Thailand’s military is working to further link major weapon systems
By: Valerie Insinna
SURAT
THANI AIR FORCE BASE, Thailand, and WASHINGTON — The words “network-centric Air Force”
are emblazoned all over the buildings that make up the Royal Thai Air Force’s Wing 7, located at Surat Thani Air
Force Base, southern Thailand.
One could find it in conference rooms, in
promotional videos created to highlight the wing’s significance and on a mural
in one space where pilots grab coffee between briefings or sorties.
Wing 7 is known for being the home of
Thailand’s 11 Gripen fighter jets, but its squadron commanders and pilots say
the Thai military’s indigenous network, called Link T, is just as critical to
the wing’s future.
Having
“network-centric wings actually is kind of the big picture of the Royal Thai
Air Force,” said Group Capt. Prachya Tippayarat, deputy commander of the RTAF’s
Wing 7. “We had to start almost from — well, not from zero — but we had do
something to be able to reach that [vision].”
Link T, a tactical data link manufactured
by Saab and managed by
Thailand, makes it possible for Wing 7’s Gripens and its two Saab 340 airborne
early warning aircraft to share a common battlespace picture. Defense News
visited the Wing 7 from Nov. 27-28 and accepted airfare and accommodations from
Saab.
Now, the Thai military is working to
expand Link T’s reach to make its major weapon systems more interoperable — a
goal that might sound familiar to observers in the United States.
Top U.S. military leaders such as Air
Force Chief of Staff Gen. Dave Goldfein and Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John
Richardson have rallied around the idea that future battlefields will require
the services’ platforms to be networked
together to seamlessly
share data.
Thailand has close ties with its
neighbors through the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. The country is
also allied with China and the United States, and it conducts military
exercises with both nations, such as the “Falcon Strike 2018” air force drills
that occurred this September with China and the multinational “Pitch Black”
exercise with Australia, the United States, Canada and others.
Because Thailand has good relationships
with countries that may be competing or are adversaries with each other,
protecting Thai sovereignty — and its information — is of primary importance to
its government.
“We aim to have our own defense. We have
to be able to stand on our own feet in defense of the country,” Tippayarat
said. Link T gives the military “[a] link that we can use every time,” no
matter what the situation or threat.
Link T is “easy to use,” he said. “We see
everything that happens around us. … We can see a friendly force. We can see
our enemies.”
The path to developing Link T began
around 2008, as Royal Thai Air Force leaders began calling for a more digital
air force that would be able to use emerging computer technology and understand
English — which Thai service officials saw as fundamental so that
foreign-derived technical publications and tactics could be understood by
pilots and maintainers, Tippayarat said.
The
“network-centric Air Force” concept then evolved to include the Link T network,
Gripen C fighter jets, Saab 340 early airborne warning craft equipped with
Saab’s Erieye radar, and the various organizational and maintenance support
needed to keep operations going, he said.
The Air Force plans to add
Link T to its fleet of Northrop F-5s, and Tippayarat said some
aircraft have already received that modification, although he could not say how
many. The service is also planning to add the data link to other military
aircraft, but the country’s F-16s will not receive that upgrade, but rather
continue using the NATO standard Link 16.
That’s a good thing, Tippayarat said,
because it gives the Royal Thai Air Force options on how much data it wants to
share or safeguard, depending on the circumstance.
“We have no problem working with the two
links. We see that as a strong point because if we have to do something on our
own [without allies’ support], then we can use Link T,” he said. “Doesn’t
matter when, how or whatever. We can use it on our own. And if we have to join
with other coalitions, we have other [data links] — Link 16 for the F-16.”
Tippayarat wouldn’t go into details on
the measures the pilots take to protect data when they conduct training with
China, but did say it’s important to trust in partners while knowing the limits
of what can be shared.
“We know what we are doing,” he said.
“The last three years that we train with
them, of course it is eye-opening for us. We do feel privileged because not
many countries in the world have a chance to do an air-to-air flight with the
[Chinese] air force,” he said. “We learn from them a lot, and we hope that they
learn from us also.”
Source: defensenews.com
Published
on May 21, 2018
RTAF
F-5 E/F Tiger II & Tigris/Super Tigris in Thailand
Saab Gripen RTAF: Details
Northrop F-5E Tiger II & III: Details
RTAF Saab 340
AEW&C: Details
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