these exercises as representatives of TLP. They
present new developments from the course to
allied nations, so they can integrate them too.
AFM: Are specific missions created
for helicopters and how do they
integrate with fixed-wing aircraft?
Col Villar: The missions try to reproduce
the conditions of a real operation, which
means that helicopters and transport
aircraft participate. Helicopters will
be protected during the transit to the
area of operations or while extracting
a downed airman, for example.
AFM: What kind of management work
is required to stage a TLP course?
Col Villar: One of the biggest complications
is the co-ordination of participating assets,
not only the pilots on the ‘friendly’ side, but
also the opposition forces. These include
fighters simulating different real-world threats,
land-based and portable air defence systems
and electronic warfare systems, directed
against communications, radar and infrared.
Each mission is planned in great detail.
The objective is to provide a threat
proportional to the scale of the course and
with the ability to adapt the pressure of
the threat according to the development
of the mission. This offers the best
possible training and ensures the crews
meet the learning objectives set for each
mission. The ‘hostile’ systems are provided
by participating nations and electronic
warfare simulators and ground-based air
defence systems are sometimes used.
Another important issue is co-ordinating the
engineering side. The units have to generate
additional sorties alongside their normal
programming, which distorts maintenance chains.
AFM: How many countries
have participated, and how many
courses have been run?
Col Villar: Participating nations include
the ten nations that make up the Tactical
Leadership Programme: Belgium, Denmark,
France, Greece, Germany, Italy, the
Netherlands, Spain, the United Kingdom and
the United States. There are also invited
nations that have included Austria, Bulgaria,
Canada, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Estonia,
Finland, Hungary, New Zealand, Norway,
Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia,
Switzerland and Turkey, among others.
More than 200 flight courses have been
carried out since the beginning of TLP in
Germany, with almost 6,000 pilots graduating.
Since the move to Albacete, more than 100
academic courses and 28 flying courses
have been carried out, with 25,500 people
participating. Approximately 1,000 pilots
have graduated from flying courses since the
relocation to Los Llanos, including 92 from
the Spanish Air Force [Ejército del Aire].
AFM: How important is TLP to the
region and the Spanish Air Force?
Col Villar: TLP is already part of the city
of Albacete, the co-located Ala 14 and the
air force. The local population identifies
strongly with the air base and has become
accustomed to the temporary ‘invasions’ of
personnel from all over the world. The most
requested course is usually September,
which coincides with the Feria de Albacete
festival, popular among allied forces. TLP
also provides jobs to the local community and
participants contribute to the local economy.
AFM: How do Spanish Air Force
pilots and aircraft compare to those
of other participating countries?
Col Villar: Since Spain’s Ejército del
Aire began to participate in multinational
operations, our pilots have always had
international recognition, evidenced by
the fact that they have served as mission
commanders in operations since the
Balkans campaigns. Aircrew have kept
pace with aircraft capabilities. The EF-18 is
in very good shape after systems upgrades
including electronic warfare, and the
Eurofighter’s capabilities are still advancing.
Above: One of the rarer types involved at TLP 2018-1 was this Spanish Air Force TM.12D electronic
intelligence (ELINT) platform. TM.12D-72 ‘47-12’ is the sole example now operated by 472 Escuadrón based
at Torrejón. Stephan de Bruijn Below: Taking part in TLP 2017-3 last October, C.16-71 is a Tranche 3A EF2000
that had only recently been delivered to Ala 14 and was still without its fuselage serials. Spain’s expanded
presence in international operations since the mid-1990s has been paralleled by a more active role in TLP.
An Ejército del Aire Hornet pair on the runway threshold at Albacete for a TLP 2018-1 mission. The varied mission programme at TLP ranges from no-fly zone
enforcement to anti-surface warfare and from high-value asset defence to low-level attack. Stephan de Bruijn
AFM
84 // JUNE 2018 #363 http://www.airforcesmonthly.com
Tactical Leadership Programme