Multinational air power takes over Australia’s Top End for Pitch Black 26

Defense Group of uniformed air force personnel boarding a large military aircraft via mobile stairs guided by a crew member in a high visibility vest
RAAF

Australia’s Northern Territory will serve as a hub of international air power from July 20 to August 7, 2026, as 19 partner nations take part in Exercise Pitch Black 26, a three-week air combat training exercise.

The exercise officially launched on July 16, 2026, when Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) Air Commodore Matthew McCormack, who is commanding this year’s edition, joined detachment commanders from participating countries at RAAF Base Darwin. 

In total, the exercise has brought 100 aircraft and 2,500 personnel from around the world into RAAF Bases Darwin and Tindal, turning both installations into temporary centers of multinational air operations.

Why the Northern Territory is an ideal training ground

Group of diverse military personnel in flight suits standing on an airstrip with fighter jets in the background under a clear blue sky
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The location is far from incidental. Northern Australia is home to one of the largest military training areas in the world, offering vast, largely unrestricted airspace that few other regions can match. This degree of space matters for an exercise built around modern fighter aircraft, many of which need significant room to operate at full capability.

McCormack pointed to that airspace directly, noting that some of the world’s most advanced fighters require exactly the kind of operating room that the Top End provides.

As #PitchBlack26 heats up, we're shining a spotlight on the combat support teams who keep the mission moving. No. 23 Squadron at RAAF Base Amberley is supporting international tanker aircraft and ensuring safe, efficient airfield operations ✈️ pic.twitter.com/06Q5MF0z0l

— Royal Australian Air Force (@AusAirForce) July 17, 2026

What Exercise Pitch Black training involves

At its core, Pitch Black is built around large-force employment missions, exercises that bring together fighter aircraft, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance platforms, air mobility assets, and command-and-control elements in scenarios meant to mirror real-world combat conditions.

McCormack described the exercise as war fighter-focused, designed to expose both Australian aviators and their international counterparts to complex, high-end air combat scenarios. The goal, he said, is to sharpen decision-making and tactical skill while preparing participating forces to operate effectively in contested environments.

Building relationships that extend beyond the flightline

While the flying is the centerpiece, McCormack suggested the exercise carries value that extends well beyond the aircraft themselves. With so many nations training side by side, Pitch Black gives participants a chance to understand how other air forces operate, something that he feels would pay dividends if those same nations should ever need to work together in real conflict.

That collaboration isn’t limited to pilots. Aircrew, mission planners, engineers and support personnel from across the participating nations are all working together throughout the exercise, building the kind of professional familiarity that underpins effective coalition operations when it matters most.

Staged every two years, Pitch Black has become one of the Royal Australian Air Force’s signature international exercises, combining demanding air combat training with a rare opportunity for allied air forces to train, coordinate and build trust together at scale.

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