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Commentary: The Republic of Singapore Air Force's likely new fighter jet




CommentarySingaporeCommentary: The Republic of Singapore Air Force's likely new fighter jet
Russian and Chinese offerings would present significant inter-operability issues with the rest of the SAF’s equipment, which are almost exclusively of western origin, says one observer.
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
In an investor presentation, Lockheed presented a chart that showed the cost per plane has fallen more than 60 per cent since the F-35's inception. (File photo: AFP/ADRIAN DENNIS)
By Mike Yeo
10 Jul 2018 06:17AM(Updated: 22 Oct 2018 11:04AM)
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MELBOURNE: Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen’s revelation that Singapore will soon decide which aircraft will replace the Lockheed-Martin F-16 Fighting Falcon multi-role jet fighter in the Republic of Singapore Air Force service has re-ignited interest in the programme among the wider defence community.
Speaking to media in the lead-up to the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) Day, Dr Ng had said that the decision will be made in the next few months, with the new fighters needed by the 2030s when the F-16s will start facing obsolescence issues.

He added that some of the criteria that will be used to choose the new jet will be its capability to defend Singapore’s airspace; whether it can work with other SAF air, land and sea platforms; ease of maintenance; as well as the overall cost.

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F-35 THE FAVOURITE
The fighter jet that is being replaced, the F-16, has been the mainstay of the RSAF since 1998, when the first of what will become 60 aircraft were delivered to the RSAF.
Singapore’s F-16s are currently being progressively upgraded by manufacturer Lockheed-Martin, where they will be fitted with a new, more advanced radar, and improved datalinks for better networking with the rest of the SAF’s assets.

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Capable as they are, the F-16s will be more than 30 years old by the year 2030 and will be approaching the end of its useful life even with the upgrades.
READ: How the F-35 fighter jet might take RSAF to the next level
With this in mind, it had been known as far back as 2013 that the Defence Ministry had been looking at new fighters, with the Lockheed-Martin F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter being one of the types evaluated and seen by many as the favourite to be chosen as Singapore’s next fighter jet.
As its name suggests, the F-35 is the result of a multinational programme by several nations led by the United States to develop a next generation multirole fighter.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
A US soldier adjusts his cap in the cockpit as a Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II aircraft at Le Bourget Airport near Paris, France on Jun 18, 2017. (File photo: REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol)

These other development partners include the United Kingdom, Australia, Italy, the Netherlands and Norway. Other users of the F-35 include Israel, Japan and South Korea, all of whom have received their first aircraft.
Described as a fifth generation fighter by Lockheed-Martin, the F-35 is more than a traditional fighter jet. In addition to the “stealthy” design and features that will make it difficult for an enemy to detect it with radars and other sensors, also features a host of other advanced capabilities.
These include an advanced, secure datalink that will allow F-35s to share information about the battlefield and assist each other in targeting adversaries without the risk of inadvertently revealing their own location. There is also what is called the Distributed Aperture System, essentially six electro-optical cameras that will allow the F-35 pilot to “see” all around the aircraft including what is below and behind the aircraft.
The images, as well as other important flight and combat parameters, will be able to be projected onto the visor of the F-35’s unique helmet, allowing the pilot to have improved awareness on what is happening around him compared to today’s contemporaries.
There are three variants of the F-35: The conventional take-off and landing F-35A that has been ordered by the US Air Force and most user nations, the F-35B Short Take-Off Vertical Landing version ordered by the US Marine Corps, the UK and Italy that can take off on shorter runways and smaller aircraft carriers, and the F-35C designed to operate off the full-sized US Navy aircraft carriers.
Several quarters have reported that Singapore’s interest is in the F-35B variant.
Given Singapore’s land constraints as well as the small number of airbases available to the RSAF (especially given that Paya Lebar Airbase is set to be relocated in 2030 or later), the choice of a fighter jet that can operate from shorter runways would make sense. It would allow the RSAF to continue generating air power even in the event of its runways being targeted during combat.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
The fourth US Air Force F-35A Lightning II aircraft arrives at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada in this photo released on May 8, 2013. (File photo: Daniel Hughes/U.S. Air Force/Handout via Reuters)

However, the F-35B, which has a large lift fan in the centre of its fuselage to allow it to land vertically, has some restrictions placed on its manoeuvrability as well as being unable to carry as much in its internal weapons bay as a result compared to the other variants.
This opens the possibility that Singapore may opt for a mixed fleet of F-35As and Bs, although this will likely be contingent on how much more it will cost to operate two different variants compared to a homogenous fleet.
OTHER CONTENDERS
During his media interview, Dr Ng also mentioned several other fighter types available on the market although he appeared to stop short of confirming that Singapore had also evaluated these types. These include the European Eurofighter Typhoon as well as Russian and Chinese stealth fighters.
Despite its very impressive performance, the Typhoon is essentially what is known as a “4.5 Generation” fighter which does not offer significant improvements in capability over the RSAF’s F-15SG and upgraded F-16 fighters.
Meanwhile, Russian and Chinese offerings would present significant inter-operability issues with the rest of the SAF’s equipment, which are almost exclusively of western origin.
The RSAF has always operated US-made fighter aircraft with the exception of its first combat aircraft, the British Hawker Hunter acquired in the 1970s.
There are also question marks over the development and capabilities of Russia’s Sukhoi Su-57, with India pulling out of a planned joint development of the type while China is unlikely to export its Chengdu J-20 stealth fighter.
Chinese designs are also further hampered by the use of Russian engines, with Chinese attempts at developing indigenous jet engines hampered by lingering engineering issues.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Chinese J-20 stealth fighter jets fly past during a military parade at the Zhurihe training base in China's northern Inner Mongolia region on Jul 30, 2017. (File photo: AFP)

A CONSIDERED APPROACH
Singapore’s interest in the F-35 was known as far back as 2013 with Dr Ng saying then that the F-35 was “a suitable aircraft to further modernise our fighter fleet”. However, that has not been translated into an F-35 order from Singapore, with the Defence Minister saying in the meantime that Singapore was in “no particular hurry” to do so with the F-16s expected to serve until the 2030s.
It is possible that in this time, Singapore has been negotiating to ensure that it would be able to maintain as high a level of sovereign capability as possible for its aircraft in the form of customising them for Singapore’s unique requirements like it has done with RSAF’s F-15s and F-16s.
It is also likely that Singapore would have wanted to keep heavy maintenance of its aircraft in-country instead of sending its aircraft to a Lockheed-established regional facility, as well as requested restrictions on what sort of operational data is sent to the cloud-based logistics system designed and operated by the aircraft manufacturer.
The gap in time between Singapore’s initial interest and impending decision is also likely as a result of the Defence Ministry waiting on the F-35 development programme’s maturity before committing to the type.
Due in no small part to the F-35’s cutting edge technology but also because of programme management missteps, the development of the F-35 has been plagued by delays and cost overruns. It is only now that the schedule is mostly getting back on track with the flight test programme in its advanced stages and production starting to ramp up.
As such, an order in the near future means the SAF can be reasonably confident of getting a fully combat-capable aircraft, while at the same time there will be less risk of the aircraft being ordered too late and not being able to be delivered to meet the F-16 retirement dates.
The United States has also started to deploy its own F-35s, with the Marines now operating a squadron of F-35Bs to Japan since 2017 and on board its amphibious ships earlier this year. F-35 pilots who have taken part in the realistic Red Flag wargames in the Nevada desert have also been effusive with their praise of the “God’s eye view” of the battlefield offered by the F-35’s sensors, calling it a “game-changer” in the realm of air combat.
Other partner countries are also starting to receive their aircraft and based on development timelines, receiving aircraft in the 2030s would mean the Singapore will be getting fully mature aircraft with a full set of capabilities.
With the production of what is expected to be an order book of 3,000 aircraft well underway, it would also mean that aircraft unit price and operating costs would have dropped by then, with Lockheed-Martin targeting the price of a single F-35A to be US$80 million, or cheaper than the cost of some of today’s fighters.
Mike Yeo is the Asia reporter for US-based defence publication Defense News.
Source: CNA/sl
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Belgium chooses Lockheed's F-35 over Eurofighter: Belga




