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TALISMAN SABRE 2025 Officially Ends

An Australian Army M1A2 SEPv3 Abrams main battle tank provides support for soldiers during an urban assault at Shoalwater Bay Training Area as part of TALISMAN SABRE 25 [© ADoD: Cpl Michael Rogers]

After three weeks of intensive training and high-end warfighting scenarios Exercise TALISMAN SABRE 2025 has officially ended.

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Press Release, Canberra, 08 August 2025: After three weeks of intensive training and high-end warfighting scenarios across Australia, and for the first time in Papua New Guinea, Exercise TALISMAN SABRE 2025 has officially ended. The 11th iteration included live-fire and land combat exercises, amphibious landings, air combat and large-scale maritime activities.

A Royal Australian Navy Landing Craft lands an Australian Army Bushmaster Protected Mobility Vehicle during the amphibious assault on TALISMAN SABRE 2025 [© ADoD: LSIS Connor Morrison]

Chief of Joint Operations Vice Admiral Justin Jones said the scale of this year’s exercise was unprecedented.

“This year has been the largest iteration of Exercise TALISMAN SABRE in its 20-year history,” Vice Admiral Jones said. “We’ve had 32 ships, eight of which were amphibious ships, and two carrier strike groups from the UK and US. We’ve had 297 aircraft participate and 2000 sorties. We’ve moved 32 million kilogrammes of cargo and over 16,000 military personnel around the country.

“It is an extensive, tactical field training exercise by nature, over an extraordinary geographic scale; approximately 5300 kilometres from Christmas Island, north-west of Australia, through to the southern NSW coast.”

New Zealand Army soldiers from the 1st Battalion, Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment dismounts from a NZLAV during TALISMAN SABRE 2025 at Shoalwater Bay Training Area [© ADoD: Cpl Janet Pan]

Nineteen nations operated together across the five operating domains of sea, land, air, cyber and space. At its peak, 43,000 personnel from Australia, Canada, Fiji, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, PNG, the Philippines, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand, Tonga and the United Kingdom trained with the United States, while personnel from Malaysia and Vietnam attended as observers.

Australian Army soldiers and Papua New Guinea Defence Force soldiers are brought ashore by Papua New Guinea Defence Force coxswains during TALISMAN SABRE 2025 in Papua New Guinea [© ADoD: Cpl Cameron Pegg]

Exercise Director Brigadier Damian Hill said it enhanced the ADF’s interoperability with partner nations and a shared commitment to the Indo-Pacific. “TALISMAN SABRE 2025 is about demonstrating multinational interoperability and our willingness to work together while supporting a peaceful, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific,” Brigadier Hill said.

“We spent a great deal of 2024 engaging with our partner nations, asking them what they wanted to achieve, which is a significant change to the way we’re undertaking TALISMAN SABRE, and it’s bearing fruit.

“During TALISMAN SABRE we saw partner nations undertake training that is important to them and saw those close relationships and bonds form.”

Soldiers from the French Army and Australian Army prepare to embark on a CH-47F Chinook from the 5th Aviation Regiment in Charters Towers as part of TALISMAN SABRE 2025 [© ADoD: Sgt Roger Tang]
Papua New Guinea Defence Force soldiers secure Charters Towers Weir, Queensland, as part of TALISMAN SABRE 2025 [© ADoD: Capt Brittany Evans]

Some of the milestones for Australia and partner nations included:

  • The first live-firing of the Australian M142 HIMARS, including using the precision strike missile.
  • A successful land-to-sea engagement of the United States mid-range capability, including using an SM-6 missile against a maritime target.
  • Participation of the United Kingdom-led Carrier Strike Group, representing the first time a non-US aircraft carrier has been involved in TALISMAN SABRE.
  • A long-distance joint force entry operation that deployed 335 US Army paratroopers from the 11th Airborne Division from Alaska to Charters Towers alongside French and German paratroopers.
  • Large-scale amphibious operations involving forces from Australia, France, Japan, South Korea, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Soldiers from Australia’s Special Operations Command and United States Special Operations Forces conduct multi-domain training at Cockatoo Island during TALISMAN SABRE 2025 [© ADoD: Pte C]

Vice Admiral Jones praised the efforts of all involved. “TALISMAN SABRE 2025 has been an enormous success,” he said.

“It is a powerful symbol to have 19 nations from not only the Indo-Pacific but from across the world, operating together in Australia.

“These are friends, allies and partners that have a shared vision for the Indo-Pacific.

“Together we are stronger, together we are prepared.”

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