Homestead Air Reserve Base sits 30 miles south of Miami. It survived Hurricane Andrew in 1992 by losing nearly every building it had. It has spent the three decades since flying F-16s on a quiet but consequential mission: counter-drug intercepts over the Caribbean and quick-reaction defence of the southeastern U.S. The Air Force Reserve has now formally requested that Homestead’s F-16s be replaced with a full 24-aircraft squadron of F-35As.
If approved, it would make Homestead the first Air Force Reserve base in the southeastern United States to operate the F-35.
Quick Facts
Base: Homestead Air Reserve Base, Florida
Unit: 482nd Fighter Wing (Air Force Reserve)
Proposed aircraft: 24 × F-35A Lightning II
Currently flies: F-16C/D Block 30
Distance to Cuba: ~30 miles
Primary mission: Counter-drug, homeland defence, Caribbean QRA
Decision authority: Department of the Air Force
Earliest IOC: Late 2020s
Geography Is the Argument
Homestead is one of the few U.S. bases that can scramble a fighter into Caribbean airspace in minutes. Its current F-16s have flown intercepts on smuggling aircraft, unidentified contacts approaching the Florida coast, and the occasional civilian airliner with a comms failure. Putting F-35s in that role would dramatically improve the sensor picture — the Lightning’s electronic surveillance suite can map an aerial threat picture far beyond what an older F-16 can collect.
The mission isn’t glamorous. It is, however, exactly the mission F-35s in homeland-defence configuration are increasingly being asked to do.
The Andrew Memory
Homestead was almost destroyed in 1992 when Hurricane Andrew tore through south Florida. The base lost most of its hangars, support facilities, and married quarters. The active-duty F-16 wing it had hosted before the storm moved out for good. What survived became an Air Force Reserve base with one operational fighter squadron and a much smaller footprint.
A new F-35 wing would be the largest combat-aircraft commitment to Homestead in 35 years. For a base that has spent a generation as a rump operation, it is the closest thing to a full restoration.
Sources: Air & Space Forces Magazine, Air Force Reserve Command.




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