BusinessBelgium chooses Lockheed's F-35 over Eurofighter: Belga
Belgium has chosen Lockheed Martin's F-35 stealth jets over the Eurofighter Typhoon to replace its aging F-16s, news agency Belga cited government sources as saying, in a move that would cement the U.S.-made war plane's position in Europe.
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
U.S. Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon and F-35 Lightning II aircraft participate in a training mission near Kunsan Air Base
22 Oct 2018 10:10PM
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BRUSSELS/BERLIN: Belgium has chosen Lockheed Martin's F-35 stealth jets over the Eurofighter Typhoon to replace its aging F-16s, news agency Belga cited government sources as saying, in a move that would cement the U.S.-made war plane's position in Europe.
The country has been deliberating for months over a multibillion-dollar purchase of 34 new fighter jets, with the latest deadline for a decision being Oct. 29.

A defense ministry spokeswoman declined to comment on the government's decision and did not confirm the end-October deadline.

Lockheed spokeswoman Carolyn Nelson did not confirm that a decision had been made but said the company remains confident that the F-35 is the right choice for Belgium.
"The F-35 offers transformational capability for the Belgian Air Force and, if selected, will align them with a global coalition operating the world's most advanced aircraft."
If confirmed, the decision will make Belgium the 12th country to buy the radar-evading F-35 jets and could help to strengthen the U.S. aerospace company's position in forthcoming tenders in Switzerland, Finland and Germany.

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The decision, the likely outcome of which was reported by Reuters last Friday, had been expected in July before the NATO summit in Brussels. The order for jets due for delivery from 2023 is estimated to be worth 3.6 billion euros (US$4.14 billion).
Washington has extended the terms of the F-35 bid to Oct. 31 at Brussels' request, U.S. sources said, adding that any further delay would trigger changes in pricing.
Lockheed has said its bid will give Belgian companies significant opportunities to contribute to the global F-35 enterprise.
EUROFIGHTER BLOW

Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel has previously said he would like to make the decision on the F-16 replacements before a national election in May and Defence Minister Steven Vandeput has said he hoped to settle the matter before he steps down at the end of the year.
A win for Lockheed would mark a setback for Britain, Germany, Italy and Spain, the four countries behind the Eurofighter program, who had mounted a strong lobbying campaign for the European war plane.
It is also likely to anger France, which did not submit a formal bid for the Rafale fighter built by Dassault Aviation but had offered Belgium close defense cooperation to prevent a further spread of the F-35 in Europe.
Other European buyers of the F-35 include Britain, the Netherlands, Denmark, Italy, Turkey and Norway.
The Eurofighter is flown by Germany, Britain, Austria, Italy and Spain.
(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop in Brussels and Andrea Shalal in Berlin; Editing by Alastair Macdonald and David Goodman)
Source: Reuters
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Commentary: The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter will change the rules of the air power game




CommentaryCommentaryCommentary: The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter will change the rules of the air power game
The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter will provide sharper sensing for other advanced weaponry in the Singapore Armed Force’s arsenal if it is selected, says one observer.
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
The F-35 Lightning II, also known as the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF), planes arrive at Edwards Air Force Base in California in this May 2010 file photo. (Photo: REUTERS/Tom Reynolds/Lockheed Martin Corp/Handout)
By Mike Yeo
03 Nov 2018 06:28AM(Updated: 03 Nov 2018 07:48AM)
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MELBOURNE: As Singapore moves closer to selecting its next fighter jet to replace its fleet of F-16s, the oldest of which turned 20 earlier this year, the focus has been on the Lockheed-Martin F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter.
It has been widely considered by the defence community as the leading option to be selected by Singapore.

So how would the F-35 be able to fit into Singapore’s defence system?

READ: The Republic of Singapore Air Force's likely new fighter jet, a commentary
ALLOWS SINGAPORE TO GENERATE HIGH-END AIR POWER CAPABILITIES DESPITE FEW AIRBASES
The F-35, which has already been selected by 13 countries as their next generation fighter jet and is gradually entering service with a few, exists in three different variants.

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The F-35A conventional take-off and landing (CTOL) version that has been selected by a majority of customers; the F-35B Short Take-off and Vertical Landing (STOVL) version that can operate from short runways or smaller aircraft carriers; and the F-35C that is designed to operate from the US Navy’s nuclear-powered aircraft carriers.
As far back as 2013, the Ministry of Defence (MINDEF) was known to be evaluating the F-35 among several other fighter types for its F-16 replacement, with reports since then suggesting that Singapore was particularly interested in the F-35B STOVL variant.
READ: F-35B jets make first appearance in Southeast Asia for Singapore Airshow


image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Belgium opted for the US-built F-35 stealth fighter aircraft (Photo: AFP/Kazuhiro NOGI)

The F-35B can take off from a stretch of runway as short as 168m and land vertically courtesy of a lift fan and a thrust vectoring exhaust nozzle system that diverts airflow downwards during take-off and landing.
This also allows the F-35B to operate from the smaller aircraft carriers operated by the US Marine Corps and Italy, or those who lack a specialised aircraft launch and recovery systems like the United Kingdom’s ships.
Essentially, the F-35B will be the first truly multirole STOVL-capable fighter jet in service. Older STOVL aircraft, such as the Anglo-American Harrier “jump-jet”, were essentially light attack or local air defence aircraft with limitations in performance and weapons carrying capability.


The attraction of the F-35B in Singapore’s context is that it brings the advanced capabilities in the other F-35 variants, albeit with some weapons carriage and manoeuvrability restrictions due to the lift fan, into an aircraft with STOVL performance.
This means a potential operator like Singapore, with its limited strategic depth due to its small land area and number of airbases, will still be able to generate high-end air combat capability to defend itself in the event of its runways being disabled in times of conflict.
Previously, the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) has conducted exercises by turning a stretch of Lim Chu Kang Road adjacent to Tengah Airbase into an alternate runway where fighter jets can take off and land from.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An F-15SG taking off from Lim Chu Kang Road which was converted into a temporary runway. (Photo: Loke Kok Fai)

A NIMBLE NODE FOR A NETWORKED FORCE
The F-35 is designed from the start to be more than just a fighter jet.
Its ability to function as part of an integrated, networked force is a big plus for Singapore, given MINDEF’s efforts to transform the SAF into what it calls a “3rd-Generation fighting force” that is similarly networked and integrated.
The F-35 can function essentially as a network node in such a force; gathering, processing, and sharing information and data about the battlefield to friendly forces through datalinks.
As part of these network-enabled capabilities, the F-35 is even able to send targeting information to friendly aircraft and other forces that will then be able engage that target.
This capability was demonstrated recently when a US Marine Corps F-35B provided information about the exact location of a distant target via datalink to one of its High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) during an exercise in Yuma, Arizona.
The Marine HIMARS, similar to those currently being operated by the SAF, was then able to use this information to destroy that target by firing a GPS-guided rocket, according to a report that appeared earlier this month in the Marine Corps Times newspaper.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
A HIMARS vehicle can hold up to six rockets. (Photo: Aqil Haziq Mahmud)

