March 2022, the RC-135S Cobra Ball platform celebrates 60 years of mission service in the U.S Air Force fleet. These long-serving aircraft were originally modified from C-135 platforms in Greenville, Texas by the company that today is L3Harris.

This fleet has been regularly maintained and modified by L3Harris to keep pace with continuously changing mission and global navigation requirements and continues serving today.

According to the U.S. Air Force's RC-135S Fact Sheet, the Cobra Ball is a rapidly deployable aircraft, which flies Joint Chiefs of Staff-directed missions of national priority to collect optical and electronic data on ballistic targets. This data is critical to arms treaty compliance verification, and development of U.S. strategic defense and theater missile defense concepts.

There are three RC-135S aircraft in the Air Force inventory all assigned to Air Combat Command and permanently based at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb., according to the Air Force. The Cobra Ball is operated by the 55th Wing, and manned with aircrews from the 45th Reconnaissance Squadron, and the 97th Intelligence Squadron, using various forward deployment locations worldwide.

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