Anonymous F-35 Customer Is Getting A New Variant Of The Stealth Jet
THOMAS NEWDICK View Thomas Newdick's Articles
Work
is due to begin on a mysterious new variant of the F-35 stealth fighter for
an as-yet-unnamed foreign customer. A contract announcement posted recently
confirms that Lockheed Martin has received just over $49 million of Foreign
Military Sales (FMS) funds to develop the unspecified “Joint Strike Fighter
aircraft variant,” with speculation now focusing on what changes this could
involve, and which operator it’s destined for.
The
full contract announcement,
published online December 27, reads as follows:
Lockheed
Martin Corp., Fort Worth, Texas, is awarded a $49,059,494
cost-plus-incentive-fee-contract that provides engineering and other related
activities in support of the design and development of a Joint Strike Fighter
aircraft variant tailored for an unspecified Foreign Military Sales (FMS)
customer.
Work
will be performed in Fort Worth, Texas (77%); Redondo Beach, California (14%);
Orlando, Florida (6%); Baltimore, Maryland (1%); Owego, New York (1%) and
Samlesbury, United Kingdom (1%), and is expected to be completed in December
2026.
FMS
funds in the amount $49,059,494 will be obligated at time of award, none of
which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was not
competitively procured pursuant to 10 U.S. Code 2304(c)(1). The Naval Air
Systems Command, Patuxent River, Maryland, is the contracting activity
(N0001922C0015).
ISRAELI AIR FORCE/AMIT
AGRONOV
The Israeli Air Force’s uniquely
outfitted test variant of the F-35I stealth fighter represents one approach to
fielding a bespoke subvariant of the Joint Stike Fighter.
It seems highly unlikely that the new
F-35 variant would be for a new, previously unannounced customer. It would be
very unusual for the United States to award a contract for the development of
an F-35 variant for a customer who has not already agreed to buy the aircraft.
The
fact that the contract has been placed by Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR)
also doesn’t tell us more, since this serves not only as the contracting agency
for all F-35 FMS customers but is also home to the entire F-35 Joint Program Office. Therefore,
the aircraft could be a modification of the conventional takeoff and landing
(CTOL) F-35A, or
the short takeoff and vertical landing (STOVL) F-35B. So
far, there are no foreign customers for the F-35C carrier variant,
which would rule out a development of this version.
ISRAEL’S SPECIALLY-BUILT F-35I TEST JET JUST TOUCHED DOWN
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'U.S. F-35 FRIENDS CIRCLE'By Joseph TrevithickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
HERE’S HOW FINLAND JUSTIFIED ITS DECISION TO BUY 64 F-35
JOINT STRIKE FIGHTERSBy Thomas NewdickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
UAE F-35 STEALTH FIGHTER DEAL HANGS BY A THREAD AMID
CHINESE ESPIONAGE WORRIESBy Thomas NewdickPosted in THE WAR ZONE
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Most likely, we are looking at a
country-specific subvariant of an F-35A or B model. However, a NATO customer is
probably less likely, considering that a truly bespoke variant would be at odds
with interoperability requirements within the alliance.
As
for what this new iteration of the Joint Strike Fighter might actually consist
of, the chances are weighted highly in favor of a more modest modification, or
series of changes, to suit the specific local requirements of a particular
customer. After all, the price tag of $49 million for this contract is really
not large in F-35 terms, especially as that covers work through December 2026.
This is, of course, a program that has been regularly hit by spiraling costs that
have affected export
customers too.
F-35
modifications to meet local demands are not unprecedented. After all, many
foreign F-35 customers request certain changes to their aircraft, frequently
relating to weapons capabilities, but also other features, like the drag chute found
on Norway’s F-35As and which has also been selected by Finland, the most
recent Joint Strike Fighter
customer.
An
F-35A drag chute test in Norway: Video: https://youtu.be/wtxIhjKczz4
More
radical changes are embodied in Israel’s one-off test version of its F-35I
“Adir,” specially equipped to put the type’s equipment through its paces,
including aircraft and weapons trials, avionics integration, and airframe
modification and testing. You can read all about the background to this unique
F-35 model in this previous article.
In
particular, the Israeli test jet will help with the introduction of
Israeli-developed weapons destined for operational F-35Is, expected to include
the Rafael SPICE precision-guided
bomb, but potentially also air-to-air missiles and
other weapons. The operational F-35Is are also adding specific communications
and electronic warfare systems, which will be tested locally first. These jets
are also distinct from other F-35As thanks to Israel’s ability to install its
own distinct mission
software and do so independent of the Autonomic Logistics
Information System (ALIS), which also handles plenty of
critical mission functions.
The
new contract may well be for the continuation of work already underway, which
could apply to Israel. Back in 2018,
Lockheed won a contract to develop Israeli-specific modifications under the
Block 3F+ production effort, with work due to run until the end of this year.
This new contract could well serve to extend that work.
