US B-52s arrive in Darwin

The US military has flown two Boeing B-52 bombers into Darwin ahead of multi-national war games hosted by the Australian Defence Force (ADF).

The B-52s, weighing more than 125,000 kilograms each, will form the tactical backbone of a training exercise dubbed Pitch Black, according to military officials.

Two teams made up of men and women from the US armed forces have also arrived in the Top End to take part in the exercise.

The simulated conflict will involve long-range tactics in the vast, empty airspace between Darwin and Katherine.

US Marines began arriving in the Territory on a six-month rotational basis in mid-2012 and have since undertaken joint training exercises with the ADF.

According to a statement, the rotations of US military equipment and personnel in the Pacific region "enhance US ability to train, exercise and operate with Australia and with other allies and partners across the region, further enabling the US to work together with these nations to respond more quickly to a wide range of challenges, including humanitarian crises and disaster relief, as well as promoting security cooperation efforts across the region".

Decisions on future rotations remain under discussion, the statement adds.

US fighters, bombers for Top End

A US ARMY General has been reported as saying American fighter planes and bombers would be based in Darwin and Tindal under a planned military expansion in the region.

General Carlisle is reported saying that the US would send, "fighters, tankers and, at some point in the future, maybe bombers on a rotational basis" to Darwin, before being rotated through Tindal RAAF base near Katherine, about 300km south of Darwin.

US Air Force plans to spread its fighting wings

An American international politics publication has reported that the US Air Force plans to dispatch fighter jets and tanker aircraft to northern Australia in the next year. The report cited comments by the Chief of USAF Operations in the Pacific, General Herbert 'Hawk' Carlisle, in Washington this week. In a breakfast media briefing, he is reported saying the US would send "fighters, tankers and, at some point in the future, maybe bombers on a rotational basis" to Darwin.

A Darwin community group, BaseWatch, said it was disappointing to find out about any proposed escalation of the US presence in the Northern Territory through the foreign media. A spokesman for the group said locals had no way of knowing whether there were limits to the escalation of the US presence in Darwin.