E-8C Joint STARS

The Northrop Grumman E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System – known as Joint STARS – is the U.S. Air Force's premier airborne C2ISR platform.

Airplane flying in the sky
Airplane flying in the sky

The Only Total Weapons System of Its Kind

The Northrop Grumman E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System – known as Joint STARS – is the U.S. Air Force's premier airborne C2ISR platform. The only total weapons system of its kind, Joint STARS has provided air-to-ground battle management C2 and surveillance operations to U.S. combatant commands for more than 25 years in support of military operations, disaster relief, peacekeeping and counter-drug missions.

More Relevant Than Ever

While Joint STARS was conceptualized as a means of tracking during the Cold War, the fleet is more relevant than ever, operating at surge levels since 2002. Today, it is the only platform in the U.S. arsenal that combines accurate wide-area moving target detection with synthetic aperture radar imagery to locate, classify and track targets in all weather conditions from standoff distances.

Joint STARS offers battlefield commanders real-time situational information, while simultaneously transmitting target locations to aircraft and ground strike forces. It has flown more than 130,000 combat hours since 9/11 supporting operations globally, including Operation Inherent Resolve over Iraq and Syria.

E-8C Joint STARS Videos

Joint STARS Takes Flight for the First Time

Keeping the Fleet Flying: Total System Support Responsibility

Thousands of Northrop Grumman employees work side by side with our men and women in uniform to maintain JSTARS fleet readiness under the Total System Support Responsibility contract – or TSSR. Since the program's inception in 2000, Northrop Grumman has partnered with the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center to provide integrated logistics support to the 116th and 461st Air Control Wings for sustainment and support of the fleet at Robins Air Force Base and at forward operating locations worldwide.

In addition to work at Robins Air Force Base, TSSR is supported by employees and partners at the Northrop Grumman Manned Aircraft Design Center of Excellence in Melbourne, Fla., the Aircraft Maintenance and Fabrication Center (AMFC), in Lake Charles, La., and more than 30 major suppliers across the United States.

Under TSSR, Northrop Grumman provides:

  • Program Management
  • Engineering Technical Support
  • Supply Chain and Spares Management
  • Aircrew Training
  • Technical Data
  • Customer Support

Joint STARS in the News

African American crew standing in front of an airplane

E-8C JSTARS all-African American flight crew makes history

Airplane flying in the sky

US Air Force Awards $325 Million Modification Work for Joint STARS

Airplane flying over a fleet of airplane

Northrop Grumman Continues Joint STARS Sustainment and Modification Work for US Air Force

aircrew members in a control room of an airplane

US Air Force Awards $330 Million E-8C Joint STARS Fleet Total Systems Support Responsibility Contract to Northrop Grumman for FY 2019

Air crewmen monitor data from computers on an airplane

Northrop Grumman awarded $17.5 Million Contract for Fifth Generation Upgrade of E-8C Joint STARS Central Computers

People standing in front of an airplane

Northrop Grumman Celebrates 30-Year Anniversary of First Joint STARS Flight

Airplane flying in the sky

US Air Force Extends E-8C Joint STARS Fleet Support Partnership with Northrop Grumman