On Aug. 5, 2021 A-10 Warthog aircraft belonging to the Michigan Air National Guard have been the first US Air Force (USAF) aircraft to use a US civilian highway as runway when they landed on Michigan’s M-32 highway as part of the annual “Northern Strike” exercise.
The 127th wing said on its Facebook page: “We did it! We made history! We successfully landed and generated an A-10 Thunderbolt II from a U.S. Highway today!”
In addition to the four A-10s, two C-146A Wolfhounds also participated in the simulated “austere environment” operation.
“Today, we put four A-10s and two C-146s in on a less than one mile stretch of Highway 32 outside of Alpena,” Robins told the Military Times. “Today was our opportunity to put into practice what we’ve been training and practicing too. To engage in Agile combat employment as part of exercise Northern Strike.”
Northern Strike Exercise takes place on 148,000 acres of Camp Grayling and the Alpena Combat Readiness Training Center, along with 17,000 square miles between them. “This year’s Northern Strike exercise includes testing the rapid insertion of an Air Expeditionary Wing into a bare-base environment when the 127th Wing from Selfridge deploys up to the Alpena CRTC,” said USAF Brig. Gen. Bryan Teff, Michigan Air National Guard adjutant general for air. “They will establish logistics and communications in order to receive follow-on forces, generate mission employment, including the austere landing on M-32, and project combat power across all domains.”
As already reported, A-10 Warthog aircraft from the Michigan National Guard previously landed on highways in Haapsalu, Estonia during exercise Saber Strike 18.
Noteworthy the Warthog can be serviced and operated from austere bases with limited facilities near battle areas. Many of the aircraft’s parts are interchangeable left and right, including the engines, main landing gear and vertical stabilizers.
Specifically designed for close air support (CAS), its combination of large and varied ordnance load, long loiter time, accurate weapons delivery, austere field capability, and survivability has proven invaluable to the US and its allies.
The following video features Michigan Air National Guard an A-10 Thunderbolt II landing on a closed portion of highway in Alpena, Michigan.
Photo credit: Courtesy of MDOT
The Dec. 7, 1941 Japanese raid on Pearl Harbor The Dec. 7, 1941 Japanese raid… Read More
New flight-test campaign of the A400M Roll-on/Roll-off firefighting prototype kit Airbus Defence and Space has… Read More
Roger Ball! In the wake of the hard lessons of the Vietnam War, a pantheon… Read More
The making of the F-35 ‘Franken-bird’ F-35 maintenance experts at Hill Air Force Base (AFB)… Read More
Tom Morgenfeld Tom Morgenfeld graduated from the US Naval Academy in 1965 with a bachelor’s… Read More
The C-47 Dakota The Douglas DC-3, which made air travel popular and airline profits possible,… Read More