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Home Air Force

Plan to power up the air domain

in Air Force
Dynamic moves for Cope North

Royal Australian Air Force Leading Aircraftman Carl Dransfield from No. 27 Squadron assists United States Air Force (USAF) personnel unload a flightline generator from a USAF C-17A Globemaster III during Exercise Cope North 24, Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, USA. *** Local Caption *** Exercise Cope North 24 is a multilateral field training exercise involving the United States Air Force (USAF), Japan Air Self-Defense Force (Koku-Jieitai), and the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), conducted from Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, from 5 to 23 February 2024. The exercise is focused on enhancing Australia, the United States, and Japan’s integration, deepening our relationships, and strengthening engagement to ensure the capability to deliver air power and agile operations in the Indo-Pacific region. The RAAF has deployed a C-27J Spartan and a contingency response squadron, as well as support and operations personnel. RAAF aviators will also be integrated within a Multinational Task Force Headquarters.

Air Force will have enhanced strike and air-mobility options across the north-east Indian Ocean through to the Pacific, thanks to large funding commitments in the 2024 Integrated Investment Program.

About $28 billion to $33 billion is earmarked to bolster RAAF capabilities to support Defence’s new strategy of deterring potential adversaries from moving against Australia, as well as providing aerial surveillance of maritime approaches.

More than $10 billion will go to air mobility, with a focus on acquiring 20 C-130J Hercules aircraft to replace the current fleet of 12 older-model Hercules aircraft.

An estimated $10 billion to $12 billion will continue combat aircraft upgrades to mitigate threats and maintain interoperability with partners and allies.

This includes lethality and survivability enhancements for the F-35A Lightning II, F/A-18F Super Hornet and EA-18G Growlers.

About $5 billion to $7 billion will go to air-launched strike weapons, including the development of hypersonic missiles.

An investment of more than $4 billion will help develop and acquire uncrewed air systems, including the MQ-28A Ghost Bat.

The next stage of development of the MQ-28A Ghost Bat is already approved, which will progress the MQ-28A’s integration with crewed aircraft, and the MQ-28A’s mission payloads, integrated combat system and autonomous systems.

Air intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance will receive nearly $4 billion for P-8A Poseidon sustainment and upgrades, acquisition of a fourth MQ-4C Triton remotely piloted aircraft and delivery of an MC-55A Peregrine fleet.

Much of the more than $14 billion in missile defence will go towards the joint air battle management system, airborne early warning and control systems and the Jindalee Operational Radar Network.

Northern air base infrastructure will benefit from about $6 billion, and about $4 billion will go towards bolstering resilience of fuel supplies.

The National Defence Strategy and Integrated Investment Program are available on the National Defence Strategy website.

Public release

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Tags: upgrades
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