If a Humvee gets destroyed in the war on terror, it should be replaced in a war supplemental budget. If an airplane gets lost or worn down to a non-flyable condition in the same war, it should come out of the base budget. That is the view of Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) and a growing list of lawmakers who question why the Air Force would include F-35 Joint Strike Fighters in its supplemental funding request when the aircraft won’t be available until around 2010. At a March 6 House Budget Committee hearing, Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England defended the Air Force position, saying that “there is a principle that’s very important, and that is, as we lose equipment … we do need to recover the costs of the equipment lost. … If we don’t do that, it’s true, it won’t affect us this year or next year but, at some point in the future, we will be short equipment.” Having said that, England stated that the Pentagon likely would “re-allocate and re-prioritize … [and] because of other pressing needs, we will move those to the bottom of the priority list.”
New Budget Deal Could Cost USAF Up to $14 Billion
March 12, 2025
The Air Force would suffer the loss of billions of dollars of buying power under a yearlong Continuing Resolution, only somewhat mitigated by proposals that would allow it to pursue new starts, Lt. Gen. Adrian Spain, deputy chief of staff for operations, told the readiness subcommittee of the Senate Armed…