Smith slams F-35 lifecycle
costs: ‘We can do a hell of a lot better’
By: Joe Gould 1 day
ago
23
House Armed Services
Committee Chairman Adam Smith questions witnesses about the FY2022 defense
budget request in the Rayburn House Office Building on Capitol Hill, June 29,
2021 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
WASHINGTON ― House Armed
Services Committee Chairman Adam Smith on Tuesday criticized Lockheed Martin
and other contractors over the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and its exorbitant
lifecycle costs.
“There’s no
question that everyone involved ― certainly Lockheed Martin ― could be doing a
better job on getting sustainment costs down,” Smith, D-Wash., told the Defense
Writer’s Group. “The sustainment costs ― and it
varies, I understand they’re as high as $38,000 an hour, and that is incredibly
expensive ― it’ll make the plane so that you don’t really want to operate it any more
than you absolutely have to.”
The comments
are the latest volley at the F-35 program from Smith,
who called the fighter a “rathole” in March. He has been pointing to
the F-35′s costs and performance problems as a symbol of the Pentagon
acquisition system’s shortcomings.
Air Force
officials plan to complete a business-case analysis this summer to attack
escalating sustainment costs, the service’s top uniformed acquisition official,
Lt. Gen. Duke Richardson, said at a Senate hearing last week. In addition, the
Air Force is negotiating a three-year sustainment contract with performance
incentives, instead of the standard annual contract.
Lockheed says global demand for F-35 remains strong
despite uncertainty over US Air Force plans
The company’s optimism stands in sharp contrast to
a rising tide of criticism regarding the F-35′s cost relative to its
capabilities.
By: Valerie Insinna
Beyond cost,
average repair times stood at 131 days a year ago because there wasn’t enough
depot capacity, according to a GAO finding. Richardson touched on those issues
last week, telling lawmakers that more repair depots need to be in place
quickly.
“When it does
break, it tends to stay down for a very long time, and that’s because we
haven’t stood up the repair infrastructure,” Richardson said. “We should have
gotten started on that, frankly, a lot sooner than we did. And so, that’s the
part that we’re really attacking.”
Though F-35
sustainment costs have long been a hot topic, the issue took on new urgency
after the GAO reported in April a difference of $3.7 million per aircraft
between actual sustainment costs and what the services project they can afford
over the program’s lifecycle ― and projected a total overrun of $4.4 billion
by 2036.
To build
pressure for cost reductions, Smith talked about threatening to mothball F-35s
in favor of other platforms or somehow barring contractors linked to F-35
overruns from the emerging Next-Generation Air Dominance, or NGAD, program.
“The NGAD is a
pretty good way to incentivize it: you know, if you screw us on this contract,
then we ain’t giving you the next one,” Smith said. “There are a bunch of
different ways to work it, but I want to be as creative as possible about
incentivizing competition and incentivizing all of our contractors to give us
the best deal possible.”
Lockheed says
it has lowered its portion of the sustainment cost per flight hour by 44
percent since 2015 and that it expects to lower it another 40 percent over the
next five years.
“We’re
committed to working with our customers to bring F-35 sustainment costs down
and improve overall aircraft capability, availability and affordability for our
warfighters,” a company spokesperson said in a statement.
Smith stopped
short of bashing the F-35 entirely, calling it “an important platform,” and he
didn’t say the problems were all Lockheed’s fault.
“It’s part of
our future no matter what, but for it to be effective, we’ve got to get those
costs under control, and we’ve got to find ways to incentivize ― and I know it’s not just Lockheed,” Smith told reporters.
“You’ve got a
lot of subs that are involved with the software problems, and there are engine
issues that we’re trying to get our arms around. So, you know there’s a lot of
work to be done here, but we need to incentivize the entire operation to bring
costs down, and also, by the way, to get us to the capability that we need.”
Work is afoot
on new, more fuel-efficient engine technology meant for sixth-generation
fighters that could be used in the F-35 to drive down costs, Smith said. Fully
funding those upgrades and fielding them as soon as possible would be helpful,
he added.
To inject more
competition in defense acquisitions more broadly, Smith said he is considering
language in the upcoming defense policy bill aimed at to ensuring the Defense
Department can maintain intellectual property rights when it buys systems from
defense contractors.
“It’s a
freaking complicated thing to build an airplane, or to build anything that’s
going to be in the middle of a firefight, and it’s not going to go seamlessly,
and it’s not going to go on time and under budget every time,” Smith said.
“However, we can do a hell of a lot better than we did in the last 20 years.”
Valerie Insinna and Rachel
Cohen in Washington, D.C. contributed to this report.
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