As a more advanced and user-friendly aircraft, the Growler
will only require two-man flight crews vice four for the Prowler.
In the EA-6B, a pilot, navigator, and two electronic countermeasures
officers were needed. The improved capability of the Growler
requires less manpower, with only a pilot and an electronic
warfare officer for in-flight missions.
"I've flown it, and I can tell you that both the naval
flight officer in the back seat and the naval aviator in the
front are going to be busy with their new responsibilities.
There's going to be more information than you could possibly
imagine at your fingertips," says Capt. Bradley Russell,
commodore of Electronic Attack Wing, U.S. Pacific Fleet (CVWP).
"This is a big, fast, highly maneuverable jet that's
going to give you total situational awareness to the battle-space
out there. I tell you this: you're going to love your new
office; however, let me caution you, crawl before you walk
and walk before you run." The Navy has placed an order
of 85 Growler aircraft, five aircraft will be attached to
each of the 10 deploying Electronic Attack Squadrons (VAQ).
12 aircraft are anticipated at the Fleet Replacement Squadron
(FRS), VAQ-129.