F-35 Risks Falling Behind China, Russia Threats, Panel Warns
Lockheed Martin Corp.’s F-35, the world’s costliest weapons system, may fail to keep pace with Chinese and Russian air defense improvements given its “extraordinary costs” so far, the U.S. House defense policy committee has warned.
The House Armed Services Committee supported the F-35’s $398 billion acquisition program in the report accompanying its version of the fiscal 2022 defense policy bill. It said the sophisticated fighter “can be used against advanced integrated air defense systems operating against the United States or its foreign partners and allies during high-end, very contested contingencies” once it finally receives key software upgrades.
But the committee called into question “overly aggressive development and production schedules” that for more than 20 years have resulted “in longer schedules and much higher costs than planned to realize less than full warfighting capabilities required by the Department of Defense.”
With adversaries that pose “near-peer” challenges advancing more rapidly than expected, the panel said it’s “uncertain as to whether or not the F-35 aircraft can sufficiently evolve to meet the future expected threat in certain geographical areas of operations in which combat operations could occur.”
The committee didn’t name the adversaries of concern but Pentagon officials cite China as the prime threat driving U.S. defense investments and also note Russian moves.
The panel’s view reflects that the F-35 still hasn’t demonstrated its capabilities in a simulation against the most challenging Russian and Chinese air defense systems. The 64-sortie simulator exercise to be run by the Navy was most recently supposed to have been completed in December, though it was originally planned for 2017.
Simulation Concerns
In April, Bloomberg News reported that the Defense Department’s F-35 program office projected the target date as August 2022. F-35 program manager Air Force Lieutenant General Eric Fick told reporters on Wednesday that a new start date was being assessed and would be presented to Pentagon leaders next month.
Although much progress has been made, it’s his assessment after visiting the test site last week that the schedule for the initial upfront preparation phase before the aircraft is put through its most challenging phases “is aggressive and will be challenging to meet,” Fick said.
The program office is working its way through about 105 subsystem software “packages” needed to verify and validate that the simulator “does what we expected it to do” and “we can trust what it says to be true,” Fick said. “That progress to date has been pretty slow” with about only 25 of the packages reviewed. The test team is “reassessing options and alternatives” to modify and make the schedule more realistic, he said.
The Pentagon requested 85 F-35s for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, up from 79 this year. The House Armed Services panel cut five, authorizing 80. The Senate Armed Services Committee added six jets. The House Appropriations Committee approved 85; its Senate counterpart hasn’t acted on its bill yet. More than 690 F-35s of more than 3,000 projected have been delivered and are operating from 21 bases around the world.