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Joint Strike Fighter Wing
US Navy fighter wing From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Joint Strike Fighter Wing (JSFW) (aka COMJSFWING or JSFWING) is the U.S. Navy's Fifth-generation fighter squadron wing. It oversees 4 squadrons that all fly the F-35C Lightning II. The wing, based at Naval Air Station Lemoore in California, is also home to the West Coast F-35C Fleet Replacement Squadron (FRS) VFA-125, which is the only F-35C FRS in the US Navy. It trains pilots in the jet before they are assigned to operational fleet squadrons.
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History
The Joint Strike Fighter Wing was established on 1 October 2018 at NAS Lemoore under Commander, Joint Strike Fighter Wing, to oversee training and mission readiness of all F-35C squadrons as the US Navy increased its inventory of that aircraft.[1] It was established around the same time that VFA-125 and VFA-147 were transitioned to the F-35C Lightning II.[2] The mission statement of JSFW is to resource and deliver combat-ready JSF squadrons to Carrier Air Wing Commanders to conduct carrier and shore-based Strike Warfare missions as directed by Theater and Fleet Commanders.[3]
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Mission
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When it was first established in 2018, the initial objective of JSFW was to get VFA-147 ready for operational testing and for its upcoming Initial Operational Capability (IOC) declaration.[1] The unit passed all testing and achieved IOC on 28 February 2019.[4] JSFWING's current broad mission is to provide the US Navy Carrier Air Wings (CVWs) with combat-ready Fifth-generation fighter squadrons. Currently, the only aircraft the US Navy flies that classifies as a 5th generation fighter is the F-35C Lightning II. The wing trains the pilots in its squadrons for Electronic attack and Strike fighter missions. JSFW is in charge of operating F-35C Fleet Replacement Squadrons. The only F-35C FRS is currently VFA-125 based at NAS Lemoore. JSFW has also been tasked with meeting Naval Aviation Enterprise requirements to qualify its aircraft as Ready for Tasking (RFT).[3] RFT is similar to the classification of Full Mission Capable (FMC) but is less demanding and only requires that a fraction of all aircraft in the command can perform a given mission at a time. For example, a F/A-18E/F Super Hornet on a precision strike mission could be designated as RFT even if it would not be able to perform aerial refueling, another of its missions, on the same flight.[5]
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Assigned units
Joint Strike Fighter Wing exercises command over 4 operational squadrons and 1 fleet replacement squadron (VFA-125).[3] The squadrons in the following list are organized chronologically from top to bottom based on when they transitioned to the F-35C Lightning II. The year they transitioned is listed in parentheses.[2][6]
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References
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