READ: ‘Easiest aircraft I’ve ever flown’: Taking the F-35 for a spin - and a fight

The effect of this capability is two-fold. First, the demonstration of the F-35’s capability of being a network node means that its ability to unleash fire power at enemy targets is not limited by the weapons it can carry itself.
Second, the F-35B is able to give friendly forces such as other, less stealthy fighter jets or ground-based rocket systems, the ability to engage those targets without using their own sensors (such as radars) to find targets – therefore lowering the risk of giving away either of their own positions.
DRONE MOTHERSHIP
Another potential capability of the F-35B that could be of interest to Singapore’s defence planners in the future is work in the US exploring its ability to act as a mothership to cheaper, unmanned aircraft.
The US Air Force Research Laboratory has taken steps to develop such a concept, known as the Loyal Wingman.
Defence companies have also done work in this area, with Lockheed-Martin having reportedly flown a demonstration with an unmanned F-16 teamed with a manned fighter. Another company, Kratos Defence and Security Solutions has also tested two unmanned aircraft types that were developed for the programme.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An F-35B is cleared for short take-off at night. (Photo: Lockheed Martin)

Such a development would not only enable militaries to send unmanned aircraft for riskier missions while under the control of a manned aircraft, it would also conceivably enable air forces to reduce manning requirements.
With Singapore’s population challenges that has seen the SAF embrace the use of unmanned technology in recent years, this is yet another potential avenue that could interest MINDEF in years to come.
ENABLING REGIONAL INTEROPERABILITY
There are several regional air forces already buying F-35s with Australia, an F-35 development partner country who has a close security relationship with Singapore, ordering 72 F-35As.
Australia is also building facilities and infrastructure to support its own F-35s, which includes threat emitter systems to simulate hostile radar and air defences in the same training areas RSAF fighters have used in the past as part of the training agreements Singapore has signed with Australia. These could potentially be used by the RSAF to train with in the future.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
The F-35 can carry more than 3,500 pounds of weapons in stealth mode and over 18,000 pounds when stealth is not needed. (Photo: Lockheed Martin)


READ: How the fifth-generation fighter jet might take RSAF to the next level

In northeast Asia, both Japan and South Korea have ordered F-35As for their own air forces and have reportedly looked into the possibility of operating F-35Bs from ships of their respective navies.
The United States military also plans to deploy F-35s to its forward-deployed forces based in the region, with one squadron of US Marine Corps F-35Bs already based in Japan while more US Air Force and Navy fighter squadrons based in Japan are expected to convert to the F-35 over the next decade.
This will create a significant pool of F-35 users in the region, which will potentially enhance interoperability among these nations during any multinational coalition operations.
Australian companies have also successfully secured the rights to conduct heavy maintenance and warehousing of spare parts for regional F-35 operators, and this would streamline sustainment and supply chain matters should Singapore opt for it as the next fighter jet.
Mike Yeo is the Asia reporter for US-based defence publication Defense News.
Source: CNA/nr(sl)
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The controversial F-35 Lightning stealth fighter is being put to the test amid allegations of falsified results
NOVEMBER 13, 2018 12:04PM

Australia welcomes the new F-35 fighter jet

Jamie Seidelnews.com.au
More than a decade late and innumerable billions over budget, it’s crunch time for the F-35 Lightning II program.
Its manufacturers insist it’s ready. Its supporters say none of its remaining problems are insurmountable.

Auditors and the Pentagon are not so sure.


All three versions of the Joint Strike Fighter — the F-35A built for the US air force and the RAAF, the F-35B ‘jump jet’ built for the US Marines and UK navy, and the F-35C built for the US Navy — will this month begin a seven-month in-depth assessment.

The purpose of the tests are to determine if the jets live up to expectations.

But doubts persist: have all of its ‘critical’ flaws been addressed?

And the F-35 project is already two months late.

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The original evaluation start date was September. This was missed due to a late ‘critical’ software update. Now the entire 11-month evaluation program must be squeezed into just nine months.

If they make the grade, the F-35’s current ‘low-level’ production runs will be accelerated. The assembly lines will be cranked into high gear to mass-produce the hundreds ordered by the US and its allies, including Australia.

The Royal Australian Air Force has taken delivery of nine early-model F-35As. It has committed to purchasing a total of 72.

A US Air Force and a Royal Australian Air Force F-35A Lightning II are towed on the flight line during a monsoon at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona, earlier this year. Picture: USAF

TRIAL BY FIRE

The initial operational test and evaluation (IOT & E) process kicks off tonight.

The F-35 can’t fail.

But a poor showing could further delay the project and add substantially to its overall cost.

Between now and July next year, a handful of F-35s of all types will be put through their paces.

Can they operate in cold weather? Can they be kept operational given the exposure to weather and limited facilities available on aircraft carriers? Can they fight — and win?

It’s a process intended to reassure customers — and critics — that the controversial jet has overcome most of its problems.

It’s a process that has already been delayed several times. Most recently, a September 15 start-date was missed due to delays in the provision of a vital operating software update.

However, the new November start date maintains the September deadline.

The Joint Strike Fighter Operational Test Team (JOTT) says it believes it can complete IOT & E by the original July 2019 date. But, to do so, it must hurry things along — and “assuming more risk”.

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Some 300 F-35s are already in service.

And several squadrons have already deployed on ‘limited’ operational tours. The US Marines has had their jump-jet version active since 2015. And the US Air Force has a few of its strike-fighters since 2016.

It’s already fired its first shots in anger.

Israeli F-35s reportedly engaged in two strikes “somewhere in the Middle East” in May. On September 27, a Marine Corps F-35B, launched from the USS Essex amphibious warfare ship, struck targets in Afghanistan.

It hasn’t all been plain sailing.

The most troubled version of the F-35, the “B” variant jump-jet, suffered the first ever crash of the type in September. The pilot ejected and survived. But the jet, worth more than $100 million, was destroyed. The cause was traced to faulty fuel-lines, prompting the grounding of the entire fleet for assessment and repairs.

An F-35 displays its weapons bays. It’s ability to target the weapons it carries is under question.

UNDER THE MICROSCOPE

In August, the Pentagon’s aircraft testing director reported that the F-35 simply was not ready to undergo the crucial combat evaluation tests.

Director of operational test and evaluation Robert Behler ruled that he would not accept testing of an aircraft that did not have the same operational software as production aircraft.

And he pointed out the F-35s operating software, mission-data system, self-diagnostic and self-reporting systems were not up to scratch.

RELATED: What we know about Russia’s new Su-57 stealth fighter

The September start date also was delayed to ensure F-35 on-board artificial intelligence — the Autonomic Logistics Information System (ALIS) — reported accurate mission flight test data.

This was accompanied by concerns of “key technical deficiencies” including the F-35’s ability to effectively use one of its primary weapons — the AIM-120 Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile (AMRAAM). Its on-board cannon was also judged to be out-of-alignment, consistently firing to the right of the crosshairs and missing its target.

