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U.S. Sends 12 F-22 Raptors from UK Base to Middle East as Tensions with Iran Escalate.
On 24 February 2026, twelve US Air Force F-22 Raptors departed RAF Lakenheath in the United Kingdom under tanker escort, heading toward the US Central Command area of responsibility as tensions with Iran intensified. The move signals a reinforced US air superiority posture in the Middle East following the collapse of nuclear negotiations with Tehran.
Twelve US Air Force F-22 Raptor fighters departed RAF Lakenheath in the United Kingdom on 24 February 2026 under the escort of three KC-46A Pegasus and one KC-135 Stratotanker aerial refueling aircraft, according to open-source flight tracking data and defense OSINT accounts, including Archer83Able on X. The deployment shifts a portion of America’s premier air superiority fleet from Europe to the US Central Command theater amid rising tensions with Iran and the breakdown of nuclear talks. The movement forms part of a broader US airpower surge across Europe and the Middle East, described by analysts as one of the largest regional buildups in decades. Beyond its operational impact, the transfer sends a calibrated signal to Tehran and regional partners that Washington is positioning credible high-end combat capability within rapid reach of potential flashpoints.
Twelve US Air Force F-22 Raptors departed RAF Lakenheath under tanker escort toward the CENTCOM theater, signaling a major shift in US airpower posture amid escalating tensions with Iran (U.S. Air Force/Flightradar24)
The latest OSINT reports indicate that the formation consists of three Boeing KC-46A Pegasus tankers (ROMA02 21-46095, ROMA03 22-46100, ROMA05 21-46093) and a KC-135 Stratotanker (ROMA04 57-1440), supporting twelve F-22 fighters routing out of RAF Lakenheath. The aircraft appears to be part of a broader series of transatlantic “Coronet” ferry missions that have, over recent days, positioned fifth-generation assets in the United Kingdom as an intermediate staging point before onward deployment to the Middle East. Observers note that similar patterns of pre-positioning at Lakenheath preceded earlier US air operations linked to strikes against Iranian nuclear infrastructure, suggesting that the current movement may be part of contingency planning for renewed pressure on Tehran’s military and strategic assets.
From a capability standpoint, the pairing of F-22 Raptors with KC-46A and KC-135 tankers underlines the emphasis on sustained, long-range, high-end air operations. The F-22, designed as an air-superiority platform with secondary ground-attack roles, combines low observability, supercruise, and advanced sensor fusion to detect and engage air threats at long range, typically carrying a mix of AIM-120 AMRAAM and AIM-9 infrared-guided missiles in internal bays. The KC-46A Pegasus, derived from the Boeing 767, provides both boom and hose-and-drogue refuelling in a single sortie and can carry over 212,000 lb of fuel, while also acting as a cargo and personnel transport. The legacy KC-135 Stratotanker, in service for more than six decades, remains the backbone of US aerial refuelling capability and offers the range and fuel offload needed to move fighter packages over intercontinental distances and sustain them once deployed forward.
Te F-22 is not a newcomer to the CENTCOM theatre. Raptors have previously deployed to bases in the region, including Al Dhafra in the United Arab Emirates, for missions ranging from air defence of critical infrastructure to deterrence patrols in the skies over Syria and the Gulf, and to counter unsafe interactions with Russian aircraft. More recently, F-22s were again sent into the CENTCOM area in August 2024 as part of a broader package of fighters and bombers intended to deter Iranian missile and drone attacks and to reassure regional partners after major strikes and incidents. Against that backdrop, today’s movement from Lakenheath looks less like a routine rotation and more like a continuation and amplification of a pattern: rapidly introducing fifth-generation fighters into the theatre whenever the threat picture around Iran, Syria or Iraq demands additional air dominance and missile-defence coverage.
The tactical value of a dozen F-22s in the CENTCOM environment lies primarily in their ability to establish air superiority and to provide high-end defensive counter-air coverage for critical assets. In a crisis centred on Iran, these jets can patrol high-threat corridors, escort strike packages of bombers and fourth-generation fighters, and interdict hostile aircraft, cruise missiles or drones before they approach key bases, naval task groups, or partner territory. Their low observability and powerful radar make them well suited to operating against dense surface-to-air missile networks and advanced fighter threats, while data links allow them to act as forward sensors for other platforms, cueing both air- and ground-based air-defence systems. Combined with modern tankers, they can maintain persistent orbits over choke points such as the Strait of Hormuz, the Bab el-Mandeb or the air and maritime approaches to Israel and the Gulf states.
This deployment must be read together with the wider inflow of US assets to the region in recent weeks: additional F-35s and F-16s, surveillance aircraft, airborne early warning platforms and the presence of two carrier strike groups, as well as the evacuation of non-essential US diplomatic staff from Lebanon. According to recent analyses of the build-up, Washington is positioning over 150 aircraft across Europe and the Middle East in order to keep multiple military options open, ranging from targeted strikes against Iranian missile sites and proxy forces to a broader campaign aimed at degrading Tehran’s air defences and nuclear infrastructure. Deploying F-22s from Lakenheath into the CENTCOM area strengthens the most sophisticated layer of that posture, signalling to Iran that any attempt to retaliate against US forces or partners would face a robust, survivable and highly responsive air component. At the same time, it reassures Gulf and Levant partners that the US is prepared to reinforce their air defences at short notice, even as negotiations continue in Geneva and other diplomatic channels.
The observed transfer of twelve F-22 Raptors from RAF Lakenheath to the CENTCOM theatre under KC-46A and KC-135 tanker escort illustrates how quickly the United States can pivot its most capable air assets from European staging bases toward the Middle East when the regional threat environment deteriorates. Grounded in open-source flight-tracking data and OSINT reporting rather than official communiqués, this movement nonetheless fits a clear pattern of force build-up around Iran that combines fifth-generation fighters, robust refuelling capacity and a network of regional bases and carrier groups. For actors in the region, the message is unambiguous: any further escalation will unfold under the shadow of a significantly reinforced US air dominance posture, in which the F-22 plays a central role as both shield for allies and spearhead for any potential strike options.