Sure. However, I was just noting that I remember hearing about USAF crews embedded in these squadrons after the EF-111 was retired. However, this was clearly a US Navy crew.
That’s true. USAF personnel have been in Navy EW squadrons since the early 90s, when the USAF decided to abandon tactical EW as a capability by retiring the EF-111. They stepped even further away when they eliminated jamming capability on the B-52s. All done to meet budget cut targets.
Not their best decision, in my opinion, there is a place for tactical aircraft that can perform the EW mission, and the Growler is a good one.
In fact, the Growler is a USN success story. Basically, an NFO Admiral named Don Gaddis went to Boeing and negotiated the modest changes in the Super Hornet for it to be able to do EW as a replacement for the EA-6B that was nearing the end of its fatigue life.
By harnessing advanced computing, the WSO in the Growler handles what the 3 ECMOs did in the EA-6B. The airplane was modified, just a bit, to have equipment in what was the gun bay, and on the wingtips, replacing sidewinder rails, and to carry the updated ALQ-99 pods from the latest capability improvements in the EA-6B.
A whole new airplane was delivered to the USN for under $1Billion. A true bargain and an acquisition success story. There was a lot of resistance in DOD and some concern over delivered capability, but the EW airplane is over 90% common with the fighter version, simplifying maintenance, training, and tactical employment.