20th century In September 1970, the EA-6B entered service with Fleet Replacement Squadron
VAQ-129; 10 months later, Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron 132 (VAQ-132) became the first operational squadron to be equipped with the type; during June 1972, VAQ-132 began its first combat deployment to Vietnam on ; it was promptly followed by VAQ-131 on and VAQ-134 on . Two squadrons of Prowlers flew 720 sorties during the Vietnam War in support of USN attack aircraft, as well as the
Boeing B-52 Stratofortress bombers of the
United States Air Force; typically, they suppressed enemy air defenses just prior to the attack/bomber aircraft deploying their own payloads. During the 1983
invasion of Grenada, four Prowlers supported the operation from . Two years later, in response to the
Achille Lauro hijacking, Prowlers from provided ESM support during the interception of the EgyptAir 737 carrying four of the hijackers on 10 October 1985. Prowlers jammed Libyan radar and air defenses during
Operation El Dorado Canyon in April 1986. Similarly, Prowlers from VAQ-135 on jammed Iranian ground control intercept radars, surface-to-air missile-guidance radars, and communication systems during
Operation Praying Mantis on 18 April 1988. During 1991, 39 EA-6Bs were involved in
Operation Desert Storm; 27 were based on six aircraft carriers, while 12 were from USMC shore bases. During 4,600 flight hours, Prowlers fired over 150 AGM-88 HARM missiles, the majority of which were targeted at radars and communications nodes across Iraqi's integrated air defense system. In total, USN Prowlers flew 1,132 sorties, while USMC EA-6Bs flew 516 sorties; no losses were incurred. Following the retirement of the
EF-111 Raven in 1998, the EA-6B was the only dedicated aerial radar-jammer aircraft of the
United States Armed Forces, until the fielding of the Navy's
EA-18G Growler in 2009. The EA-6B was flown in almost all American combat operations from 1972 until its retirement in 2019 and was frequently flown in support of missions undertaken by the United States Air Force (USAF).
21st century : Note the
gold tint of the canopy for protection from
electromagnetic interference and prevents some EM emissions. In 2001, 124 Prowlers remained, divided between 12 USN, four USMC, and four joint USN-USAF "Expeditionary" squadrons. A
Joint Chiefs of Staff staff study recommended that the EF-111 Raven be retired to reduce the types of aircraft dedicated to the same mission, which led to an
Office of the Secretary of Defense program memorandum to establish four land-based "expeditionary" Prowler squadrons to meet the needs of the Air Force. Between 2004 and 2014, the USAF augmented USN Prowler units with electronic warfare officers from the 388th and 390th Electronic Combat Squadrons assigned to the
366th Operations Group at
Mountain Home AFB,
Idaho. . In 2007, the Prowler reportedly had been used in counter-
improvised explosive device operations in the
conflict in Afghanistan for several years by jamming remote detonation devices such as garage-door openers or cellular telephones. Two Prowler squadrons were also based in Iraq, working with the same mission. According to
Chuck Pfarrer in his book
SEAL Target Geronimo, an EA-6B was also used to jam Pakistani radar and assist the two
MH-60 Black Hawk stealth helicopters and two Chinook helicopters raiding Osama Bin Laden's compound in
Operation Neptune Spear. During June 2014,
VMAQ-3 began flying Prowler missions against
Islamic State militants over Iraq. Two months later,
Operation Inherent Resolve began and
VMAQ-4 took over. The Prowlers were the first USMC aircraft in Syria, where they were involved in strike packages, air drops, and electronic-warfare requirements against militants. By January 2015, the five aircraft of VMAQ-4 had flown 800 hours during 110 sorties in support of operations in both countries, including supporting
coalition airstrikes and providing EW support for
Iraqi Army forces to degrade enemy systems. Marine Prowlers had not dropped munitions themselves, and host nations basing them have not been revealed. Though once considered being replaced by
Common Support Aircraft, that plan failed to materialize. In 2009, the USN EA-6B Prowler community began transitioning to the EA-18G Growler, an electronic-warfare derivative of the F/A-18F Super Hornet. All but one of the active-duty USN EA-6B squadrons were based at
Naval Air Station Whidbey Island. VAQ-136 was stationed at
Naval Air Facility Atsugi, Japan, as part of
Carrier Air Wing 5, the forward deployed naval forces air wing that embarks aboard the Japan-based . VAQ-209, the
Navy Reserve's sole EA-6B squadron, was stationed at
Naval Air Facility Washington, Maryland. All USMC EA-6B squadrons were located at
Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point,
North Carolina. During 2013, the USN planned to fly the EA-6B until 2015, while the USMC expected to phase out the Prowler in March 2019. The last Navy deployment was on in November 2014, with VAQ-134. The USN's last operational flight took place on 27 May 2015. NAS Whidbey held a retirement commemoration for the EA-6B from 25 to 27 June 2015 of the EA-6B culminating on the last day with the Navy's last operational EA-6B Prowler, bureau number 163890, taking off from NAS Whidbey Island. In April 2016, a squadron of EA-6B Prowlers from Marine Corps Tactical Electronic Warfare Squadron 4 (VMAQ-4), based at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, North Carolina, was deployed to
Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, for operations over Syria. U.S. European Command confirmed that the deployment was expected to last through September 2016. The
Center for Strategic and International Studies suggested that the Prowlers may be used to prevent Russian and Syrian air=defense systems from tracking U.S. and coalition aircraft. During November 2018, Prowlers of
VMAQ-2 completed their last operational deployment to
Al Udeid Air Base,
Qatar. The squadron, being the last equipped with the EA-6B, was disbanded on 8 March 2019, after which its remaining two Prowlers were reallocated to museums. The USMC's four members of VAMQ-2 flew the last EA-6B on its final flight on 14 March 2019 from their station at Cherry Point, North Carolina, to the
Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. ==Operators==