It is not known if the software fix applied to the aircraft since September has addressed all these issues. That, however, will become apparent under the eyes of the evaluation umpires in coming months.

Loading video
The Project On Government Oversight (POGO) in August found F-35 program officials had been cooking the books.

It accused the program of altering paperwork to make to appear as though the F-35 had completed its development phase — when it had not.

And this, it said, was potentially life threatening.

At the heart of the issue is a list of long-known design flaws. POGO states reports had been altered to make it look as though progress had been made in addressing these issues, when in fact nothing had been fixed.

RELATED: How China’s J-20 stealth fighter compares

“F-35 officials are recategorizing — rather than fixing — major design flaws to be able to claim they have completed the program’s development phase without having to pay overruns for badly needed fixes,” the POGO report reads. “Several of these flaws, like the lack of any means for a pilot to confirm a weapon’s target data before firing, and damage to the plane caused by the tailhook on the Air Force’s variant, have potentially serious implications for safety and combat effectiveness.”

An F-35 Lightning II fighter jet conducts the first ever night-time flight trials aboard the Royal navy aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth. Picture: US Navy

CHALLENGED FUTURE

The Defence Department is slated to make a decision on full rate production by the end of 2019. Though this is entirely dependent upon the evaluation program’s outcome.

Under US federal law, this cannot begin until the director of operational test and evaluation office agrees the F-35 program has met all of its agreed-on criteria.

But the new US deputy secretary of defence isn’t so worried about whether or not the F-35 is up to the task: He’s more worried about whether or not that lasts.

“We know long term, the biggest challenge for the F-35 is not going to be the performance of the aircraft, it’s going to be affordability,” Shanahan said. “In the next two years, we double the fleet. And if we don’t really have a robust, high-performing sustainment system, it’ll divert attention of the F-35 program from other critical areas like development or production, and it’ll create disruption in the supply.”

An F-35 is put through its paces at Edwards Air Force Base in California. The stealth jet must now pass a series of performance examinations.

The F-35 has been flying in some form or another now for 17 years. Some 300 early examples have already been delivered to the US and its allies.

All nine of Australa’s F-35s are currently situated at a US training facility in Arizona. The first two to be permanently stationed in Australia — at RAAF Williamstown in NSW — are due to arrive on December 10.

RELATED: Here’s the USAF’s vision of future air combat

Most of those will likely need extensive upgrades, repairs and modification to bring them up to fully operational standards.

The complete force of 72 Australian jets is due to be delivered by 2023.

It’s a $17 billion project aimed at replacing Australia’s ageing F/A-18 A and B model Hornet strike fighters.

Loading video
It’s an incredibly ambitious aircraft.

To maintain its standards of stealth, all components must be precisely fitted. Even being a millimetre out can produce a surface producing unwanted radar reflection. All this requires high quality materials and precision engineering not previously applied to aircraft.

Then there’s the complex and integrated nature of its sensor and weapons systems. Pulling it all together requires powerful software.

With complexity comes risk.

According to US Air Force records for its F-35As, the type achieved only a 55 per cent availability rate during 2017. That’s a lot of down time in the hangar. It also means a greatly reduced presence of aircraft on the ‘front line’.

Availability objectives require more than an 80 per cent readiness state across the operational fleet. Clearly, the F-35A still has some way to go to reach that goal.

An F-35 aboard the Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth. Picture: US Navy

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BRIEFING
'We are ready to fight tonight': The F-35 stealth fighter just pulled off a massive flex that China and Russia aren't close to matching

ALEX LOCKIE
NOV 21, 2018, 10:15 AM

US Air Force photo/Senior Airman Justin Fuchs
The F-35As at the exercise at Hill Air Force Base.
Thirty-five F-35s just took off from a single runway and flew in formation in a show of combat power that Russia and China, the US’s rivals, can’t hope to match.
Hundreds of F-35s are being produced for countries around the world. Russia’s Su-57 and China’s J-20 have only a couple dozen airframes to show.
And Russia’s and China’s jets don’t have the right engines in yet, crippling their performance.
Meanwhile, the F-35 is flying combat missions and supporting troops around the world.
Hill Air Force Base in Utah just held a combat power exercise with 35 F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighters taking off from a single runway and flying in formation in a massive show of force that the US’s rivals haven’t even come close to.

The 388th and 419th Fighter Wings, the only two combat-ready units with the Air Force’s F-35A variant, launched the formation on Monday to show that the most expensive weapons program in history is ready for action.

“We are ready to fight tonight, and exercising with multiple squadrons of F-35s can demonstrate our ability to defeat potential adversaries wherever they may arise,” Maj. Caleb Guthmann, the 34th Fighter Squadron’s assistant director of operations and exercise project officer, said in a statement from the base.

China and Russia have both tried to field fifth-generation fighters to compete with the F-35, but neither jet is anywhere close to pulling off a feat anything like the one on Monday.

Though both China’s J-20 and Russia’s Su-57 have been declared “operational” by their respective militaries, that operation has so far been little more than a public-relations blitz.

J-20

Wikimedia Commons
China’s J-20 doesn’t have the proper engines yet, killing the jet’s performance and preventing it from achieving supercruise.

The lack of a home-built Chinese engine for a fifth-generation fighter is reportedly “embarrassing” an air force that hopes to overtake the US military.

China has a few dozen or so J-20s in total. Experts who spoke to Business Insider assessed that the airframes it does have, such as the ones it showed off at the Zhuhai Air Show, were preproduction and not ready for combat.

Read more: China’s most advanced stealth fighter shows off its weapons for the first time, revealing some serious heat


“We do not know of more than four production machines at any location. Four in a line unit, four in an R&D unit. If five are at any location, that is news by itself,” Lawrence Trevethan, a researcher at the China Aerospace Studies Institute, which works with the US Air Force, told Business Insider.

Su-57

Dmitry Terekhov/Flickr
Russia called its Su-57 “combat proven” after a few days of dropping bombs on unprotected enemies of President Bashar Assad in Syria, but that jet too fails to reach the bar of real operational status.

The combat carried out by the Su-57 could have been done by any number of 1970s-designed, Soviet-built Russian jets stationed in Syria and did not vindicate any of the stealth or fifth-generation claims from Russia.

Read more: Get up close and personal with Russia’s only 5th-generation fighter during a low-level photo shoot

Additionally, a maximum of 12 Su-57s exist in the world. The Su-57 also doesn’t have the final engine installed, and Russia hasn’t even bothered to order any to give its combat brigades.

In short, the world has been promised three new fifth-generation fighter jets by the end of this decade, and as of November, only one is a real production aeroplane: the F-35.

F-35 versus J-20/Su-57: Who would win?

US Air Force photo/Senior Airman Justin Fuchs
The F-35As at the exercise at Hill Air Force Base.
The US has 91 F-35s, international partners have 28, and 22 have been sold to additional countries.

A month before the November elephant walk, the Hill Air Force Base fighter wings flew the plane’s 10,000th sortie.

In total, the US has ordered more than 2,000 F-35s to fly from land, aircraft carriers, and even improvised or short runways.

F-35 pilots have had years of practice developing new tactics and training regimens for jets that don’t fly like anything else before them.

While the F-35 awaits software updates – it will be continually upgraded and modified throughout its life span – it’s already at sea aboard the USS Essex carrying out combat missions in Afghanistan.

