The development of an IRST, which allows the fighter to detect and engage targets at long range without having to rely on its radar and risk exposing its own position, would also be useful to Japan’s plan to develop its next-generation fighter to replace its Mitsubishi F-2s in the 2030s.
The country is also the biggest foreign buyer of Lockheed-Martin’s F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter, with the first squadron of what will eventually be a fleet of 105 F-35As and 42 F-35Bs already operational. The F-35s will replace the JASDF’s F-4EJ Phantom II and older F-15s that will not be upgraded, with the short take-off vertical landing F-35Bs earmarked for future operations aboard Japan’s Izumo-class helicopter destroyers.
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