A new Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessment monograph suggests that the Air Force should cut in half its buy of F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighters to pay for the kind of force the service will need by 2028. Author Thomas Ehrhard, now special assistant to the Chief of Staff, believes the service will need the money it saves for other higher priorities like a B-3 bomber. Ehrhard considers the F-35 a “middle-weight” aircraft that lacks the capability to meet high-end challenges and that “is over-specified and overpriced for low-end challenges.” The B-3, on the other hand, will be “a critical and indispensible element … for decades to come,” Ehrhard writes. He advocates buying more than 100 at a rate of 12 per year, starting with a manned version but progressing to unmanned “to turn it into a truly global surveillance-strike asset.”
The U.S. military is maintaining a beefed-up presence in the Middle East, including fighters and air defense assets, following the U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities June 22 and subsequent retaliation by the Iranians against Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar.