The European Union is looking to create a consortium for military aerial refueling in response to a clear deficiency on the part of NATO’s European members in this capability during the alliance’s military intervention in Libya last year, said NATO Deputy Secretary General Alexander Vershbow. The United States “carried the lion’s share of the load” in aerial refueling during that operation, Vershbow told reporters in Washington, D.C., on Aug. 29. Now, the EU is looking to create its own tanker fleet for “EU-led” or “NATO-led operations,” he said. The consortium won’t necessarily be based on the model of the three-aircraft C-17 wing jointly operated by a consortium of 10 NATO and two alliance partner nations at Papa AB, Hungary, said Vershbow. The multinational C-17 organization operates “kind of like a timeshare arrangement,” he said. “Your investment gives you a certain number of hours of use . . . for a month.” Vershbow said he doesn’t know whether that model would work for aerial refueling, but the arrangement could be “similar.”
Due to the prolonged delay in deliveries of the Tech Refresh 3 version of the F-35 fighter, Denmark is pulling six of its TR-2-configured F-35 jets stationed in the U.S. back to home base in order to consolidate aircraft and get better training for its pilots and maintainers, the Danish…