Russia and China frequently talk up the theoretical and future capabilities of their nascent aircraft, but today the answer to the question of who would win, the F-35 or the J-20/Su-57, the answer is simple and clear.

The F-35 wins because it’s a real program and a real aircraft that’s ready to defend its country. Until China and Russia sort out their engines and actually build the planes, they’re not worthy of a mention in the same breath.

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It is time we buy planes from Russia and China and also procure some from USA.

We can then maintain a good balance of relationship with all of them. Someone say need to take side ? Well , we covered all side and angle.
 
KNN, American is trying to make us buy their expensive weaponery.
All the weapon use and software must come from USA. It is like day light robbery.

Fire 1 missile, we have to purchase from them to replace the missile. Very good business.
 
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BRIEFING
A bold F-35 pilot carried out a 'bizarre' backward landing on Britain's largest warship
RYAN PICKRELL
NOV 21, 2018, 11:00 AM


Royal Navy
The first bombs have been dropped from F-35B Lightning II fighter jets conducting trials aboard the HMS Queen Elizabeth.
A British F-35 pilot has pulled off what the Royal Navy called a “milestone” manoeuvre, executing a backward landing on the deck of Britain’s largest warship.
“It was briefly bizarre to bear down on the ship and see the waves parting on the bow as you fly an approach aft facing,” the test pilot said.
A British F-35 pilot has pulled off what the Royal Navy called a “milestone” manoeuvre, executing a backward landing on the deck of Britain’s largest warship, the HMS Queen Elizabeth.

The Royal Air Force test pilot Squadron Leader Andy Edgell flew his American-made F-35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter across the bow of the large British aircraft carrier.

The pilot then brought the short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing aircraft to a hover over the deck before gently setting it down, the Royal Navy said in a statement Monday. He said the F-35 jump jet “handled beautifully.”

The aviation achievement is intended to give the carrier crew additional options in the event of an emergency. Given the nature of the aircraft, the landing was not radically different from more conventional alternatives.

An F-35 landing on the HMS Queen Elizabeth
Royal Navy
An F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter landing on the HMS Queen Elizabeth.
The British Royal Navy said this atypical landing was like “driving the wrong way down a one-way street.” Reflecting on the manoeuvre, Edgell said, “It was briefly bizarre to bear down on the ship and see the waves parting on the bow as you fly an approach aft facing.”

“It was also a unique opportunity fly towards the ship, stare at the bridge, and wonder what the captain is thinking,” he added.

This manoeuvre, like the previously executed conventional landings and rolling landings, was part of a nine-week intensive training program that began off the US east coast.

UK navy F-35 F-35B Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier
UK Ministry of Defence
An F-35B Lightning II above the aircraft carrier Queen Elizabeth on September 25.
Read more: The biggest warship in British history just met the F-35 for the first time


The first landing was carried out September 25, when Royal Navy Cmdr. Nathan Grey landed an F-35B on the deck of the carrier. It marked the first time in eight years that an aircraft had landed on a British carrier. The UK had previously acquired the F-35, and its new carrier set sail last year. The combination of the two was championed as the dawn of a new era for British sea power.

Commodore Andrew Betton, the commander of the UK carrier strike group, called it “a tremendous step forward in reestablishing the UK’s carrier strike capability.”

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Japan's fighter jet deal a game-changer for balance of power in Asia

By 9News Staff - 2 days ago

China's J-20 stealth fighter flies at an international air show held at Zhuhai city.
Japan is preparing an order for roughly 100 US-designed F-35 stealth fighter jets in a deal that could potentially upend the balance of power in Asia, according to sources familiar with the process.
That order would include a version of the jet that can take-off and land vertically, a feature that could prompt Japan to transform some of its existing ships into aircraft carriers so that it can operate the fighters at sea - a capability they have not had since World War II, a source close to the F-35 program told CNN.
"With short take-off vertical landing capability you are now able to operate at sea. You are able to penetrate areas and reach ranges in a shorter distance which is an important capability," the source said.
Japan is preparing an order for roughly 100 US-designed F-35 stealth fighter jets. Source Rebecca Wright/CNN
Japan is preparing an order for roughly 100 US-designed F-35 stealth fighter jets. Source Rebecca Wright/CNN (Supplied)

