
Six F-22 Raptor aircraft belonging to the 3rd Wing from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson have arrived at Lajes field, in the Azores on Sept. 27.
The aircraft were deploying to an undisclosed location in the Middle East: considered the almost permanent presence of the stealth fighter jets at Al Dhafra, it is quite likely the Raptors photographed by André Inácio were on their way to the large U.S. base in the United Arab Emirates.
Few days ago, Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh said that an F-22 Raptor flying an HVAAE (High Value Air Asset Escort) over the Persian Gulf flew under two Iranian F-4 to check out their weapons load without them knowing that he was there, and then pulled up on their left wing, called them and said ‘you really ought to go home’ because they were pursuing an MQ-1 Predator.
The 3rd Wing has recently developed a new concept to deploy four F-22s and make them ready for combat from a remote location in 24 hours. Raptors from JBER in Alaska are among the F-22s with the most recent “Block 3.1″ hardware and software upgrade, that provides the ability to find and engage ground targets and drop GBU-39 small diameter bombs.
Image credit: André Inácio
Let’s see, how these fare against Iran’s Stealth Qaher-313! I am sure, there will be an absolute SCI-FI meeting of two epic cutting edge technology fighter planes.
The whole world will be watching this encounter in absolute Aww with all major news channels & discussion boards clogged with the same discussion.
Are you being serious?
very very interesting .!?
american latest technologies encounter with iran ?!
i think iran work for this new problem.(rapidly)
Rather odd, isn’t it? It has been my understanding that we keep our most advanced fighters safely away from the prying eyes of our potential enemies, rather than put them based on the ground where they are subject to scutiny and potential damage.
Those things sure look cool with the external fuel tanks loaded up. Fierce.
Really shows how big these are if you compare the size of the pilots head to the rest of the aircraft.