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11 August 2023
RAAF
After two weeks of high-end warfighting, Exercise Talisman Sabre 2023 (TS23) has officially closed.
Held across five states and territories over a two-week period, more than 34,000 military personnel from 13 nations joined forces across sea, land, air, cyber and space.
Australian and United States military personnel deployed alongside soldiers, sailors, marines and aviators from Canada, Fiji, France, Germany, Indonesia, Japan, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, the Republic of Korea, Tonga and the United Kingdom.
Military personnel from India, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand observed the exercise.
In its tenth iteration, TS23 reflected Australia's enduring military partnership with the United States and strengthened relationships between trusted allies and like-minded nations.
Chief of Joint Operations Lieutenant General Greg Bilton said TS23 had tested skills in combat readiness and interoperability between all the participants.
"This was a complex series of training activities that allowed us to test our combined capabilities across sea, land, air, cyber and space operations," Lieutenant General Bilton said.
"Tragically we lost four soldiers when their helicopter impacted waters near Lindeman Island during a night-time training activity. The immediate search-and-rescue operation, and support provided by our international defence partners and civilian agencies, was a comfort to our people, and a demonstration of our strong and genuine relationships.
"These relationships are strengthened by multi-national activities like Talisman Sabre, which ensure we are able to work together whenever and wherever needed."
United States Commanding General I Corps Lieutenant General Xavier T. Brunson said Talisman Sabre reinforced commitments to regional security.
"Talisman Sabre has strengthened our collective commitment to promoting peace, security and stability in the Indo-Pacific," Lieutenant General Brunson said.
"This event is a testament to the bond between nations, not just the Australian and United States alliance, but also the 11 other participating countries. The vast scope and scale of this year's exercise speaks to the shared understanding of maintaining a strong network of friends, partners and allies.
"By integrating all branches of the military, and multiple domains, we ensure we are better able to meet the security challenges of our times."
TS23 Exercise Director Brigadier Damian Hill praised communities across the country for their support throughout the two-week exercise.
"Across Queensland, including Norfolk Island, and throughout the Northern Territory, Western Australia and New South Wales, communities have enabled us to conduct our essential training in and around their public spaces. At times they've even played an active part in the exercise as role-players to make our training as realistic as possible," Brigadier Hill said.
"With their support we've been able to achieve increasingly complex activities that have tested our combined logistics capabilities and enhanced our interoperability in live-fire activities, field training exercises, amphibious landings, ground force manoeuvres, air combat and maritime operations."
Consisting of a field training exercise incorporating complex logistics across an area as vast as the Australian continent, amphibious landings, ground force manoeuvre, air combat and maritime operations, key TS23 activities included:
Stay tuned for more TS23 stories over the course of the week.
In memoriam
Defence offers its deepest condolences to the families of the four soldiers who tragically lost their lives during a training accident as part of Exercise Talisman Sabre 2023 off the coast of Queensland on Friday July 28, 2023.
Australian Army Captain Danniel Lyon, Lieutenant Maxwell Nugent, Warrant Officer Class Two Joseph Laycock and Corporal Alexander Naggs tragically died when the helicopter they were flying impacted waters near Lindeman Island.