Stealth planes might be invisible to radars but they can do nothing against human eye. This is what the following images prove.
Taken by Gian Luca Onnis, a (lucky) photographer and aviation
enthusiast, on Jan. 25, the photographs show a flight of six F-22
Raptors trailing two KC-135 and a KC-10 tankers overflying Sardinia
island, Italy, on their way back to the U.S..
The radar evading planes, returning to Holloman, New Mexico, from a deployment in South East Asia, were clearly visible because of the long white contrails they left over the Mediterranean Sea.
The six F-22 Raptors had deployed to Al Dhafra in the UAE via Moron, Spain, on Apr. 20, 2012. Whereas the six stealthy planes of the 49th Fighter Wing returned to
the CONUS (Continental U.S.) six F-22 belonging to the 3rd Fighter Wing,
were flying in the opposite direction (via Lajes, Azores) to replace
them in the Persian Gulf area.
Noteworthy, unlike the Holloman’s F-22As the 3rd FW’s Raptors from
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, in Alaska, are Block 3.1 planes capable
to find and engage ground targets using the Synthetic Aperture Radar
mapping and drop up to eight GBU-39 SDBs (Small Diameter Bombs) in the air-to-surface role.
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