Japan's Defense Ministry would not confirm the deal, but said it would be looking to buy a "highly competent fighter jet" when its "midterm defense maintenance plan" comes up for approval by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's cabinet in December.
The ministry said almost half of its existing F-15J fighter jet fleet cannot be upgraded, making the purchase of new planes necessary.
"At this point, the concrete model has not been decided," the ministry's press office said.
But a source close to the US F-35 program confirmed to CNN that a deal was being worked on for Japan to buy about 100 of the stealthy single-engine F-35s.
The Pentagon touts the F-35, with the world's most advanced avionics, engines and weaponry, as the "the most affordable, lethal, supportable and survivable aircraft ever to be used."
Some 40 of the order would be F-35Bs, capable of short take offs and vertical landings on a warship, confirmed the source.
Adding credence to the report, Japanese Defense Minister Takeshi Iwaya said on Wednesday that Tokyo is seriously considering refitting at least one of its Izumo helicopter destroyers to accommodate jets, essentially transforming one or both of the 27,000-ton vessels into aircraft carriers.
"Since this is valuable equipment that we already own, I think it would be desirable to use it for as many purposes as possible," Mr Iwaya said in a news conference held after a Cabinet meeting.
Nikkei News Service put the value of the fighter jet deal at $8.8 billion, with the value of each jet at $88 million.
The move, which critics allege violates the country's postwar pacifist constitution, comes amid Chinese naval expansion in the Pacific Ocean. A Japanese defence white paper in August highlighted concerns over China a changing security environment.
"China's rapid modernisation of the People's Liberation Army, enhancement of operational capabilities, and unilateral escalation of activities in areas close to Japan are generating strong security concerns in the region and international community, including Japan," the paper said.
The cabinet of Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe confirmed it is looking to buy a "highly competent fighter jet" in December. (AP)
Speaking to CNN, Timothy Heath, senior defense analyst for the RAND Corp, said that China's ambition to dominate the Asia-Pacific region carries "enormous consequences for Japan."
"It is in Japan's interest to build a capable military that deters China from rash actions and to help other countries balance politically and military against Chinese power," said Heath.
At the same time, the Trump administration's unconventional approach toward trade and military alliances has left Tokyo feeling, at times, unsure of the extent of US support in recent months which had underpinned its international relations since the end of World War II.
President Donald Trump has repeatedly urged military allies in east Asia to pay for their own defense, teasing the end of a US military presence in the region while encouraging Japan to buy more American weapons.
The F-35, in particular, has been a favorite of Trump, who has publicly touted international sales of the aircraft as a success for his administration and praised foreign leaders who have purchased the fifth-generation aircraft.
Japan's commitment to purchase additional F-35's is, in part, an effort to reaffirm its military partnership with the US, according to the source close to the program, who noted that the aircraft not only provides an upgrade in capability but also facilitates strength in allied partnerships.
"The President has put a big emphasis when he travels the globe on military partnerships, industrial partnerships and Japan is certainly a strong partner for the US military. When you see great focus on the F-35 from Japan I think that is the result of the very strong US-Japan military partnership," the source told CNN.
'Push the front line of maritime engagement'
Sources said the new Japanese-US deal would include two of the three F-35 variants, the A and B models. The third, the F-35C, is designed for use on the US Navy's largest aircraft carriers.
F-35As, of which Japan already has 10 in its fleet, with 32 more on an preexisting order, are conventional jets, using a runway to take off and land.
F-35Bs are short take-off and vertical landing capable, meaning they can use smaller airports or operate from flattop warships. The US Marine Corps flies F-35Bs off US Navy amphibious assault ships, sometimes called baby aircraft carriers as they are about half the size of the US Navy's Nimitz-class carriers.
Japan's Maritime Self Defense Force possesses two of these type of ships, the Izumo and its sister ship, the Kaga, each one is capable of carrying 14 helicopters and would need to be refitted to accommodate the F-35Bs aircraft.
A fleet of F-35 fighter jets could soon be in Japan's ownership. (AP)
While the main role of Japan's military remains defense of its home islands, "this could push the front line of maritime engagement further out than before," said Corey Wallace, Asia security analyst at Freie University in Berlin, said of Japan's possible acquisition of F-35Bs.
"Will it bother China? Probably, but only in so far that it further complicates the projection of Chinese military power into the southwestern maritime domain around Japan's Ryukyu islands," Mr Wallace said.
China's twin-engine J-20, seen as Beijing's answer to US F-22s and F-35s, entered the People Liberation Army Air Force fleet in February. It is unknown how many J-20's China has in operation in its fleet at present.
Carl Schuster, a former US Navy captain and now Hawaii Pacific University professor, said the F-35Bs on a Japanese warship "add a new dimension" and "a deterrent factor" to the security situation in the Pacific.
But Mr Schuster said a refitted Japanese carrier would likely only carry six to eight F-35Bs, compared to as many as two dozen jets that will be on Chinese carriers now in sea trials or production.
Mr Schuster also cautions that it could be three or four years until newly ordered F-35s reach the Japanese fleet, unless Tokyo's orders are given priority over other buyers of the plane.
Strength in numbers
Twelve nations besides Japan and the US are in the F-35 program, with two of those - Australia and South Korea - in the Pacific region, according to Lockheed Martin, which builds the plane.
Japan does enjoy the advantage of being one of three final assembly points for the F-35, the others being in Texas and Italy.
And it's the F-35 commonality between Japan, the US and their allies that brings strength in numbers but also understanding.
Mr Wallace said the future could conceivably have US F-35s operating from Japanese ships and or Japanese F-35s flying off American ones.
One of the other two nations to operate the F-35B, the United Kingdom, has had US versions of the jet operating off its HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier.
But Mr Wallace also warned not to overemphasise the importance of a Japanese carrier.
"This singular new carrier won't carry enough planes, or be able to launch jets with enough ordnance to conduct strike, or bombing missions in any way that will truly threaten China's mainland, given how strong China's own defenses are," he said.
What F-35Bs will do is increase the options available to Japanese defense planners.
"The F-35B can operate from modified runways or make-shift airfields thereby giving the ASDF more options to operate from smaller, more distant Japanese islands in a pinch. This is quite important for survivability and response if the major airbases are put out of commission in a saturation missile attack," he said.
- By Brad Lendon and Zachary Cohen, CNN
© Nine Digital Pty Ltd 2018
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Japan has more izumo helicopter ships than china has aircraft carriers.
Korea too has several of these helicopter ships.
japan must build landing strips on islands near taiwan. If Tsiwan sttack, japan help them bomb beijing like how US flattened tokyo in WWII.
 
The Sydney Morning Herald

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Defence doesn't know cost of maintaining new F-35 fighter jets
By Doug Dingwall
6 December 2018 — 12:00am
The Defence Department doesn't know how much it will cost to maintain its new multibillion dollar fleet of warplanes as officials wait for United States-based support to become ready.

Days before the first two of Australia's F-35 Joint Strike Fighters are due to land in Williamtown, NSW, the national auditor has found the price tag for keeping them in the air won't be known before 2020.

Defence also failed in three years to provide annual updates to the government on the purchase, despite directions, and had committed $266.3 million in spending without first telling the prime minister and finance minister as required.

Australia is purchasing the new fleet from the US to replace its ageing F-18 Hornets, and the federal government is directing more than $20 billion towards buying the planes and maintaining them until 2025. The federal government doesn't yet know the final cost of the purchase as the complex project, involving multiple partner nations, takes shape.

This year the Defence Department estimated Australia will pay an average of $115.7 million for each of its aircraft.


The federal audit office, in a report tabled in parliament on Wednesday, said the government decided to purchase the planes using rough estimates of the cost to maintain them, ignoring Defence Department guidelines for approving major spending, and against the findings of previous reviews and audits.

Australia's newest warplane, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.
Australia's newest warplane, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

Photo: Joe Armao
Defence is waiting for a maintenance program centred in the United States, and relying on US government contracts with weapons manufacturer Lockheed Martin and aerospace firm Pratt and Whitney, to progress before it can better calculate the costs.

In December 2020, after which the department may be able to advise the government of the planes' maintenance costs, Australia expects to have 30 Joint Strike Fighters and one operational squadron of at least 12. It plans to purchase 72 in total.

A review board convened by Defence in October 2018 raised problems with the maintenance program intended to support the F-35s, saying it was "immature" and faced a number of challenges.


It raised fears about the level of funding for operating and supporting the Joint Strike Fighters.

"The funds required for sustainment, even for the next few years, have yet to be quantified or allocated," it said.

Sourcing funds for the fleet by 2023 and beyond could be a major challenge, particularly if those costs were not contained through savings expected from having a global network of maintenance.

Australia will rely on the global maintenance network for parts and upkeep for the new warplanes, and will be a regional hub for maintaining and warehousing F-35s - a role with costs unknown when the purchase was approved in 2014, and that have added to financial pressures.

As it relied on a US-centred, multi-nation maintenance program, the Defence Department was constrained in managing risks, including access to spare parts, the audit report said.


Defence was managing the risks coming with this arrangement, as well as the cost pressures of establishing Australia as a regional maintenance and warehousing hub for the Joint Strike Fighters.

In response to the audit report, Defence secretary Greg Moriarty and Defence Force chief Angus Campbell said the department would return after 2020 to the government knowing the fleet's costs through to its planned withdrawal date.

They admitted the department had not updated cabinet in 2015 and 2016 but said it had made improvements that would prevent a repeat of the failures.

F-35s will perform air combat, bombing and surveillance for Australia's military, and of more than 3000 aircraft to be built for nine participating partner nations, the US will keep about 75 per cent. Defence has described the build as one of the most technologically advanced and complex ever undertaken in defence aviation.

The Defence Department is building infrastructure for Australia's share of the aircraft and has prioritised construction at their main operating base at Williamtown before the first two new planes arrive. Budget pressures have forced it to delay work at other bases, and work at Williamtown and another air force base at Tindal in the Northern Territory is $44 million over the approved budget.


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We should send our F35s to take out the jiuhu air force and missile defenses in a surprise attack.
 
