ORLANDO, Fla. — The Air Force's most advanced fighter has been in battle against the Islamic State group for about five months, and has performed well enough to now be an anchor of airstrike sorties.

against the Islamic State group​, the head of the Air Force's combat arm said Thursday today​.

The F-22 flew its first combat mission in September, striking an Islamic State headquarters building in late September in ​Syria. Since then, the F-22 has flown as part of strike packages in most of the combat sorties as part of Operation Inherent Resolve in both Iraq and Syria. It has flown , both flying ​combat missions, escorted as well as escorting ​bombers and helped helping to ​manage other fighter aircraft on their sorties, Air Combat Command chief Gen. Hawk Carlisle said today ​at the Air Force Association Air Warfare Symposium here in Orlando​.

"The airplane has performed fantastically," Carlisle said, with its "ability to go to areas where other aircraft can't, re-role and mission manage the entire force.

"When you have F-22s in a package, every single airplane in that package is better because the F-22s are there."

The F-22 has shown an ability to "re-role" in the middle of a mid-​sortie, changing from an escort to using its advanced sensors and avionics to help control other aircraft and change targets mid-mission​, Carlisle said. This ability has led to an increase in its the ​use of the jet from its first sortie​.

"We're putting Raptors into every package whenever we can because they have exceeded even what we have expected," Carlisle said.

Carlisle used his stage at the conference to target those who have criticized the role of air power in Inherent Resolve. As of Feb. 5, coalition aircraft have conducted 2,294 airstrikes. These missions have been effective, Carlisle said.

"Air power is doing fantastic," he said. "Folks over there are doing tremendous work. Their [Islamic State's] ability to finance has been severely cut off, [along with] their ability to mass in any numbers, and their ability to communicate. … Air power is very effective. It has changed the way they operate."

This effectiveness is attributable to the fact that a coalition, not just the U.S., has been flying missions, not just the U.S., ​said Gen. Frank Gorenc, commander of U.S. Air Forces in Europe-Air Forces Africa.

As of Feb. 5, U.S. aircraft have conducted 1,856 airstrikes, while coalition aircraft have has ​conducted 438 airstrikes. Meanwhile However​, the Jordanian aA​ir fF​orce has increased its been increasing their ​activity following the death of a captured pilot.

"When things happen, there are people who choose to go with us," Gorenc said. "That interoperability, the ability to switch on and operate in a coalition way on Dd​ay 1 is something that has to be brought out as a topic of goodness at every opportunity."

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