 With your look around the Air Force, I'm technical sergeant Eric Mann. Cope North 2022 is a humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, large force employment and aerial combat training exercise with air forces from Australia, Japan and the United States participating. The training reinforces the combined ability and interoperability of the three countries to support the Indo-Pacific during a natural disaster. More than 2,500 U.S. armed forces are training alongside about 1,000 combined Japanese Air Self-Defense Force and Royal Australian Air Force counterparts. Eight additional countries are observing key parts of the exercise, with the possibility of participating in the future. The Mission Execution Excellence Program, or MEAP, aims to save the Air Force about $80 million a year by increasing fuel efficiency and optimizing flights. The program is looking at the C-17 Globemaster III first as the largest consumer of fuel in the fleet. MEAP will work with pilots, mission planners and maintainers to integrate improved techniques into their daily operations. Roberto Guerrero, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Air Force Operational Energy, says they've met with commercial airlines and transport companies to see how those businesses use 21st century tools to improve efficiency. He says there are lots of ways to support airmen in flying more efficiently. For the first time, an all-military team of cyber airmen deployed the F-35A Lightning II's Autonomic Logistics Information System to support a fighter squadron. The system is a secured network that carries critical information to and from each jet. It allows pilots to plan missions, maintainers to track parts and maintenance, and schedulers and engineers to follow the health of the fleet. The all-military team takes over from contractors, part of the planned evolution of the F-35 program, making the system rapidly deployable and more agile. The deployment took place at Red Flag, a large force exercise at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada. And that's your look around the Air Force.