Across these nine updates, NATOâs air enterprise is doing three things at once: sharpening high-end combat skills, tightening Integrated Air and Missile Defence (IAMD) on the eastern flank, and cycling Allied detachments through Baltic and Black Sea operating locations to keep a persistent, credible air policing posture in place.
We start in the United Kingdom with Cobra Warrior 2026-1, the Royal Air Forceâs premier tactical air training event. The exercise is designed to push aircrews through complex, high-end warfighting scenarios and culminates months of preparation aimed at keeping Allied air forces integrated, adaptable, and ready. The focus is composite air operations: joint mission planning, tactical execution, and the synchronization of tactics, techniques, and procedures against a peer-competitor threat. Cobra Warrior also doubles as a leadership pipeline, producing mission commanders and functional team leaders able to direct coalition air operations in a resilient, decentralized command environment.
That emphasis on integration and readiness carries into Ramstein, where Admiral Giuseppe Cavo Dragone and the NATO Military Committee visited Allied Air Command on March 25â26, 2026. The visit underscored the strategic importance of Allied air and space power in maintaining deterrence and defence, with a clear theme: trust, cohesion, and reliability among Allies are not ânice-to-haves,â but core strategic assets. The discussions highlighted how NATO secures its airspaceâparticularly along the eastern flankâthrough an integrated air and missile defence framework that combines air policing, ballistic missile defence, and vigilance activities such as Eastern Sentry, supported by continuous intelligence and information sharing and effective command and control across the Alliance.
From there, the story shifts to the operational reality of deterrence and assurance: rotational deployments that keep NATOâs defensive posture visible and responsive from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea.
Over Lithuania, Romania assumed air policing duties from Ć iauliai Air Base, deploying F-16s and roughly 100 personnel as part of Eastern Sentry. This marks Romaniaâs fourth contribution to Baltic air policing from Lithuania, and the rotation is strengthened by a parallel French Rafale presence operating from the same base. Two detachments, two aircraft types, one missionâcontinuous monitoring and the ability to intercept aircraft approaching NATO territory when required.
Franceâs own deployment â four Rafales to Ć iauliai â took the lead for NATOâs Baltic Air Policing mission as Spain rotated out. It also marked Franceâs ninth rotation in Lithuania, with additional deployments to Ămari, Estonia reinforcing a consistent pattern: the Alliance sustains air defence through routine, interoperable, multinational detachments that can plug into the same command-and-control architecture on day one.
Estonia saw the same continuity from a different angle. Portugal deployed F-16s to Ămari Air Base to assume Baltic air policing responsibilities from Italy, keeping fighters on quick reaction alert under the Combined Air Operations Centre in Uedem, Germany. The Portuguese rotation included four aircraft and up to 95 personnel and marked Portugalâs ninth participation in NATO air policing overallâits second time conducting the mission from Ămari after earlier deployments to Ć iauliai.
The handovers matter because they demonstrate what NATOâs air policing model is built to do: sustain uninterrupted coverage, absorb transitions cleanly, and maintain readiness at speed. Italyâs concluding rotation in Estonia is a good example. After two consecutive deployments at Ămari, Italian Eurofighters handed over to Portugal, closing out a demanding stretch that included continuous quick reaction alert, more than 1,300 flying hours, multinational training, air-to-air missions alongside multiple Allies, and activities designed to validate procedures against emerging threats.
Spainâs conclusion in Lithuania followed a similar pattern. After two consecutive rotations at Ć iauliai, Spanish F-18M Hornets logged more than 900 flying hours and conducted more than 25 âAlpha Scramblesâ in response to unidentified aircraft approaching NATO airspace. The detachment also took part in multiple multinational exercises and executed Agile Combat Employment activities, including cross-servicing with the Lithuanian Air Force: practical, hands-on steps that expand operational flexibility and help sustain dispersed operations. Spain also contributed counter-unmanned aircraft systems protection at Ć iauliai and supported air-to-air refuelling with A400M aircraft, reinforcing interoperability and readiness across the region.
In the Black Sea region, Romaniaâs south-eastern air defence mission saw two major transitions.
First, Germany concluded two consecutive rotations at Mihail KogÄlniceanu Air Base, having been deployed since summer 2025. German Eurofighters accumulated more than 600 flying hours and flew over 470 sorties, including more than 25 Alpha Scrambles â maintaining a persistent, responsive presence close to a strategically sensitive air approach. Germany also conducted flexible deterrence options under Eastern Sentry and routinely operated alongside Romanian F-16s, building interoperability in the day-to-day rhythm of real-world vigilance.
Then the Royal Air Force deployed Eurofighter Typhoons to Borcea Air Base to take over the enhanced air policing mission from the outgoing German detachment for the next four months. The deploymentâsupported by around 200 personnelâpaired British quick reaction alert duties with Romanian Air Force cooperation and highlighted Agile Combat Employment in practice: operating from an alternative Romanian location and integrating mission execution through close coordination with NATOâs air command-and-control architecture. The result is a flexible, scalable posture designed to adjust rapidly to shifts in the security environment while keeping air policing continuous.
Taken together, these stories show NATOâs air mission in full motion: high-end tactical training that builds mission command and coalition proficiency; senior-level focus on air and space power as strategic enablers of deterrence; and a steady cadence of rotations that keeps fighters, enablers, and command-and-control networks aligned across the Baltic and Black Sea regions. The throughline is consistent: readiness, interoperability, and the ability to sustain persistent defensive coverage across the eastern flank.
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