U.S. Air Force tests security procedures at key refueling base

Key Points
  • The U.S. Air Force’s 92nd Air Refueling Wing will conduct an active threat response exercise at Fairchild Air Force Base on Jan. 29, 2026, focused on insider threat procedures.
  • The drill has drawn attention amid Middle East tensions, as Fairchild hosts refueling assets critical to potential long-range U.S. operations, though the Air Force says the exercise is routine.

The United States Air Force’s 92nd Air Refueling Wing announced that Fairchild Air Force Base in Washington will conduct an active threat response exercise on January 29, 2026, as part of routine emergency readiness training for personnel across the installation.

According to the 92nd Air Refueling Wing, the exercise will involve base-wide participation and is designed to train units on insider threat response procedures. Personnel and visitors can expect to hear messages broadcast over the base klaxon system and observe Airmen practicing lockdown and emergency response actions in designated areas.

The wing said the exercise is scheduled in advance and is not expected to affect normal operations at key facilities, including the Medical Treatment Facility, the Base Exchange, or the Commissary. The Air Force emphasized that the activity is a planned training event and not a real-world incident.

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“The goal of the exercise is to provide insider threat emergency response training for units across the installation,” the 92nd Air Refueling Wing said in its notice to base personnel.

Fairchild Air Force Base is one of the U.S. Air Force’s primary air refueling hubs and is home to KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft assigned to Air Mobility Command. The base plays a central role in global air refueling and mobility operations, supporting U.S. and allied aircraft across multiple theaters.

Active threat response exercises are conducted regularly across U.S. military installations to ensure personnel are familiar with procedures for securing facilities, accounting for staff, and coordinating with base security forces during emergencies. These drills typically include communications testing, movement restrictions in exercise zones, and command-and-control coordination.

The Air Force said klaxon announcements and visible security activity during the exercise are part of the training design and should not cause alarm among base residents or nearby communities. The wing encouraged personnel and visitors to follow posted instructions and continue normal activities outside designated exercise areas.

The base has also served as a staging and support location for overseas operations in the past, making emergency preparedness training a regular requirement for its units and tenant organizations. The Air Force did not release details on the specific scenarios to be practiced during the exercise, citing standard security policy.

The exercise is receiving added attention because of heightened tensions in the Middle East and ongoing U.S. military posture adjustments in the region. Some observers have linked the timing of the drill to the possibility of increased operational activity in the event of a potential U.S. or allied strike against Iran, noting that Fairchild Air Force Base hosts refueling and mobility assets that would support long-range combat and logistics missions.

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