Japan
receives first of three Global Hawk surveillance drones at Misawa Air Base
BY
SETH ROBSON
• STARS
AND STRIPES • MARCH 15, 2022
An RQ-4B Global Hawk surveillance
drone lands at Misawa Air Base, Japan, March 12, 2022. It is the first of three
that will be operated by the Japan Air Self-Defense Force. (Antwain Hanks/U.S.
Air Force)
An RQ-4B Global Hawk surveillance drone that landed Saturday at Misawa Air Base in northeast Japan is the first of three that will be operated by the Japan Air Self-Defense Force, according to the unmanned aircraft’s manufacturer.
Photographs
of the Global Hawk’s arrival were posted Monday on Misawa’s official Facebook
page.
“Congratulations
to our JASDF counterparts on their newest capability! The addition of the RQ-4B
Global Hawk to the Japan Air Self-Defense Force’s inventory directly supports
the defense of Japan, and peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region,” said
a message accompanying the images.
The
Global Hawk flies at 60,000 feet and has a line of sight to targets more than
340 miles away, according to manufacturer Northrop Grumman.
The
exact range of the aircraft’s cameras and sensors is classified, but a Global
Hawk flying near the Korean Demilitarized Zone, for example, could see well
beyond the Yalu River that marks North Korea’s border with China.
Japan’s
three Global Hawks cost nearly $500 million combined, with deliveries slated to
wrap up this year, Forbes reported April 15, 2020.
The
new Global Hawks will “conduct information gathering in areas relatively remote
from Japan, as well as persistent airborne monitoring during situations with
heightened tensions,” Japan’s Ministry of Defense said in a statement after the
drone landed.
The
first of Japan’s three Global Hawks left Palmdale, Calif., on Thursday and
landed at Misawa nearly 19 hours later, Northrop Grumman said in another
statement Monday.
“The
arrival of the first Japan Global Hawk is an important milestone in the
development of this critical security asset,” Jane Bishop, vice president and
general manager for global surveillance at Northrop Grumman, said in her
company’s statement. “The autonomous Global Hawk will provide the Japan Air
Self-Defense Force with persistent, high-altitude surveillance of the
Indo-Pacific.”
An RQ-4B Global Hawk surveillance
drone sits in a hangar at Misawa Air Base, Japan, March 12, 2022. It is the
first of three that will be operated by the Japan Air Self-Defense Force.
(Antwain Hanks/U.S. Air Force)
The
U.S. Air Force has positioned its Global Hawks at Misawa for several summers
since 2014. The drones come to Japan to avoid typhoons at Andersen Air Force
Base, Guam. In recent years, including 2020, they have operated out of Yokota
Air Base in western Tokyo during the summer.
South
Korea has four Global Hawks that are believed to be flown out of Sacheon Air
Base, near the port of Busan, according to an October report by Jane’s Defence
Weekly.
The
Royal Australian Air Force will acquire seven RQ-4C Tritons, the maritime
version of the drone, and will fly them from RAAF Base Edinburgh, according to
the service’s official website.
Guam-based
Air Force Tritons completed a maiden deployment to Misawa in October.
The
U.S-Japan defense treaty allows America to share defense technologies such as
the Global Hawk, F-35A Lightning II stealth fighter and E-2D Hawkeye early
warning aircraft, Lt. Col. Cody Chiles, a spokesman for the Misawa-based 35th
Fighter Wing, said in an email Saturday.
The
Japan Air Self-Defense Force has positioned these aircraft at Misawa, Chiles
told Stars and Stripes by phone March 9. The Air Force shares the base with the
3rd Air Wing of the Self-Defense Force.
“The
acquisition of these platforms, and subsequent operations by our allies, sends
a strong signal to regional adversaries that the United States and our allies
are equipped and ready to detect and defend our nations from regional threats,”
he said.
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