By Airman 1st Class Ridge Shan, 56th Fighter Wing Public
Affairs / Published December 16, 2015
LUKE AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. (AFNS) -- Maj. Morten Hanche, a
Royal Norwegian Air Force F-35 Lightning II student pilot training with the
62nd Fighter Squadron, flew the first Norwegian F-35 sortie here Dec. 14.
Hanche has been training at Luke Air Force Base under the
instruction of American pilots for the past several months in order to become
Norway's first F-35 pilot and instructor, part of a wider effort to foster
international cooperation of global F-35 fleet development, which include the
air forces of partner nations Australia and Italy.
"The flight was smooth and it was a good sortie,"
Hanche said. "We worked a close air support scenario with ground
controllers and practiced integration with ground forces. The aircraft was very
well-behaved."
This event, which marked the first flight of a
Norwegian-bound F-35 at the hands of a Norwegian pilot, was attended and
observed by Maj. Gen. Per-Egil Rygg, the Royal Norwegian Air Force chief of
staff.
"The way Luke Air Force Base and the 56th Fighter Wing
have handled this flight and the overall training of our pilots is
extraordinary," Rygg said. "This partnership is very important to
Norway, and I'm very proud today to have seen the first time a Norwegian F-35
has been flown by a Norwegian pilot."
The F-35, produced at the Lockheed Martin Corp. facility in
Texas, is one of the first two Norwegian F-35s produced; both of which are
currently stationed at Luke AFB for development and training.
Lt. Col. Gregory Frana, the 62nd FS commander, flew
alongside Hanche and guided him through the sortie. Frana commands the training
efforts of the international pilots assigned to the 62nd FS.
"This was a momentous occasion for Norway, for Luke and
for the United States Air Force," Frana said. "We've been standing up
all of our operations here with our international partnerships in mind, and
these relationships will continue to develop as we receive more F-35s from all
of our eight partner nations."
Two other Norwegian pilots are now undergoing the initial
academic phase of their training here, with more slated to arrive in March. The
pilots will eventually join Hanche in flying the F-35. Norwegian maintainers
are also at Luke AFB, learning to repair and maintain the F-35s that will one
day be on their home flightlines in Norway. Eventually, all of the airmen will
return home to help develop the training program for their own air force.
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