The Jerusalem Post

Advanced F-35 fighter jets set to land in Israel today

Adir to arrive at Nevatim Air Base near Beersheba • US Defense Secretary Ash Carter arrives ahead of ceremony

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

Israel’s most advanced weaponry, two F-35 stealth fighter jets, are set to touch down at Nevatim Air Force Base near Beersheba for the first time on Monday afternoon.

Expected at the ceremony to welcome the jets to Israel will be President Reuven Rivlin, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman, IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Gadi Eisenkot, OC Air Force Maj.-Gen. Amir Eshel and US Secretary of Defense Ash Carter.

Carter is expected to deliver remarks and will meet with Liberman, with whom he will later hold a joint press conference.

“The arrival of the aircraft highlights the close defense cooperatio­n between the US and Israel,” the Pentagon said in a statement.

Liberman also issued a statement, saying: “Carter is a true friend of Israel. And during his tenure this was proven beyond all doubt in his excellent cooperatio­n, and of the US Defense Department with the State of Israel and the Defense Ministry. It’s symbolic that Carter’s tenure ends with the arrival of the Adir to Israel, because just like the plane, Carter’s contributi­on to the security of Israel was tremendous.”

Built by Lockheed Martin and nicknamed “Adir” or “Mighty,” the plane is being flown from the US to Israel by American pilots with a stopover in Italy. On Tuesday, two of the six Israeli pilots who trained on the F-35 in the US will take command of the aircraft.

But the two planes expected on Monday are only the beginning, with plans to receive a total of 50 – two full squadrons – by 2022. After

the first two F-35s arrive, the air force will receive six to seven per year.

“Israel never had a stealth fighter before the F-35, it is a huge jump and will be a huge challenge” Brig.-Gen. (res.) Abraham Assael told The Jerusalem Post in a recent interview, adding that “it is a very interestin­g time for our air force,” as the F-35 “is more like a system than a plane, and it will take time to fully understand the system.”

The fighter jet “is an enigma,” he said, and the system will have to be learned from scratch by pilots, mechanics and even IAF commander Eshel, who, according to IAF Magazine, is learning to fly the craft “switch by switch, system by system.”

After years of developing the most expensive plane in history, the advanced jet will, according to senior Israeli officials, provide complete air superiorit­y in the region for the next 40 years. According to Lt.-Col. Yotam, the Adir Squadron commander, it was purchased “in order to attack places that we are not always able to attack.”

The fifth-generation jet “is a quantum leap in relation to the combat aircraft we have today,” he said, designed to fly longer and faster than most other fighters.

It has an extremely low radar signature, allowing it to operate undetected deep inside enemy territory, evading advanced surface-to-air missile defense systems such as the Russian-made S-300s and S-400s deployed in Syria and Iran.

Israel remains concerned that Iran will violate the internatio­nal accord signed with world powers aimed at preventing it from developing nuclear weapons.

Israel is the first country outside the United States to receive the F-35, and once the jets arrive in Israel, they will not leave except for combat missions.

According to senior IAF officers, all maintenanc­e of the jets will be done in Israel, with maintenanc­e and support facilities built at Nevatim specifical­ly for the F-35. Other countries that purchased the aircraft will have their maintenanc­e done at regional centers, often outside their borders.

Despite the excitement, the F-35 is a controvers­ial plane with an expensive price tag of close to $100 million each, delays and a long series of failures. In one such failure, a pilot weighing less than 62 kilos (136 pounds) was at risk of being killed by its ejection system. Another was a flaw in the plane’s cooling system that led to the US Air Force grounding the jet two months after it declared it combat-ready. Eight of the planes grounded by the USAF belong to Israel. •

 ?? (Liz Lutz/Lockheed Martin Aeronautic­s) ?? AN IAF F-35 Adir fifth-generation stealth multi-role fighter takes its first flight in Fort Worth, Texas, in July.
(Liz Lutz/Lockheed Martin Aeronautic­s) AN IAF F-35 Adir fifth-generation stealth multi-role fighter takes its first flight in Fort Worth, Texas, in July.

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