We should send our F35s to take out the jiuhu air force and missile defenses in a surprise attack.
I doubt also if it has the range and endurance for prolong combat,,,

Navy’s F-35 doesn’t have range for real stealth strikes, House report says
Risks to carriers, absence of stealth tankers puts "necessary targets" out of reach.
SEAN GALLAGHER - 5/23/2018, 4:30 AM

f35C1-800x533.jpg

Enlarge / Lt Cmdr Chris Tabert, Air Test and Evaluation Squadron (VX) 23, pilots Navy F-35C test aircraft CF-02 on Flt 595 for an external GBU-31 flutter and Flying Qualities test flight from Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, April 10, 2018. Congress is concerned that the F-35 doesn't have the range to attack "contested" targets without putting carriers in danger.
US Navy
WITH 168 POSTERS PARTICIPATING, INCLUDING STORY AUTHOR
The House Armed Services Committee has sent its report on the Fiscal Year 2019 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) to the floor. And buried in that report are words of caution about the F-35C, the Navy's version of the F-35 Lightning II, also known as the Joint Strike Fighter—and the Navy's whole carrier air capability in general. The reason for that concern is that the F-35C doesn't have the range to conduct long-range strikes without in-flight refueling—and the Navy's tanker planes are not exactly "stealth."
The F-35C suffers somewhat from the length of its development cycle. Competition for the Joint Strike Fighter program began in 1993—25 years ago—when the military threats facing the United States were significantly different. In 1993, there was no concern about Chinese "carrier killer" anti-ship ballistic missiles, for example; but in 2010, China introduced the Dongfeng (or Dong-Feng) 21D, an anti-ship ballistic missile with a range of 900 miles and a circular error probability of 20 meters. That's accurate enough, with satellite tracking and terminal guidance, to hit an aircraft carrier far offshore.
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The F-35C's advertised range is 1,200 nautical miles (roughly 2,200 kilometers), roughly 10 percent longer than that of the F/A-18. But for most strikes, that would require the carriers launching F-35C sorties to be much closer to the coast than falls within the comfort zone. And with advanced air and coastal defense systems—including, for example, the sorts that are popping up on islands in the South China Sea these days—less-than-stealthy tanker planes would give up the whole game.
ARS TRENDING VIDEO
Hybrid Options for US's Next Top Fighter


The House Armed Services Committee report hinted at this issue:
The committee notes that the aircraft carrier air wing has been optimized for striking power and sortie generation and believes that it may not be configured to support the long-range strike required by current and future threat systems. While the introduction of the F-35C will significantly expand stealth capabilities, the F-35C could require increased range to address necessary targets. The committee believes that several options could be used to address this issue to include developing a stealth tanker capability, improved engine technology, or to develop and procure a strike capability that is purposely built to strike at increased range.​
The third option—a stealthy long-range strike aircraft—is something the Navy already attempted with its Advanced Tactical Aircraft program, launched in the late 1980s. The McDonnell Douglas A-12 was the winner of that competition. A low-observable delta-wing design aircraft with the wingspan of an F-14 Tomcat, the A-12 would have had a range of 800 nautical miles and an internal weapons bay capable of carrying 5,000 pounds of ordnance. It was to be the Navy's answer to the F-117 Nighthawk stealth fighter.
But the would-have-been $4.38 billion program failed so hard that, in 1991, then-Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney cancelled it—the biggest program cancellation ever up until that point—and the government sued McDonnell Douglas for breach of contract. Eventually, Boeing (which acquired McDonnell Douglas) had to pay the government $2.8 billion—the $1.35 billion that McDonnell Douglas was initially awarded, plus the interest that accrued while the companies fought the suit over the next 18 years.
A stealthy tanker, of sorts, is in the works—what started as an effort to build an unmanned carrier-launched strike aircraft took a U-turn and became the Carrier-Based Aerial-Refueling System (CBARS) program, also known as the MQ-25 Stingray. Boeing, Lockheed, General Atomics, and Northrop Grumman are all in the hunt with proposed designs. If and when the winning design for an unmanned, stealthy tanker flies—likely after 2020—they could double the range of the F-35C.
Regardless, the House Armed Services Committee has decided to give the Navy a bit of a shove toward figuring out how to best develop a "carrier-based long-range strike capability." The NDAA report states that the committee "directs the Secretary of the Navy to provide a briefing to the Senate Committee on Armed Services and the House Committee on Armed Services by January 25, 2019, on options to expand the strike range of a carrier air wing in a contested environment, including manned and unmanned capabilities, and Department of the Navy capabilities it plans to pursue in the Next Generation Air Dominance capability."
 
news.com.au

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Australia takes delivery of its first two F-35 Lightning II stealth fighters
DECEMBER 10, 2018 1:02PM
Australia welcomes the new F-35 fighter jet

Jamie Seidel, AAPnews.com.au
Australia’ has taken delivery of two of its ultra-expensive, state-of-the-art fighter jets
The two F-35A stealth fighters have arrived at Williamtown RAAF Base, near Newcastle. More than 50 of the aircraft will eventually reside at this one base, with a further 12 or so on rotation to Tindal Air Force Base in the Northern Territory.

Flanked by the ageing F-18 Hornets they’re set to replace, the first two F-35s landed at RAAF Base Williamtown on Monday after flying from RAAF Amberley in south Queensland, where they arrived from the United States last week. Aviation enthusiasts gathered on the edge of the base from early in the morning and more watched a flyover of Newcastle ahead of the state-of-the-art aircraft’s official welcome by Defence Minister Christopher Pyne.


The single-engine F-35A Joint Strike Fighter has been labelled the most advanced in the world and is capable of reaching a top speed of 1975km/h.

The Royal Australian Air Force has taken delivery of nine early-model F-35As. The remaining seven continue to operate out of a US Arizona training facility.

The federal government will spend a total of $17 billion on 72 of the F-35 aircraft, with the cost being widely criticised, including by US President Donald Trump. The project is widely cited as the most expensive in history, with the total projected cost - once research, development and sustaiment is factored in - estimated to be over $US1 trillion

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Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull backed Australia’s spending when questioned last year. “When we send our young men and women out to war, they have the tools to do the job to destroy their enemies and the terrorists,” he said.

Lockheed Martin, builders of the jets, say the cost is expected to be driven down to $80 million per plane by 2020. Support costs — those associated with maintaining the aircraft and keeping them in fighting form — are expected to remain high, however.

And there are fresh concerns the fighter cannot maintain its main redeeming feature — stealth.

Especially in Australia’s harsh climate.

Reports state the F-35’s radar-absorbing coating is wearing off far faster than expected. The composite material may need to be replaced after every flight.

The coating is so sensitive — and so important — that a simple scratch could expose an area large enough to act as a beacon to modern radar systems.

“It’s not a human problem; that’s just the result of our ability. We’re approaching the limits of our ability to build some of these things from precise-enough technology,” a Lockheed Martin spokesman told reporters overnight, admitting the company was having issues with the Low Observable coating.

An Australian F-35A aircraft during a sudden dust storm at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona. The first two Lightning IIs to be based in Australia have touched-down. Picture: Defence

‘NEXT GENERATION’

Royal Australian Air Force chief Air Mashal Leo Davies has told the Australian Strategic Policty Institute that the F-35 strike fighter is an invaluable addition to Australia’s defence force.

“They’ll think we’d be a tough nut to crack’, says Davies. ‘That to me is the first part of having a defence force—deterrence.”

He said that regional air forces have been enhancing their abilities. Australia had to do the same.

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“So we need to maintain a level of sophistication that allows us to do what we need to do when we need to do it. The F-35 brings that next step which means we are able to confidently send men and women to do a job and have a better than even chance of survival—and of success.”

Marshal Davies says reports from his pilots about the F-35 state ‘there’s just no comparison’ with other combat aircraft: particularly in relation to the way its integrates information from its own and external sensors.

