A 50-strong detachment supports the F/A-18 jets from Fliegerstaffel 11 at Meiringen during the flying training; pilots, maintainers and force protection personnel ensure the jets are prepared, turned around and flown during training drills demonstrating their skills in multinational composite air operations.
“This is the 24th time that Fliegerstaffel 11 – the Tiger Squadron of the Swiss Air Force – has participated in a NATO Tiger Meet,” said Lieutenant Colonel Andrin Witschi, responsible for the Swiss Tiger detachment. “Tiger Meets are a great experience for our team. Deploying our fighter aircraft to another base some 1000 kilometres away from our home in Switzerland boosts our expeditionary skills and resilience as a unit. Our pilots hugely benefit from this challenging training event. They fly with our international partners, go through in-person flight planning and participate in large force employment. All this hones their flying skills – something you don’t get when you only fly in your known environment at home,” he concluded.
“Fliegerstaffel 11 is a busy fighter unit tasked with important real-world missions,” he said. “However, we have to take time off our schedule to train individually and collectively – this is mission-essential. This year, we will once again not be able to stay to the end of the Tiger Meet, as we redeploy on June 12 to get ready to protect the skies in Switzerland during the Summit on Peace in Ukraine taking place on June 15 and 16at the Bürgenstock resort in the canton of Nidwalden,” he concluded.
Established in 1952, Swiss Fliegerstaffel 11 based at Meiringen Air Base, Switzerland has been a member of the NATO Tiger Association since 1981.