F-22 Raptor: The U.S. Air Force's Unstoppable Stealth Fighter

F-22 Raptor
January 1, 2024 Topic: military Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: F-22F-22AF-22A RaptorF-22 RaptorStealthU.S. Air Force

F-22 Raptor: The U.S. Air Force's Unstoppable Stealth Fighter

The F-22 Raptor is ranked by many as the best stealth fighter - some say the best fighter ever. The reason is it seems to be able to take on any mission assigned to it. 

 

There’s an old joke thrown around in, or perhaps it would more accurate to say “thrown at,” the U.S.. fighter pilot community that the difference between a fighter pilot and God is that God doesn’t think he’s a fighter pilot. Be that as it may, if there’s any fighter pilot that does indeed elevate (bad pun intended) American fighter pilots to deity-like status, it’s the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor.

F-22: The Supreme Being of 5th Generation Fighters?

The always savvy Alex Hollings of Sandboxx News rates the F-22 as the best stealth fighter in the world: “As the world’s first 5th generation fighter, the F-22 Raptor is the oldest design on this list, but its incredible combination of low observability and high performance not only set the standard for all stealth fighters to come, it remains the most capable stealth fighter in service anywhere on the planet to this very day…While the F-22 doesn’t offer the same degree of situational awareness found in the F-35, its sensor and avionics suite is still considered to be robust enough to give Raptor pilots what the Air Force calls, ‘first kill opportunity,’ meaning it can spot enemy fighters and engage them with weapons that reach beyond-visual-range before the bad guy even knows it’s there.” (original emphasis).

 

For a basis of comparison, Mr. Hollings ranks the Raptor’s competitors in ascending order: Russia’s Sukhoi Su-57 Felon, China’s Chengdu J-20, and America’s (and Lockheed Martin’s) other entry into the 5th Generation fighter game, the F-35 Lightning II.

Moreover, the F-22 is said to carry a frontal radar cross-section (RCS) of just 0.0001~0.0002 square meters, which is some 5,000 times smaller (yes, you read that correctly, five thousand) than expert assessments of the Russian Su-57, at least 800 times smaller than the J-20, and even 5-10 times smaller than the much newer F-35.

Powered by two Pratt & Whitney turbofan engines and capable of reaching speeds of Mach 2 (1,534 mph/2,469 kph), this warbird has a ceiling of 50,000 feet (15 kilometers) and a range of 1,841 miles (2,962 km) without refueling.

For purely air-to-air missions, the Raptor carries six AIM-120 AMRAAM “Slammer” missiles and two AIM-9 Sidewinder heat-seeking missiles (no AIM-7 Sparrows need apply); for air-ground, the plane packs two Slammers, and either two 1,000-pound (450 kg) JDAMs or eight 250-pound (110 kg) GBU-39 Small Diameter Bombs. And in case of a good old-fashioned dogfight, the bird of prey wields a 1× 20 mm M61A2 Vulcan rotary cannon with 480 rounds of ammo.

F-22: This Air God is Still a Mortal

Alas, this God of the Air has been “killed,” so to speak, not in air-to-air combat or even by enemy SAMs or triple-A fire, but by the bureaucrats.

Well, perhaps not “killed” outright, but definitely stunted in its growth potential; in 2009, then-SECDEF Robert Gates cancelled the F-22 program after less than half of the requited 381 planes were built.

Why? Gates, in his own memoir, “Duty,” rationalized that the F-22 was useless in the Afghanistan and Iraq counterinsurgencies, was a Cold War relic, and that a Chinese stealth fighter wouldn’t be along until the 2020s, so nothing would be lost by killing it.

Now that we are in the 2020s, it becomes readily apparent that Secretary Gates wasn’t a believer in long-term planning, which is all the more shocking in light of the fact that Mr. Gates himself was a former USAF officer.

F-22

 

For a more detailed—and damning—account of Gates’s decision to undermine the F-22 program, read the 2015 book Air Power Abandoned: Robert Gates, the F-22 Raptor and the Betrayal of America's Air Force, by the late great Robert F. Dorr, arguably the most prolific military aviation author since Martin Caidin, an Air Force veteran in his own right, and a Facebook Friend of mine who unfortunately passed away before I ever got to meet him in person.

About the Author

Christian D. Orr is a former Air Force officer, Federal law enforcement officer, and private military contractor (with assignments worked in Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, Kosovo, Japan, Germany, and the Pentagon). Chris holds a B.A. in International Relations from the University of Southern California (USC) and an M.A. in Intelligence Studies (concentration in Terrorism Studies) from American Military University (AMU).  He has also been published in The Daily Torch and The Journal of Intelligence and Cyber Security.

All images are Creative Commons.