Usaf Roundel — 3 museum-grade prints in this palette. The McDonnell Douglas F-4G Advanced Wild Weasel was the United States Air Force's final Phantom-based SEAD platform, converting surplus F-4E airframes at Hill Air Force Base with APR-38 Radar Homing and Warning System pods and ARN-101 digital modular avionics to locate and destroy enemy radar emitters. Paired with the Textron AGM-88 HARM, the F-4G devastated integrated air-defence networks during Operation Desert Storm — 561st TFS aircraft launched opening-night HARM salvos against Baghdad-area SAM sites. The F-4 Phantom II flew more combat sorties for the United States than any other jet fighter since Korea, serving as the backbone of Vietnam air campaigns, NATO deterrent patrols, and Middle East conflicts across five decades. Its two-seat crew concept, smoke-trailing J79 exhaust, and ungainly beauty made it instantly recognizable on carrier decks and ramrod runways alike. The F-117A Nighthawk proved that radar-evading attack aircraft could operate in contested airspace, rewriting strike doctrine from the Gulf War forward. Skunk Works faceted shaping, developed when computational stealth modelling was still emerging, produced an aircraft instantly recognizable despite its secrecy.