He say’s it is like being able drive at night - as though you were driving in the day. “It’s that stark in their estimation: Night becomes day so you can drive normally. But to try to drive without night-vision equipment or headlights would be impossible.”

An Australian F-35A on the flight line at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona. The resiliance of the sealth fighter is facing some serious questioning. Picture: Defence

TESTING TIMES

More than a decade late and innumerable billions over budget, it’s crunch time for the F-35 Lightning II program.

Its final test and evaluation program began last week.

Its manufacturers insist it’s ready. Its supporters say none of its remaining problems are insurmountable.

Auditors and the Pentagon are not so sure.

All three versions of the Joint Strike Fighter — the F-35A built for the US air force and the RAAF, the F-35B ‘jump jet’ built for the US Marines and UK navy, and the F-35C built for the US Navy — have begun a seven-month in-depth assessment.

The purpose of the tests are to determine if the jets live up to expectations.

But doubts persist: have all of its ‘critical’ flaws been addressed?

And the F-35 project is already three months over its latest deadline.

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The original evaluation start date was September. This was missed due to a late ‘critical’ software update.

If they make the grade, the F-35’s current ‘low-level’ production runs will be accelerated. The assembly lines will be cranked into high gear to mass-produce the hundreds ordered by the US and its allies, including Australia.

Royal Australian Air Force and United States Air Force F-35A aircraft taxi toward the runway prior to a training mission at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona. The new stealth aircraft are undergoing evaluation to determine if they live up to expectations. Picture: Defence

TRIAL BY FIRE

The initial operational test and evaluation (IOT & E) of the Lightning II finally kicked off last week, after a three month delay.

The F-35 can’t fail.

But a poor showing could further delay the project and add substantially to its overall cost.

Between now and July next year, a handful of F-35s of all types will be put through their paces.

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Can they operate in cold weather? Can they be kept operational given the exposure to the elements and limited facilities available on aircraft carriers or forward-deployed airfields? Can they fight — and win?

It’s a process intended to reassure customers — and critics — that the controversial jet has overcome most of its problems.

It’s a process that has already been delayed several times. Most recently, a September 15 start-date was missed due to delays in the provision of a vital operating software update.

“The start of formal operational testing is a milestone more than 18 years in the making,” F-35 program head Vice Admiral Mat Winter said.

The Joint Strike Fighter Operational Test Team (JOTT) initially said it believed it could complete IOT & E by the original July 2019 date. But, to do so, it must hurry things along — and “assuming more risk”. The latest US military statement now, however, says it expects the testing to be “completed in the late summer (US time) of 2019”.

Some 300 F-35s are already in service.

And several squadrons have already deployed on ‘limited’ operational tours. The US Marines has had their jump-jet version active since 2015. And the US Air Force has a few of its strike-fighters since 2016.

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It’s already fired its first shots in anger.

Israeli F-35s reportedly engaged in two strikes “somewhere in the Middle East” in May. On September 27, a Marine Corps F-35B, launched from the USS Essex amphibious warfare ship, struck targets in Afghanistan.

It hasn’t all been plain sailing.

The most troubled version of the F-35, the “B” variant jump-jet, suffered the first ever crash of the type in September. The pilot ejected and survived. But the jet, worth more than $100 million, was destroyed. The cause was traced to faulty fuel-lines, prompting the grounding of the entire fleet for assessment and repairs.

A Royal Australian Air Force F-35A aircraft during operations at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona. Picture: DEFENCE

UNDER THE MICROSCOPE

In August, the Pentagon’s aircraft testing director reported that the F-35 simply was not ready to undergo the crucial combat evaluation tests.

Director of operational test and evaluation Robert Behler ruled that he would not accept testing of an aircraft that did not have the same operational software as production aircraft.

And he pointed out the F-35s operating software, mission-data system, self-diagnostic and self-reporting systems were not up to scratch.

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The September start date also was delayed to ensure F-35 on-board artificial intelligence — the Autonomic Logistics Information System (ALIS) — reported accurate mission flight test data.

RELATED: What we know about Russia’s new Su-57 stealth fighter

This was accompanied by concerns of “key technical deficiencies” including the F-35’s ability to effectively use one of its primary weapons — the AIM-120 Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile (AMRAAM). Its on-board cannon was also judged to be out-of-alignment, consistently firing to the right of the crosshairs and missing its target.

It is not known if the software fix applied to the aircraft since September has addressed all these issues. That, however, will become apparent under the eyes of the evaluation umpires in coming months.

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The Project On Government Oversight (POGO) in August found F-35 program officials had been cooking the books.

It accused the program of altering paperwork to make to appear as though the F-35 had completed its development phase — when it had not.

And this, it said, was potentially life threatening.

At the heart of the issue is a list of long-known design flaws. POGO states reports had been altered to make it look as though progress had been made in addressing these issues, when in fact nothing had been fixed.

RELATED: How China’s J-20 stealth fighter compares

“F-35 officials are recategorizing — rather than fixing — major design flaws to be able to claim they have completed the program’s development phase without having to pay overruns for badly needed fixes,” the POGO report reads. “Several of these flaws, like the lack of any means for a pilot to confirm a weapon’s target data before firing, and damage to the plane caused by the tailhook on the Air Force’s variant, have potentially serious implications for safety and combat effectiveness.”

An Australian F-35A aircraft is towed to cover during a sudden dust storm at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona. Picture: Defence

CHALLENGED FUTURE

The Defence Department is slated to make a decision on full rate production by the end of 2019. Though this is entirely dependent upon the evaluation program’s outcome.

Under US federal law, this cannot begin until the director of operational test and evaluation office agrees the F-35 program has met all of its agreed-on criteria.

But the new US deputy secretary of defence isn’t so worried about whether or not the F-35 is up to the task: He’s more worried about whether or not that lasts.

“We know long term, the biggest challenge for the F-35 is not going to be the performance of the aircraft, it’s going to be affordability,” Shanahan said. “In the next two years, we double the fleet. And if we don’t really have a robust, high-performing sustainment system, it’ll divert attention of the F-35 program from other critical areas like development or production, and it’ll create disruption in the supply.”

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The F-35 has been flying in some form or another now for 17 years. Some 300 early examples have already been delivered to the US and its allies.

Seven of Australa’s nine F-35s are currently situated at a US training facility in Arizona.

RELATED: Here’s the USAF’s vision of future air combat

Most of those will likely need extensive upgrades, repairs and modification to bring them up to fully operational standards.

The complete force of 72 Australian jets is due to be delivered by 2023.

It’s a $17 billion project aimed at replacing Australia’s ageing F/A-18 A and B model Hornet strike fighters.

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It’s an incredibly ambitious aircraft.

To maintain its standards of stealth, all components must be precisely fitted. Even being a millimetre out can produce a surface producing unwanted radar reflection. All this requires high quality materials and precision engineering not previously applied to aircraft.

Then there’s the complex and integrated nature of its sensor and weapons systems. Pulling it all together requires powerful software.

With complexity comes risk.

According to US Air Force records for its F-35As, the type achieved only a 55 per cent availability rate during 2017. That’s a lot of down time in the hangar. It also means a greatly reduced presence of aircraft on the ‘front line’.

Availability objectives require more than an 80 per cent readiness state across the operational fleet. Clearly, the F-35A still has some way to go to reach that goal.

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