USAF EAMs – STEADFAST NOON DAY 11 – October 27

2 years ago
14

HIGHLIGHTS:
00:18 i'm an idiot
00:46 recordings actually start
07:47 someone tries to read an EAM as quickly as possible and fails
12:30 operator error (misreads Q as 6, issues correction)
12:45 ALE broadcast on 8992 kHz (this follows alleged ALE broadcasts on October 26th on 11175 kHz that I did not hear myself, and unusual ALE activity on the same day on 9025 kHz as documented on my EAM video for that day)

13:54 for the first 6GT7FI EAM, first reading of character 21 as "OSCAR"
14:38 for the first 6GT7FI EAM, second reading of character 21 as "OSCAR"
15:42 for the second 6GT7FI EAM, first reading of character 21 as "DELTA"
16:22 for the second 6GT7FI EAM, second reading of character 21 as "DELTA"

"Exercise Able Archer was an annual exercise by NATO military forces in Europe that practiced command and control procedures, with emphasis on transition from conventional operations to chemical, nuclear, and conventional operations during a time of war. When it was active, it was seen as the culmination of Exercise Autumn Forge. The exercise is best known for Able Archer 83, which began on November 7, 1983 and is believed to have nearly started a nuclear war with the Soviet Union." – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise_Able_Archer

"NATO’s annual nuclear exercise gets underway: Air forces from across NATO will exercise nuclear deterrence capabilities involving dozens of aircraft over north-western Europe starting on Monday (17 October 2022). The exercise, which runs until 30 October, is a routine, recurring training activity and it is not linked to any current world events." – https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natohq/news_208399.htm

Follow along yourself by tuning in and listening to;
- 4724 KHz, 8992 KHz, 11175, and/or 15016 KHz for US Air Force frequencies
- 4625 KHz ("UVB-76"), 4770 KHz, et al. for Russian military frequencies
(For more information, visit https://www.priyom.org)

You can use either your own shortwave radio or use an online client like http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/ or any of the WebSDR clients listed in the video. You can also do a search for "KiwiSDR" for many other online clients using a different software suite to achieve the same end.

If you'd like, can follow me on Twitter at @02_0279 for shortwave tweets.

#INTERNETFREQUENCYSQUAD #usaf #shortwaveradio #osint #russiaukrainewar

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