US, Allies Boost Readiness in Bamboo Eagle 25-1

The U.S. Air Force Warfare Center kicked off Bamboo Eagle 25-1-a combined exercise featuring the U.S. Air Force alongside the joint force and allied forces from the Royal Air Force, Royal Australian Air Force, and, for the first time, Royal Canadian Air Force designed to enhance cooperation, agility and combat readiness in order to improve interoperability.

At its core, Bamboo Eagle focuses on Agile Combat Employment -a strategy that ensures forces can quickly adjust, relocate and sustain operations from multiple locations, even in contested environments.

"We have had the luxury of operating from safe haven bases for many decades, and modern threats have fundamentally changed that reality," said Maj. Gen. Christopher Niemi, USAFWC commander. "Bamboo Eagle is a big part of helping us figure out how to manage those threats, and training together with our allies improves our ability to face those threats as a unified team."


The USAFWC designed Bamboo Eagle to test and refine joint and coalition forces' ability to deploy aircraft, equipment, and personnel to unfamiliar airfields, ensuring they can sustain operations under pressure. The goal is to build a more agile and resilient force capable of deterring threats in a rapidly evolving security environment.

"This is the largest number of aircraft we've deployed for an exercise at Nellis (AFB) since we first attended Red Flag in 1980," said RAAF Group Captain Stewart Seeney. "These exercises provide a realistic training environment where we can integrate different capabilities and develop our ability to work with key allies and partners. For many of our aviators, deploying on these exercises is a career highlight and is not an experience that can be easily replicated elsewhere."

As global security challenges continue to evolve, exercises like Bamboo Eagle ensure the U.S. and its allies remain ready to respond together. By strengthening these international and joint partnerships, the exercise reinforces the commitment to stability, security and cooperation across the Indo-Pacific.

U.S. Air Force Logo
/U.S. Air Force Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).View in full here.