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US Air Force halves F-35 request for Congress, dealing blow to Lockheed Martin


WEB DESK: The US Air Force has cut in half its request to Congress for its signature F-35s, dealing a blow to Lockheed Martin Corp., the top US defense contractor.

A Defense Department procurement request document sent to Capitol Hill this week asked for 24 of the planes, down from 48 that was forecast last year.

The proposed cut is significant because the Air Force is the largest customer for the world’s biggest weapons programme. The scaling back of the F-35 request may reflect one way the service is revising its funding for fiscal 2026 to comply with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s plan to reduce projected US military spending by 8 percent over the next five years.

The request could undergo substantial changes as it moves through Congress. Lockheed Martin has many supporters in Congress who may be able to change the budget outlook for the F-35 programme.

Manned aircraft were not among the 17 areas that Hegseth protected from cuts back in February. One area he did safeguard was the Air Force’s newest drone programme.

The Air Force now plans to ask for $3.5 billion for the F-35 aircraft, and another $531 million for advance procurement of materials for it, reported Bloomberg.

For the Navy carrier variant of the F-35, the Pentagon is planning to ask for $1.95 billion to buy 12 and $401.5 million for advance procurement. The Marines would request $1.78 billion for 11 planes. Another $113.7 million would go toward advance procurement.

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The Navy’s request of 12 F-35s is a cut from the 17 Congress approved for this fiscal year, while the Marines would also see a reduction of two from this year’s funding. The Pentagon is funded under s stopgap measure because Congress did not approve a spending bill for the agency.

The Air Force had planned to procure a total of 1,763 F-35s but the warplane has become a prime target for criticism under President Donald Trump. Elon Musk, the billionaire who led the president’s efforts to slash government costs before the two men had a dramatic falling out this month, said in December that “some idiots are still building manned fighter jets like the F-35” in the age of drones.

Laura Loomer, a right-wing influencer, joined in the attacks. “The F-35 fiasco – it is time to shine a spotlight on a scandal that’s quietly draining our nation’s resources while compromising our military readiness every day,” she wrote on X in April.

The F-35 is now a roughly $2 trillion programme, including about $1.5 trillion for decades of support on top of $485 billion to develop and procure 2,456 of the jets for the American military. So far, about 967 have been put on contract, with 747 delivered.

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