Quick Facts
- Exercise: NATO Tiger Meet 2026
- Location: Araxos Air Base (116th Combat Wing), Greece
- Dates: 4–14 May 2026
- Participants: 12 squadrons from 9 countries, 50+ aircraft, 1,000 personnel
- Host: Hellenic Air Force 335th Squadron
- Public events: Spotters Day 8 May, Air Show 10 May
Le Programme de Combat
The exercise runs in two daily waves of Composite Air Operations (COMAO) — large-formation missions that simulate real combat scenarios. The mission types read like a textbook of modern air warfare: Defensive Counter-Air (protecting friendly airspace), Offensive Counter-Air (attacking enemy airfields and aircraft), Air Interdiction (hitting ground targets behind enemy lines), Dynamic Targeting (engaging time-sensitive targets), and SEAD/DEAD (destroying enemy radars and surface-to-air missiles). Supporting the fighters is a NATO AWACS — the airborne command post that provides the “God’s eye view” of the battlespace, vectoring fighters onto targets and warning them of threats. It’s exactly how NATO would fight a real air campaign.The Aircraft
This year’s Tiger Meet features a diverse mix of combat aircraft reflecting NATO’s multinational character. The Belgian Air Force brought F-16A/B MLU Fighting Falcons from 31 Smaldeel at Kleine Brogel. The Hungarian Air Force is flying five JAS 39C/D Gripens from the 101st Tactical Aviation Squadron “Pumas” — sporting a spectacular new tiger livery unveiled specifically for the exercise. Greece’s own 335th Mira operates F-16C/D Block 52+ fighters as the host unit. The Swiss Air Force — technically neutral but operationally NATO-compatible — is represented by five F/A-18C/D Hornets. Italy contributes HH-101 Caesar helicopters from 21° Gruppo at Grazzanise, adding a combat search-and-rescue dimension to the exercise.More Than Paintjobs
The tiger-themed paint schemes that make the Tiger Meet famous on aviation photography websites are not the point. They’re a tradition — and a remarkably effective one for building esprit de corps across national boundaries. But the real value is interoperability: forcing pilots who don’t normally fly together to plan, brief, execute, and debrief complex combat missions as a single integrated force. In a real conflict, NATO would need exactly this capability — Belgian F-16s working seamlessly with Greek F-16s, Hungarian Gripens, Swiss Hornets, and everyone else. Tiger Meet has been building this muscle memory since 1961.Araxos: Strategic Location
The choice of Araxos is not coincidental. Located on the Peloponnese peninsula overlooking the Ionian Sea, it puts the exercise area in airspace that faces the Eastern Mediterranean — a region where NATO’s eastern flank meets real-world tension. Greece’s proximity to Turkey (notably absent from this year’s exercise) and the broader Eastern Mediterranean security environment gives the flying an edge of realism that exercises in central Europe sometimes lack. The public Air Show on 10 May will give aviation enthusiasts a rare chance to see twelve different national air forces operating together. For the pilots, it’s another day of a two-week campaign that sharpens the skills they hope never to use for real — but know they might.Sources: NATO Tiger Association, Hellenic Air Force, Aviation News EU, Aerospace Global News, SWI swissinfo.ch



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