response Unit of 30 active personnel from a roster of 200 for peacekeeping duties.

Luke
Luke (@guest_843400)
1 month ago

“marking the first time these advanced aircraft have participated in a NATO air policing deployment.”
Surely the first time for RAF lightnings. Not for other NATO F35 users. Dutch F35A’s have been involved in Air Policing in Eastern Europe since 2022.