What the Compass Call Actually Does
From the outside, the EA-37B looks like what it is: a modified Gulfstream G550 business jet, the kind of aircraft you might see parked at Zurich or Teterboro. But the resemblance ends at the fuselage. Distinctive bulging “cheek” fairings on either side of the aircraft house an electronic warfare suite that can reach deep into enemy airspace without the jet ever crossing a border. The Compass Call jams enemy radar systems, disrupts military communications, and blinds the command-and-control networks that coordinate air defence batteries, missile launchers, and ground forces. Its secondary role is intelligence collection — it spots, tracks, and geolocates the very emitters it is designed to suppress. The “A” in EA-37B stands for “attack,” reflecting a capability that goes beyond mere jamming into actively degrading and destroying electronic targets. Captain Tyler Laska of the 55th Wing put it in operational terms: “Every moment of hesitation we can implant into an adversary’s decision-making process increases survivability of our personnel.”EA-37Bs 19-1587 and 17-5579 as AXIS41 and AXIS43 are deploying to RAF Mildenhall via McGuire AFB. This is the first operational deployment for the EA-37B. pic.twitter.com/6InlHCdLnd
— KIWA Spotter (@KiwaSpotter) March 31, 2026
From Hercules to Gulfstream
The EA-37B replaces the EC-130H Compass Call, a modified C-130 Hercules turboprop that had been the backbone of American airborne electronic warfare since the 1980s. The old fleet was down to just four airworthy airframes — slow, vulnerable, and unable to keep pace with the modern electromagnetic battlefield. The jump to the Gulfstream G550 platform changes everything. The EA-37B flies faster, higher, and farther than its predecessor. Higher altitude means a dramatically expanded field of view — the aircraft can project electronic effects across vast areas without having to fly anywhere near the threat. Greater speed and range mean it can operate from stand-off distances that keep it well outside the engagement envelopes of modern surface-to-air missile systems. The Air Force plans to acquire ten EA-37Bs in total, gradually replacing the remaining EC-130H fleet. L3Harris is the prime contractor for the electronic warfare mission systems, building on decades of Compass Call expertise.Why Iran Changes the Calculus
The timing of this deployment is not subtle. Operation Epic Fury — the U.S. military campaign against Iran — has been escalating steadily. The EC-130H fleet reportedly saw action during the early phases, including possible support during operations in Venezuela. But those aging turboprops were never designed for the kind of sophisticated, layered air defence environment that Iran presents. Iran operates one of the densest integrated air defence networks in the Middle East, built around Russian-supplied S-300 systems, domestically produced radars, and increasingly capable short-range air defence platforms. Suppressing those systems — or even degrading their coordination — is precisely what the Compass Call was built to do. The pairing of two EA-37Bs also hints at a more ambitious concept. The Air Force has been working on integrating the Compass Call with the RC-135 Rivet Joint, its premier signals intelligence platform. The idea is to fuse the Rivet Joint’s deep sensing capabilities with the Compass Call’s electronic attack functions, creating a real-time cycle of finding, fixing, and frying enemy emitters. The 55th Wing declined to comment on the deployment, deferring all questions to Central Command. But the flight tracking data, the cargo aircraft heading to Istanbul, and the operational context all point in one direction. The EA-37B Compass Call — barely a year out of its first training flight — appears to be going to war. Sources: The War Zone, Stars and Stripes, FlightGlobal, Air & Space Forces MagazineRelated Questions
What is the EA-37B Compass Call?
The EA-37B Compass Call is the U.S. Air Force's newest electronic-attack aircraft, built on a Gulfstream business-jet airframe and operated by the 55th Wing. It jams enemy radars and communications, collects intelligence, and geolocates the emitters it is designed to suppress. The 'A' for attack reflects a role that goes beyond jamming into actively degrading electronic targets.
What aircraft does the EA-37B replace?
The EA-37B replaces the EC-130H Compass Call, a modified C-130 Hercules turboprop that had been the backbone of U.S. airborne electronic warfare since the 1980s. The ageing Hercules fleet had dwindled to just four airworthy airframes, slow and unable to keep pace with modern threats. The jet-powered EA-37B flies higher and faster while carrying upgraded mission systems.
What is electronic warfare?
Electronic warfare is the military use of the electromagnetic spectrum to attack, protect and exploit radar and radio signals. Offensive electronic attack jams or degrades enemy radars and communications, blinding air defences ahead of a strike. Dedicated platforms like the EA-37B Compass Call and Turkey's emerging radar-killer jet are built specifically for this mission.
What is RAF Mildenhall?
RAF Mildenhall is a Royal Air Force station in eastern England used extensively by the U.S. Air Force as a forward operating and refuelling hub for European and Middle Eastern operations. In March 2026 two EA-37B Compass Call jets deployed there in what appeared to be the type's first operational deployment, staging onward toward Turkey and the Middle East.
How does jamming protect strike aircraft?
Jamming floods enemy radar and communication frequencies with noise or deceptive signals, preventing air-defence operators from tracking incoming aircraft or guiding missiles. By degrading an adversary's situational awareness, electronic-attack jets buy time and survivability for the strike package. The same suppression role is increasingly shared by aircraft flying F-35 Wild Weasel duties.





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