Donley: New F-35 Restructure Implies IOC Slip

The Pentagon's newly announced changes to the F-35 strike fighter's development schedule likely will delay when the Air Force's first combat-ready F-35A unit will be ready, according to USAF Secretary Michael Donley. "I think that’s implied with the additional dollars and time required in system development," he said, when asked about this, during his Air Force Association-sponsored Air Force Breakfast Series presentation in Arlington, Va. He did not provide additional details during his Wednesday talk. Before this new program restructure, 2016 had been the Air Force's target IOC, or in-service date, for the F-35A. The Pentagon is extending F-35 development from mid 2015 into early 2016 to account for challenges encountered mostly, but not exclusively, in maturing the Marine Corps F-35B short takeoff and vertical landing variant. Donley said this extension is necessary because there's "more work to be done" on testing and software. He said these changes mean an "even more conservative approach to production rates," meaning flat F-35 deliveries for about two years. Development of the F-35A and Navy F-35C model has been progressing "satisfactorily," noted Defense Secretary Robert Gates last week. (See also F-35 fact sheet discussing the restructure)

Revamping Space Acquisition

The Air Force is launching a more efficient space acquisition strategy focused primarily on block buys for satellites, greater use of fixed-priced contracting, and more stable research and development funding, says Air Force Secretary Michael Donley. “We are still working...

Investing in the Virtual Future

The Air Force will be spending some of its $34 billion in planned overhead savings on buying an extra 16 simulators for its fleet of F-35A strike fighters, said Secretary Michael Donley. He said the service expects to conduct fully...

Austerity Alert

In several years, US military forces in Europe may be in no better position to confront emerging threats in the region than their European partners. Yielding to budgetary pressure, many European allies have cut deeply into defense spending and the...

NATO’s Baltic Fighter Squeeze

NATO fighters have provided air sovereignty to Baltic member states Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania since their accession to the alliance in 2004, something European defense cuts are rendering increasingly complicated, according to Maj. Gen. Mark Schissler, US Air Forces in...

Kulis Air Guard Wing Nears Big Move

Members of the Alaska Air National Guard’s 176th Wing are preparing for their relocation from Kulis ANG Base in Anchorage to Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, also in the Anchorage area, in less than one month. Under changes that BRAC 2005 mandated,...

General Officer Acculturation

Experts with the Air Force Culture and Language Center at Maxwell AFB, Ala., are helping to prepare flag officers for deployments of more than 180 days by offering a course that familiarizes them with the languages and cultures they may...

Canada Joins Afghans, Operating the Mi-17

Canada’s Air Force pilots recently began operating Mi-17V5 helicopters in Afghanistan, giving them a platform in common with the Afghan air force, Col. Christian Drouin, former commander of the Canadian’s Afghanistan Air Wing, tells the Daily Report. Canadian crews operate...

Car Crusher Demilitarizes Bombs

Environmental restoration officials at Eglin AFB, Fla., have recycled more than one million pounds of metal as they demilitarize some 50,000 BDU 33 and Mark 106 practice bombs. For this work, they are employing a method for the first time...