EA-37B Compass Call: The US Air Force's New Electronic Attack Aircraft
The U.S. Air Force Air Combat Command received its first EA-37B Compass Call on Aug. 23 for pilot training at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona.
EA-37B is a heavily modified version of the Gulfstream G550 business jet that will operated by the Air Force as a wide-area airborne electromagnetic attack weapon system.
Aircraft 19-5591, now assigned to the 55th Electronic Combat Group, will be flown by the 43rd Electronic Combat Squadron and maintained by the Contractor Logistics Support Aircraft Maintenance team at Davis-Monthan AFB. The aircraft will give ACC aircrews their first opportunity to begin pilot mission planning and training.
Although located at Davis-Monthan AFB, the 55th ECG reports to the 55th Wing at Offutt AFB, Nebraska. The group is the sole operator of Compass Call aircraft in worldwide contingency operations.
The aircraft sustains joint force military advantage in the electromagnetic battlespace and builds a more lethal force by modernizing electromagnetic attack capabilities to deny peer competitors' tactical networks and information ecosystems.
Additionally, the aircraft denies, degrades and disrupts adversary communications, information processing, navigation, radar systems and radio-controlled threats. It also employs offensive counter-information and electromagnetic attack capabilities in support of U.S. and coalition tactical air, surface and special operations forces.
“The EA-37B is the right choice right now because as we continue to pivot toward Great Power Competition, we have adversaries that are developing long-range kill chain ecosystems and anti-access area denial capabilities,” Hensley said. “The Compass Call will allow us to do things in the non-kinetic spectrum as well as the electromagnetic spectrum to give us the advantage and not them.”
As the Air Force’s newest electromagnetic attack platform, the EA-37B will replace the legacy EC-130H as a more modern, and cost-effective, commercial derivative aircraft. Nine of 14 EC-130H aircraft have been divested to date.
“The EC-130 has been one of the flagships of Davis-Monthan since the early 1980s, and the arrival of the EA-37B along with the stand up of 11th Air Task Force shields a new era for Davis-Monthan AFB,” said Col. Scott Mills, 355th Wing commander. “As we look to take on the growing threat, the bottom line for the Airmen of Davis-Monthan and the 55th Electronic Combat Group is we are ready today to face that threat.”
A second aircraft is expected to be delivered for training to Davis-Monthan AFB by the end of 2024.
Top Stories
INSIDERMechanical & Fluid Systems
Starliner to Perform Uncrewed Return Flight From International Space Station...
INSIDERDefense
Archer Delivers First Midnight eVTOL to US Air Force
INSIDERAerospace
ESA to Test Canadian Startup's Diamond Quantum Sensors in Space
INSIDERAerospace
EA-37B Compass Call: The US Air Force's New Electronic Attack Aircraft
INSIDERAerospace
Modern Commercial Jets Create Longer Living Contrails Than Older Aircraft,...
INSIDERManufacturing & Prototyping
Anduril Takes Software-Defined Approach to Hyperscale Defense Manufacturing
Webcasts
Automotive
Mitigating Risks, Ensuring Reliability: Deep Dive into Automotive...
Automotive
Accelerating Time to Market: Tackling NVH Challenges in Electric...
Communications
Space Communications and Navigation Summit 2024
Electronics & Computers
Utilizing Model-Based Systems Engineering for Vehicle Development
Software
Meeting the Challenges of Software-Defined Vehicles With...
Software
Automotive Hardware Security Modules: Functionality, Design, and...