- Reaction score
- 4,722
- Points
- 1,160
Could it be that because it was US only, they're being slightly more careful on what is released?
US Air Force Boss: Faster F-35 Buy Rate Might Not Be Possible
The head of Air Combat Command wants to see the US Air Force build up its inventory of F-35s quicker than planned, but its civilian head signaled Wednesday that it might not be feasible in the current fiscal climate.
Speaking to the press on Tuesday, Gen. Herbert “Hawk” Carlisle said he was concerned about the service’s current F-35 buy rate, which hovers in the 40s until fiscal 2021 when that number jumps up to 60. Carlisle stated he would like the Air Force to buy at least 60 aircraft per year in the near term to replace legacy aircraft that is aging out [emphasis added].
But in an interview with Defense News and sister publication Air Force Times, Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James said boosting the number of active-duty airmen is currently a bigger priority than ramping up the F-35 buy [emphasis added].
"It's all a matter of money. I would love to increase the buy also, but I don't see that as more urgent than staying the course to increase our end strength, for example,” she said in an interview Wednesday [Aug. 3]. “Increasing that end strength is the top thing. We think it's the top thing for all of our senior leaders.”..
Carlisle noted Aug. 2 that increasing the number of F-35s bought would boost economic order quantity, bringing the cost per jet closer to its $85 million target. On the other hand, moving slowly could lead to the Air Force spending more money upgrading fourth-generation airplanes that would otherwise be removed from service.
“I need more [F-35s] sooner to replace legacy airplanes and airplanes that are going to require money to do service life extension and do capability increases if I don’t replace the F-35,” he said. “So I would like to see the numbers go up to at least 60 if I can. Eighty would be optimum, but given the fiscal constraints that we’re in today, 80 would be very, very hard to get to.”..
Boosting the buy in 2018 is an unlikely prospect because the Air Force would have to take money from other procurement accounts in order to do so, he said. Even then, it has few options. The service cannot make big cuts to its KC-46 tanker program without breaking its fixed-priced contracting agreement. Slashing other procurement programs like the T-X trainer and Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System would not yield enough cash to meaningfully increase procurement...
http://www.defensenews.com/story/defense/air-space/air-force/2016/08/05/f35-buy-rate-air-force-budget-secretary-air-combat-commander/88306140/
Good2Golf said:On the question upstream a bit, If I were the USAF I wouldn't be in a hurry to blurt out results even if quite favourable. So long as the head shed knows, then I see no immediate need to placate the media and naysayers with justifications of performance....let all think it still has big issues for all I'd care. 35B and 35A are now IOC, Navy to follow, kicking and screaming with chants of the cancelled A-12 program and languid F/A-XX program echoing I. The background...
Singapore puts off decision on whether to buy Lockheed’s F-35
Singapore has put on hold a decision to buy as many as 12 of Lockheed Martin Corp.’s F-35 jets, according to information from the Pentagon’s program office.
The island nation’s permanent secretary of defense development informed the U.S. in mid-June that it was delaying final steps toward purchasing four of the fighters by about 2022, with an option to buy eight more, according to the information presented to Pentagon officials last month as part of their regular reviews of the costliest weapons program.
While Singapore gave no indication of when it might revive efforts to buy the F-35, the U.S. continues to encourage the Asian city-state to buy the fighter. “We welcome Singapore’s interest in purchasing the F-35 aircraft,” President Barack Obama said in opening remarks at a White House press conference last week with Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.
In December 2014, Singapore submitted a “letter of request” to the U.S. formally seeking information on purchasing the F-35, and it followed up in early 2015 by indicating it wanted the most complex model, the F-35B. Intended for short takeoffs and vertical landings on unimproved airstrips, the F-35B was designed for use by the U.S. Marine Corps and has already been ordered by the U.K. and Italy...
http://about.bgov.com/blog/singapore-puts-off-decision-whether-buy-lockheeds-f-35/
Harrigan said:I laud your optimism, but I don't follow your logic.
Just a month of so ago, the USAF and LM gleefully spread the news that the F35 deployment to Mountain Home had been a huge success, even releasing a graphic that left the impression the F35 had an 8:0 kill ratio vs the F15E (complete with 'pew pews'). They even more recently said they were so stealthy that SAMs couldn't see them. Then, they participate in a realistic exercise against the same aircraft they are expected to replace, and USAF and LM Public Affairs suddenly develop restraint?
The F35 cannot afford to fail, or more importantly, to be seen as a failure. It is in a constant fight for funding, and a constant fight to show that the massive amounts of money involved are not a waste. Carlisle wants to increase the numbers from 40 to 60 per year, and ideally 80. This doesn't happen without proving it is much better AND cheaper than its replacements.
The bar is high - LM and F35 supporters are constantly raving about how obviously better it is than everything else. So when given the opportunity, it has to live up to its own hype. Clearly, I hope that it does. Considering the amount of treasure that many countries have poured into the project, it had better be as good as LM says it is, otherwise the west is going to be in a world of hurt (financially, at the very least).
You could be right. Perhaps all the awesome news of how the F35 wiped the floor with the F15, F16, and F18 at Red Flag is being kept quiet - Senators, the GAO, influential media, and potential foreign buyers be dam**d -but to believe that they would do that is against all previous evidence.
Harrigan
HB_Pencil said:Uhh, is this what you were looking for?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4auM08D-S_E
Frankly, they don't need to "sell" it at every single instance. Its blindingly obvious to everybody internationally (except for the Canadian public) that this aircraft basically is a revolutionary advance over current designs. Talking about how it "wiped the floor" with F-16s ect. misses the point. The next iteration of warfare (which I've harped on here for years) has less to do with can you beat X or Y in one on one combat (which I think the heritage report a few days ago makes clear it is as good if not better than them) but how it operates within the emerging electronic battlespace.
Those other aircraft don't even fight in this space: they will become bit players, subservient to platforms with those capabilities. They are easy to detect, spoof, neutralize because of it... vastly degrading their actual value in the battlespace.