An E-2D Advanced Hawkeye taxis at
Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Japan, Aug. 9, 2017. (Aaron Henson/U.S.
Marine Corps)
TOKYO – The U.S.
State Department has approved the possible sale to Japan of more early warning
planes and support equipment worth an estimated $1.38 billion, the Defense
Department said this week.
The department’s
Defense Security Cooperation Agency notified Congress on Tuesday of the plan to
provide E-2D Advanced Hawkeye airborne early warning and control aircraft,
according to a notice posted on the agency’s website Tuesday.
Japan has asked
for up to five of the aircraft, according to the statement.
Northrop Grumman,
the aircraft’s manufacturer, describes the Advanced Hawkeye as a “digital
quarterback” designed to “manage the mission and keep our net-centric carrier
battle groups out of harm’s way.”
The aircraft
provides “expanded battlespace awareness, especially in the area of information
operations delivering battle management, theater air and missile defense, and
multiple sensor fusion capabilities in an airborne system,” the company states
on its website.
Japan already
operates three E2-Ds and 10 older E2-C Hawkeyes from Misawa Air Base in
northeast Japan and Naha Air Base, Okinawa, a Japan Air Self-Defense spokesman
said by phone Thursday. Government spokespeople in Japan customarily speak to
the media on condition of anonymity.
Japan began flying
Advanced Hawkeyes in 2019.
The goal of
acquiring the planes was to “strengthen intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance capabilities in airspace around Japan, including vast airspace
on the Pacific side,” Japan’s government said in its budget that year.
The U.S. Navy’s
Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 125, part of Carrier Air Wing 5, flies
E-2Ds from Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Japan.
The squadron was
the first to deploy with the aircraft, MCAS Iwakuni states on its website.
“The E-2D Advanced
Hawkeye … features a state-of-the-art radar with a two-generation leap in
capability and upgraded aircraft systems that will improve supportability and
increase readiness,” the website states.
The two engine,
turboprop aircraft is often referred to as the "Hummer," the website
states.
“Its principal
mission is command and control of airborne, surface, and battlefield assets,”
the website states. “This includes long range detection of hostile forces,
strike control at sea, coordination and control for power projection ashore and
fleet air defense.”
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