Det er vanskelig å få begrep om disse software issues. Ting tyder på at maskinen er for komplisert. Meldingen fra Bloomberg er sendt meg fra min observatør på Byhaugen i Stavanger. (Red.)
Pentagon Cuts Its Request for Lockheed’s
F-35s by 35%
·
Defense Department to seek 61 in
next budget instead of 94
·
Fighter is flying over Eastern
Europe despite software issues
By
Updated
on16. mars 2022, 21:27 CET
The Pentagon will request 61 F-35s in its next budget, 33 fewer of
the stealth jets from Lockheed Martin Corp. than
previously planned, according to people familiar with the spending blueprint.
The U.S. Defense Department had planned to fund 94 of the fighters in fiscal 2023, up from the 85 in this year’s budget, according to the most recent “Selected Acquisition Report” on its costliest program.
Lockheed tumbled 6.1% to $421.34, the steepest decline since Oct. 26.
The proposed
reduction for the F-35 may be the most controversial procurement item in a
national security budget request that’s expected to top $770 billion for the
year that begins Oct. 1.
The F-35 is currently being deployed to Eastern Europe in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Six F-35s from the Air Forces 34th Fighter Squadron are flying “air policing” missions from Estonia and Romania. German Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht announced Monday that Germany would buy 35 of the warplanes.
But the proposed slowdown in purchases may raise questions among lawmakers, Lockheed investors and overseas customers about a lessening of the U.S. commitment to a program projected to cost $398 billion in development and acquisition plus an additional $1.2 trillion to operate and maintain the fleet over 66 years. The people familiar with the budget plan asked not to be identified in advance of the budget release in coming weeks.
Read More: Germany Leads EU Spending Push, Goes Big With F-35 Buy
The rationale for the reduction won’t be officially explained until the proposed Pentagon budget is made public. But the request comes as negotiations with Bethesda, Maryland-based Lockheed over the next F-35 contract -- for about 400 planes -- are going slower than anticipated. And F-35s remain hobbled by flawed execution of a crucial upgrade of their software and hardware capabilities that’s estimated to cost $14 billion.
Boeing’s
F-15EX
Along with the proposed F-35 reduction, the Air Force will request
24 non-stealthy F-15EX jets built by Boeing Co., up from 14 planned in the fiscal 2021
budget. The EX model carries more ordnance than the F-35 and is estimated to be
cheaper to fly. Still, the service plans to purchase many more F-35s than EX
jets.
Asked about the cutback in planned F-35 purchases, Laura Seal,
spokeswoman for the Defense Department’s F-35 program office, said the budget
request can be discussed “once it is delivered and released, but not before.”
Spokespersons for the Air Force, the largest customer for F-35s, and the Navy
made similar comments.
The F-35’s “Block 4” software and hardware upgrade is
currently being installed on deployed jets even though it’s “immature,
deficient and insufficiently tested,” according to an assessment by the
Pentagon testing office released in January. Aircraft operators “identified
deficiencies in weapons, fusion, communications and navigation, cybersecurity
and targeting processes that required software modification and additional time
and resources, which caused delays,” it said.
The aircraft
flying missions now, including those in Europe, are described as capable by
Pentagon officials, however. “We understand the threats that the F-35 is going
up against today,” Lieutenant General Eric Fick, who heads the F-35 program
office, told reporters this month. “We understand the threats largely
propagated throughout Europe, and those were the threats that the airplane was
developed to counter.”
A person
familiar with the Air Force’s rationale for purchasing fewer planes said it
shouldn’t be seen as stepping back from the service’s long-stated goal to buy
1,763 F-35s. Instead, the person said, it’s a matter of slowing purchases until
the full Block 4 capability can be delivered on new jets in order to minimize
the cost to retrofit them.
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