's 40th anniversary livery (2012)|thumb The squadron was formed on October 1, 1974 at
Chitose Air Base in Hokkaido as the second of the JASDF's F-4 Phantom squadrons. It was the first operational unit to operate the F-4, the 301st being the first training unit. It also operated
Lockheed T-33A trainer/liaison aircraft. On September 6, 1976 two F-4EJ's of the squadron were scrambled from Chitose to intercept the
MiG-25 of
Viktor Belenko who had flown into Japanese territory to defect. They were unable to intercept him, which led to changes in the Japanese air defense system. On November 26, 1985 the squadron transferred to
Naha Air Base in Okinawa. On December 9, 1987 an F-4EJ operated by the squadron flying from Naha
fired warning shots on two occasions when a
Tupolev Tu-16 of the
Soviet Air Force entered Japanese air space over Okinawa. This was the first time an SDF fighter had fired warning shots at an intruding aircraft. In 1992 the T-33A trainers were replaced by
Kawasaki T-4 aircraft. In 1995 the squadron finished upgrading to the F-4EJ Kai (improved) version. In November 2007 the JASDF's
F-15 Eagle fleet was grounded. During this time the squadron's F-4s were required to scramble. On March 13, 2009 the squadron finished relocating from Naha Air Base to
Hyakuri Air Base in Ibaraki prefecture north of Tokyo, swapping with the F-15J equipped
204th Tactical Fighter Squadron which moved to Naha. Following this, on March 26 of the same year the 302nd was transferred to the
7th Air Wing of the Central Air Defense Force. In January 2016 after North Korea
claimed to have exploded a hydrogen bomb, a squadron T-4 aircraft was one of the aircraft were used to test for radioactive particles. The flights were done for around 14 days. The flights didn't detect any radioactive particles. As the sole remaining F-4 fighter squadrons, either the 302nd squadron or the 301st was expected to be the first JASDF squadron to operate the
Lockheed Martin F-35A Lightning II. In August 2017 it was announced that the 302nd squadron would be the first in the JASDF to transition to the F-35. On October 18, 2017 F-4EJ Kai Phantom II 87-8408 of the squadron caught fire on the ground after its landing gear malfunctioned. There were no injuries. The squadron ceased flying the F-4 in March 2019, and in the same month relocated to
Misawa Air Base. On April 9, 2019 an F-35A of the squadron went missing over the Pacific Ocean. ==Tail markings==