Operation Bright Star

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The U.S. military gives the name Operation Bright Star to two different operations:

Contents

[edit] Biennial joint exercise

Bright Star is a joint exercise including air, ground, and naval elements. It is a central method for United States Central Command to build cooperation and readiness of allied nations within and around the Middle East.

Specifically, the exercise consists of coalition interoperability training, called Affiliation Training to teach nations how to operate with one another in a wartime environment, a Command Post Exercise designed to help standardize command and control procedures, and a large scale Field Training Exercise to practice everything together.

[edit] History

The exercise is rooted in the Camp David Accords. After its signing the military forces of Egypt and the United States agreed to conduct coalition training in Egypt. The first exercise was conducted in summer 1980 and only involved ground forces from the two principal nations. The following year a similar exercise was held using the same ground rules.

By 1983, the size of the forces involved prompted planners to hold the event every two years rather than annually. The exercise went under further evolution in 1985 with the inclusion of the American and Egyptian Air Forces. The respective navies and special forces joined the exercise in 1987.

After the 1989 event, the exercise was moved from the summer to the fall.[1]

[edit] Bright Star 95

In the Autumn of 1994, nearly 60,000 troops took part in the revived Bright Star Exercise, which included the first nations other than Egypt and the United States.

[edit] Bright Star 97

During the 1997 exercise, the U.S. Air Force encountered a fuel shortage. Their Egyptian counterparts demonstrated an ability to blend Jet A-1 fuel with additives to produce the JP-8 required by U.S/ aircraft.

[edit] Bright Star 98

The 1998 event focused on naval and amphibious warfare. It included the USS George Washington and USS John F. Kennedy Battle Groups and the Guam Amphibious Ready Group.

[edit] Bright Star 2000

The largest Bright Star exercise took place in October and November 1999 involving 11 nations and 70,000 personnel. A further 32 nations sent observers to monitor the exercise including Algeria, Australia, Bahrain, Belgium, Burundi, Canada, China, Congo, India, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Morocco, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, Poland, Qatar, Romania, Russia, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain, Syria, Tanzania, Tunisia, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Yemen, and Zimbabwe.

The exercise scenario involved a fictional hostile nation named "Orangeland" invading Egypt and trying to take control of the Nile River. The exercise coalition worked together, practicing fighting in the air, land, and sea domains, to defend the Nile and expel Orangeland.

A key piece of the training was a six-nation amphibious assault led by the Royal Navy.

[edit] Bright Star 02

Despite the events of 11 September 2001, the U.S. sent 23,000 troops to participate in Bright Star in October and November 2001. Elements of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment joined coalition partners to continue strengthening U.S.-Arab ties.

[edit] Bright Star 04

The U.S. did not participate in the exercise scheduled for Fall 2003 due to high military commitments Afghanistan War and the Iraq War.

[edit] Bright Star 06

Bright Star 05/06 began Sep. 10th.

[edit] Bright Star 08

The U.S. military participated in Operation Bright Star in 2007. Among the participants was the 42nd Infantry Division of the New York Army National Guard, the only U.S. National Guard division headquarters to deploy to Iraq, and 48th Brigade Special Troops Battalion, Georgia Army National Guard.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ The Bright Star exercises are named for the fiscal year that they fall in, consequently they take place in the calendar year before their number would indicate. For example, Bright Star 95 actually took place in the fall of 1994.

[edit] References

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