[ItaMilRadar] US Air Force ISR aircraft redeploy eastbound and confirm Europe’s logistics role for Middle East operation

Flusso automatizzato di articoli e notizie provenienti da fonti relative al monitoraggio del traffico ADS-B, occasionalmente anche del traffico marittimo AIS
Rispondi
Avatar utente
RSS Feed Bot
"Il mantra della Loggia"
"Il mantra della Loggia"
Messaggi: 721
Iscritto il: 16 gen 2026, 17:52
Località: Cyberspazio

[ItaMilRadar] US Air Force ISR aircraft redeploy eastbound and confirm Europe’s logistics role for Middle East operation

Messaggio da RSS Feed Bot »

In recent hours, two U.S. Air Force intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets have been observed moving eastbound toward the Middle East, reinforcing once again the central role played by European bases in supporting U.S. air operations beyond the Mediterranean. The movements involve an E-11A (reg. 12-9506) battlefield airborne communications node and an RC-135V (reg. 64-14848) Rivet Joint, both following routes that underline well-established transatlantic and intra-theatre logistics patterns rather than an abrupt surge. The first aircraft, an E-11A, is currently en route toward the Middle East and is expected to make a stopover at Souda Bay Air Base before continuing further east. Souda Bay remains, today as in recent years, one of the most important U.S. and NATO hubs in the Eastern Mediterranean, routinely used as a refuelling and staging point for missions directed toward the Levant, the Gulf and beyond. The E-11A, a high-value asset used to provide airborne communications relay and battle management functions, typically follows this route when redeploying to support operations in the region. At the same time, an RC-135V Rivet Joint, callsign OLIVE48, has been tracked moving across Europe and making a stop at RAF Mildenhall. While its eastbound flight might at first glance suggest a reinforcement, this movement should instead be read as a routine rotation. The aircraft is effectively replacing another RC-135V that arrived at Mildenhall yesterday after completing its deployment in the Gulf area, before returning onward to the United States. In other words, there is continuity rather than escalation in the Rivet Joint presence over the Middle East. This distinction matters. The Rivet Joint fleet is persistently tasked in the region to collect signals intelligence and maintain situational awareness, and aircraft rotations are carefully sequenced to avoid gaps in coverage. The arrival of OLIVE48 does not increase the number of RC-135s operating over the Gulf; it simply ensures that the mission continues without interruption following weeks of sustained activity. What clearly emerges, once again, is the structural importance of European bases for U.S. Air Force long-range operations. Facilities such as Mildenhall in the United Kingdom and Souda Bay in Greece function as indispensable logistics nodes, enabling crew rest, maintenance, refuelling and mission reconfiguration. Without this network, sustained ISR and command-and-control operations in the Middle East would be far more complex and resource-intensive. Following yesterday’s return flight of an RC-135 from the Gulf and today’s eastbound redeployment, the broader picture remains one of steady-state posture rather than sudden reinforcement. However, the visibility of these flights serves as a reminder that Europe is not a peripheral transit zone, but a core operational backbone for U.S. power projection toward the Middle East. As tensions across the region continue to fluctuate, these well-rehearsed air bridges ensure that Washington can adapt quickly, rotating high-value assets as needed while relying on a mature and resilient European basing architecture.

Source: https://www.itamilradar.com/2026/01/28/ ... perations/
Rispondi