Seeing F-22s deploy internationally is nothing new, but usually . Yet the 525th Fighter Squadron based at Elmendorf AFB, Alaska, has just moved 12 F-22s (half of its inventory) to Yokota Air Base in Japan. Obviously such a potent deployment is meant to send a strong message to allies, and potential foes, in the region.
is located in central Japan, just 20 miles from downtown Tokyo, and sits about 550 miles away from the Korean Peninsula. The central base gives the F-22s and their crews a hospitable place to set up temporary operations, and easy access to make their presence known to North Korea and even China. In the past, F-22s have occasionally been deployed to Okinawa at the USAF’s sprawling Kadena Air Force Base complex.
The United States Air Force has had a strong presence in Japan since the service's founding. Today,
The F-22s fairly large-scale arrival at Yokota Air Base comes just weeks afterand as tensions along the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea have escalated. Additionally, Taiwan heightening tensions in the Taiwan Strait.
Within days of North Korea’s nuclear test, It was absolutely one of the lowest forms of military-to-military communication, but such elaborate, if not even corny brandishing of weaponry, has worked in the past when it comes to getting the paranoid North Korean leadership’s ambitions in check.
Tensions are cranking up on the Korean Peninsula after North Korea executed its fourth nuclear test
Supposedly the resident is also going to be sending at least a dozen jets to Yokota Air Base. Although these aircraft are painted in exotic camouflage and are staples at air combat exercises in the region, they are still standard Block 30 F-16C/Ds with highly trained crews that could be used for combat operations in an emergency. Still, their use will most likely be threat replication for Japanese, American and possibly Korean and other units based around the region.
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Don’t be surprised if smaller detachments of both Raptors and F-16 aggressors jets turn up around the region, and especially in South Korea, for cooperative training. In doing so, the impact of the larger deployment, which does not come cheap, can be amplified and will serve as a clear reminder that the U.S. still leads in some very deadly forms of combat capabilities—ones that can be rapidly deployed to forward operating bases if need be.
Now we will have to wait and see if this F-22 deployment, and the addition of F-16s from Alaska, will grow even larger. Once we finally get a tally of what is in the region and where they plan to go from their temporary perch at Yokota Air Base, we can get a clearer picture of the deployment’s specific goals.
Yet one thing remains crystal clear, with all the American F-15s, F-16s, F/A-18s and other combat aircraft stationed in the region, the F-22 is now, more than ever, the go-to intimidation stick for Washington to hang over our potential enemies’ heads.
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Photos via USAF