Associated Press
HOLLOMAN AIR FORCE BASE Holloman Air Force Base will say farewell Monday to the F-117 Nighthawk stealth fighter, which the nation is retiring from its arsenal after 27 years.
The angular black radar-evading planes are being put in mothballs.
The last F-117s scheduled to fly will leave Holloman on Monday, then stop in Palmdale, Calif., for another retirement ceremony before arriving at their final destination Tonopah Test Range Airfield in Nevada, where the fighter made its first flight in 1981.
Holloman's ceremony will include a four-plane flyby, the last opportunity to see the stealths in the air over New Mexico, said Alan Ponder, media liaison for the base's 49th Fighter Wing.
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio, which managed the F-117 program, held an informal, private retirement ceremony last month.
Holloman had been the only base to have the stealths since the squadron moved in mid-1992 to southern New Mexico from Tonopah.
The Air Force decided to accelerate the F-117s' retirement to free funding to modernize the rest of the fleet. The Nighthawk is being replaced by the F-22 Raptor, which also has stealth technology.
The technology used on the F-117 was developed in the 1970s to help evade enemy radar. While not invisible to radar, the plane's shape and coating greatly reduced its detection.
The single-seat aircraft was designed to fly into heavily defended areas undetected. Fifty-nine F-117s were made.