These Business Jets Are Being Modified for Military Special Ops
The range and altitude of the Gulfstream G550 and Bombardier 6000 make them go-to aircraft for disrupting enemy control-and-command systems.
Michael Verdon
Aviation and Marine Editor
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Courtesy GulfstreamBusiness-jet makers have recently delivered modified aircraft to the US Air Force as well as the militaries of its allies. Instead of plush interiors with flawless wood, leather seats and big entertainment centers, the interiors are filled with high-tech equipment for jamming enemy communications on the battlefield.
It’s a fast-growing niche that could make at least some business jets an integral feature of national defense, thanks in part to the high speeds, long ranges and high-altitude capabilities developed for the corporate traveler.
Some airframe manufacturers have been in military for decades. Dassault Aviation established its presence in defense in 1964, and some of its business jets, such as the newFalcon 10X, have avionics in the cockpit derived from its Rapale fighter jets.

But others, like Bombardier, are ramping up its military presence with modifications to its business jets. A Bombardier Global 6000 was recently delivered to the US Air Force’s Battlefield Airborne Communications Node (BACN) program, according toAV.web. The aircraft is the first of six special-mission 6000s from Bombardier’s Defense division, based in Wichita, Kansas. “We are proud to be able to showcase the versatility of our Global business jets and our expertise here in the U.S. to support the type of high-altitude, endurance missions required by the elite BACN program,” said Steve Patrick, Bombardier Defense vice president, in a statement. The US Air Force has named the aircraft model the E-11A. It will be used as a high-altitude communications gateway.
Gulfstream also recentlytweeted an image of its modified G550, renamed by the Air Force as the EC-378 Compass Call. The modified G550, now called the E-378 Compass Call, will be part of the US Air Force’s tactical jammer aircraft program.
The Savannah-based airframe maker said it’s the third modified G550 that has gone to the US Air Force. It’s part of that branch’s “next-generation tactical jammer aircraft program,” according toFlying. It has electromagnetic warfare equipment from BAE Systems and L3Harris.

The Gulfstream Compass Call is slated to replace the C-130 Hercules-based EC-130H Compass Call, in service since the early 1980s. The EC-378 is designed to disrupt enemy command and control communications to restrict battlefield communication. The US Air Force order includes ten of the aircraft, with five scheduled to be delivered next year.
“The G550 platform has increased speed, endurance, and extended stand-off range over the legacy EC-130H aircraft—providing significantly improved survivability,” said one of Gulfstream’s partners, L3Harris, in a statement.
The G550 also serves as a platform for the US Navy’s Telemetry Range Support Aircraft , the Royal Australian Air Force’s MC-55 Peregrine, and for the German Aerospace Center’s HALO high-altitude atmospheric research aircraft. Gulfstream also delivered a modified G550 AISREW (Airborne Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance, and Electronic Warfare) to the Italian air force last March, according to theAviationist.

The changing geopolitical situation has prompted defense services to look outside of conventional military aircraft. “We’re going to be growing our defense business quite significantly,” Bombardier CEO Éric Martel recently told theGlobe & Mail. “There is a lot of interest right now in our product.”
Martel said Bombardier typically completes three to six specialized government aircraft annually, a fraction of the 120 business jets it delivered last year. He expects that defense projects could grow to at least 10 percent of its overall business.
To highlight the segment’s importance, Bombardier renamed its fledgling government division earlier this year to Bombardier Defense.
Authors

Michael Verdon
Aviation and Marine Editor
Read MoreMichael Verdon is Robb Report's Aviation and Marine Editor. Having been an editor at five national boating magazines, he has written about all sizes of boats. Verdon is also a lover of aircraft, from…
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