ISRAELI AIR FORCE/AMIT
AGRONOV
Frontline Israeli Air Force F-35I
jets are receiving specific avionics, electronic warfare, and weapons.
Israel
has in the past also looked at extending the range of its F-35I fleet by
incorporating external fuel tanks and
even conformal fuel tanks. Either of these would be especially useful for
long-range strikes of the kind that the F-35I would likely be tasked with. The
contract may have to do with integration work related to this.
On
the other hand, not naming the FMS customer may point to Singapore,
which has ordered an initial batch of just four F-35Bs that are scheduled to be
delivered in 2026.
That would not only tally with the timescale of the contract, but Singapore
also often prefers not to be named in FMS contracts, citing operational security
concerns.
Singapore, like Israel, has
traditionally required additional unique capabilities to be integrated into its
fighter jets and the F-35B may be no exception. Indeed, Singapore will be the
first user to operate the STOVL version of the jet exclusively from land bases
and may require modifications to its aircraft to suit its unique concept of
operations. The first four Singaporean jets will be used to evaluate whether
the F-35 really is a good fit for the tiny country, which could also point to
aircraft configured more specifically for testing purposes.
In fact, Singapore could be looking to
incorporate some of the same electronic warfare and/or weapons systems that
Israel is installing in its F-35s, which would continue an established military
relationship between those two countries.
One
other factor specific to Singapore is the refueling capability for the F-35B
variant it has selected. The STOVL model comes with a refueling probe as
standard rather than the receptacle that’s used on the Republic of Singapore
Air Force’s frontline F-15SG and F-16 tactical jets — as well as on F-35As.
It’s conceivable that the modifications could relate to equipping Singaporean
F-35Bs with a refueling receptacle, which would provide compatibility with the
boom on its A330 Multi-Role Tanker
Transport (MRTT) aircraft. While the MRTTs do feature wingtip
pods for probe-and-drogue refueling, the receptacle offers much greater fuel
transfer rates and could be an attractive capability for Singapore.
By
the same token, it’s also possible that an F-35A customer is looking to outfit
its receptacle-equipped jets with refueling probes. This could be a factor for
a country like Finland, a recent Joint Strike
Fighter customer, whose current F/A-18C/D fighters routinely
refuel from pod-equipped tankers. This is not a new proposition. Lockheed is
well aware of the potential for such a modification. Canada, for instance,
would likely require the same configuration if they were to buy the F-35A. This
would also make sense with the work being related to a new variant, as the
outright configuration would differ from its F-35A counterparts.
Israel and Singapore are certainly
both possible candidates for the mystery contract, but Steve Trimble, Defense
Editor at Aviation
Week, has pointed out that he thinks the
work may be strictly limited perhaps to a handful of avionics revisions as
requested by an existing customer.
If that’s the case, then the wording
of the contract announcement is at least curious, pointing specifically to
what’s described as a “tailored” new variant of the aircraft.
With
that in mind, some observers have suggested that the work may refer to some
previously unknown ‘downgraded’ export variant of the F-35, perhaps developed
for a more sensitive customer with specific concerns around high-end
capabilities or security issues.
Taiwan or the United Arab Emirates would potentially fit those descriptions,
but the very early nature of discussions about possible F-35 orders would also
seem to make that all but impossible. While the UAE has at least been approved
as a future F-35 customer, the future of such a deal hangs in the balance amid
concerns over stringent safeguards to protect these systems against Chinese
espionage, an issue you can read about here.
There have been other contracts
related to specific modifications of the F-35 for FMS customers, even just this
year. However, while thin on details, these have differed from the latest
announcement in elements of their wording. While the costs involved are broadly
similar in each case, they have applied to modifications that apply to multiple
unidentified FMS customers, rather than just one. Among these earlier
contracts, one valued at $13.7 million is for “support of sustainment efforts
for flight test instrumentation air systems,” which could again point to the
Israeli-specific test jet.
Beyond
the possible need for a refueling probe on its A models, Finland has already
said that its aircraft will feature some significant differences compared to
other F-35As. According to the
Finnish Air Force, “the solution encompasses the maintenance capabilities to be
built in Finland as well as spare components and replaceable assemblies for
exceptional circumstances that are under the sole national control of Finland
as well as participation in the multinational maintenance network.”
Another
non-aligned F-35 customer, Switzerland,
could conceivably also be seeking to incorporate some special modifications in
its jets, and tweaking the design to use a host of specific parts would likely
be within the realm of something in this price range. However, both Finland and
Switzerland are expecting to get their first F-35s in 2025, a year in advance
of when work will be completed under this contract.
As it stands, we can only really
speculate as to which F-35 customer is involved in this apparently bespoke
work, while the degree of change in what’s purportedly a new variant of the jet
is also unknown at this stage. Our best guess would be this pertains to giving
the A model a refueling probe, necessitating its own variant terminology, but
that is just a guess. We have reached out to NAVAIR for more information and
will continue to bring you more details of this intriguing story just as soon
as they emerge.
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