New US Stealth Fighters Now at Iran's Back Door

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by Quigley_Sharps, Apr 28, 2012.


  1. Quigley_Sharps

    Quigley_Sharps The Badministrator Administrator Founding Member

    America's most sophisticated stealth jet fighters have been quietly deployed to an allied base less than 200 miles from Iran's mainland, according to an industry report, but the Air Force adamantly denied the jets' presence is a threat to the Middle East nation.
    Multiple stealth F-22 Raptors, which have never been combat-tested, are in hangars at the United Arab Emirates' Al Dafra Air Base, just a short hop over the Persian Gulf from Iran's southern border, the trade publication Aviation Week reported.
    Air Force spokesperson Lt. Col. John Dorrian would not confirm the exact location of the F-22s, but told ABC News they had been deployed to a base in Southwest Asia -- a region that includes the UAE. Dorrian also stressed that the F-22s were simply taking part in a scheduled deployment and are "not a threat to Iran."
    "This is a very normal deployment to strengthen military relationships, promote sovereign and regional security, improve combined tactical air operations and enhance interoperability of forces," Dorrian said.
    The F-22 has only been in the UAE once before for training missions in 2009 with "coalition partners."
    Dorrian declined to say what the Raptors' mission was in the region this time around or how many planes had been deployed, citing operational security. However, Dorrian said that because of the F-22's next-generation capabilities, any number of planes deployed to the region is "significant."
    Though the F-22 has been officially combat operational since December 2005, no planes from the Air Force fleet -- which are made by defense contracting giant Lockheed Martin and cost an estimated $79 billion -- have seen combat. The plane was not used in Iraq, Afghanistan or in the U.S.-led no-fly mission over Libya. The Air Force has said the sophisticated jets simply haven't been needed yet.
    But Jeff Babione, Lockheed Martin's vice president for the F-22 program, told ABC News last year that the plane was "absolutely" suited for taking on more sophisticated adversaries and could be used in deep penetration strike missions in well-defended combat zones inside places like North Korea or Iran.

    Air Force: F-22s Ready for War, Despite Mystery Problem
    The new deployment comes in the midst of the Air Forces' continuing battle with a rare but sustained oxygen problem plaguing the F-22. Since 2008, nearly two dozen pilots have reported experiencing "hypoxia-like symptoms" in mid-air. The problem got so bad that the Air Force grounded the planes for nearly five months last year in hopes of fixing the problem but never could.
    The service also does not know what caused the malfunction that cut off F-22 pilot Capt. Jeff Haney's oxygen shortly before he fatally crashed during a training mission in Alaska in 2010.
    But despite the ongoing issues, the Air Force says the F-22 is ready for war, should it be called.
    "If our nation needs a capability to enter contested air space, to deal with air forces that are trying to deny our forces the ability to maneuver without prejudice on the ground, it will be the F-22 that takes on that mission," Air Force Maj. Gen. Noel Jones, Director of Operational Capability Requirements, said at a special briefing at the Pentagon in March. "It can do that right now and is able to do that without hesitation."
    The Al Dafra base is approximately 800 miles from the Iranian capital of Tehran, well within the range of the F-22, which can "supercruise" at one and a half times the speed of sound.
     
  2. Cruisin Sloth

    Cruisin Sloth Special & Slow

    I was hoping for pictures @ 12..

    Check out the Navy test pilot in
    the cockpit of the F/A-37... the cockpit of the F/A-37...
    LT Kara Wade.


    [​IMG]
    The download file has lots of pictures .
    Sloth
    Wade.
     

    Attached Files:

    Quigley_Sharps likes this.
  3. DKR

    DKR Raconteur of the first stripe

    You do know these are movie props - right?

    2005 movie called Stealth - a real dog BTW
     
  4. Seawolf1090

    Seawolf1090 Retired Curmudgeonly IT Monkey Founding Member

    Movie scene from several years back - NOT an actual aircraft or pilot.

    Cool movie though.
     
  5. UGRev

    UGRev Get on with it!

    You mean the fighter jet that was a big political appeasement project where parts were built in a whole bunch of different states and by many different manufacturers and at times had to be manually refined during assembly? The same craft, which has more maint time than fly time because of it's skin's vulnerability to water and abrasion? And they park it out in dust/sand storm central for potential ops? I loved that plane until I read about it's problems. What a shame..
     
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