Defending the United Kingdom defined RAF Coningsby’s contributions to Exercise Agile Warrior, as the Lincolnshire Station tested its own reactions to threats from hostile adversaries over the last two weeks.

Exercise Agile Warrior assessed the RAF’s ongoing ability to defend the UK when under direct attack from an adversary, ensuring the RAF can continue protecting the country no matter what challenges it faces.

Group Captain Andy Hampshire, Station Commander at RAF Coningsby, led the Station throughout the two weeks. He said: “We have to understand and articulate the threat we face. Agile Warrior tested every part of how we prepare for an attack, how we defend against one, and how rapidly we can recover and get back into the fight. The people of this Station rose to every one of those challenges.”

The Base Operations Centre team had no idea what the exercise would bring each day; every new scenario was a closely guarded secret, and every new scenario demanded an answer which detailed how the Station would respond to a series of hypothetical (but realistic) escalating threats.

The atmosphere at RAF Coningsby reflected the immediacy and seriousness that Agile Warrior demanded, as aircraft and personnel were dispatched across the Station – responding to rapidly emerging exercise scenarios with focus and professionalism – ready for whatever the exercise would throw at them next.

Coningsby engineering personnel teamed up with the Army’s 39 Engineer Regiment to learn the basics of rapid runway repair. Chief Tech Brereton was part of the Coningsby team. He said: “This scenario gave us an appreciation of the battle damage assessment process. We had to find the quickest way of getting the airfield back into use by assessing the damage and prioritising the repairs to rapidly enable effective aircraft operation.”

Wing Commander French, Officer Commanding Operations Support Wing, was the Exercise Director at RAF Coningsby. She and her team spent months in careful planning, creating exercise scenarios that would test the Station’s ability to respond – even under the most difficult conditions.

Wing Commander French said: “You’ve got to be real about this; there are no shortcuts. Successful defence of the United Kingdom depends on a detailed understanding of everything we do here at Coningsby; how it works, why it works – and applying that understanding to create challenging situations and scenarios that the Station must then find solutions to.”

Across Agile Warrior, RAF Coningsby was recognised as a standout performer, but Group Captain Hampshire will not let the Station rest on its laurels. “There is always more to do, no matter how well resourced you are. But this exercise has proved that Coningsby and its people, civilian and military, are a credit to the Royal Air Force, and are prepared to do what is necessary to defend the United Kingdom.”

The aircraft moves have involved pilots taxiing Typhoon aircraft from their usual dispersal points, to areas of the RAF station not usually accomodating aircraft, including roadways and in between station infrastructure.

As part of Ex Agile Warrior, RAF Coningsby encountered a simulated UAS attack causing a fuel spillage, requiring response from military & civilian Emergency Services.

Images of Royal Engineers teaching RAF Personnel at RAF Coningsby to build a make shift road if runway was damage, on 04th March 2026.

As part of Ex Agile Warrior RAF Coningsby encountered a simulated UAS attack causing a fuel spillage, requiring response from military & civilian Emergency Services. Ex Agile Warrior is testing RAF Coningsby’s response to major incidents from airfield damage to major fuel spills.

Images of Royal Engineers teaching RAF Personnel at RAF Coningsby to build a make shift rroad if runway was damage, on 04th March 2026.

Images of Typhoons lined up on the ASP and Air Marshal Marshall, Air & Space Commander, arriving at RAF Coningsby by helicopter JUNO on the 4th March 2026.

RAF Coningsby prep live actors as part of a simulated Road Traffic Collision (RTC), this simulation is part of the stations ongoing Exercise Ex Agile Warrior.

29 Squadron have done live aircraft dispersals across unit at RAF Coningsby as part of Exercise Agile Warrior.
The aircraft moves have involved pilots taxiing Typhoon aircraft from their usual dispersal points, to areas of the RAF station not usually accomodating aircraft, including roadways and in between station infrastructure.

Leave a Reply