• Northern Edge 17 Kicks Off

    Northern Edge 2017 is Alaska’s premier joint training exercise designed to practice operations, techniques and procedures as well as enhance interoperability among the services. Thousands of participants from all the services, Airmen, Soldiers, Sailors, Marines and Coast Guardsmen from active duty,

  • Northern Edge 2017

    U.S. Marine Corps FA-18C Hornets with Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 232 from Miramar, Calif., arrive at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, for Exercise Northern Edge, April 24, 2017. Various military aircraft from all services will practice operations, techniques and procedures while

  • Cruisin’ the Gulf of Alaska during Northern Edge

    Several ships from the Navy and Coast Guard cruised to Alaska to participate in the two week exercise Northern Edge. Some played the role of blue forces, or the 'good guys,' and others played the opposing forces role. Ships participating in the training were the USS Decatur, USS Lake Erie, USCG

  • Joint aviators 'fight' in Alaskan skies

    Training for combat comes in many shapes and forms, but for aviators military wide it comes in the form of Northern Edge.There are two types of aviators at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson during the exercise -- the 'good guys' and the aggressors.The exercise is an air campaign scenario, which means

  • Alaska offers unique training environment

    Exercise Northern Edge offers a unique training opportunity for members of all branches of the military - active duty, Reserve and Guard - on land, in the air and out to sea."There is no other place that provides what Alaska provides just through its sheer magnitude and size," said Maj. Gen. Thomas

  • Military aviators break service barriers

    Naval pilots begin training at Pensacola, Fla., and then branch off for individual service training. For two weeks every two years, many of them once again join forces for Exercise Northern Edge.During the exercise, Naval and Air Force pilots fly several hours each day over the skies and waters of

  • AWACs keep an eye out during Northern Edge

    To the average eye, the screen is a confusing jumble of lines, symbols and numbers. To Air Force Capt. Jon Quinlan, 961st Airborne Air Control Squadron, it's a "God's eye" view of the battlefield.Captain Quinlan, stationed at Kadena Air Base, Japan, is an air surveillance officer onboard an E-3

  • Support team makes Marine unit self-sufficient at Northern Edge 11

    Support at all levels of operations are present during the Pacific Command joint exercise Northern Edge 11 -- including servicemembers who construct, maintain and tear-down operating locations used during training.Those who make this happen at a communications site here are the motor transportation