Talk of cuts to the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program are surfacing again and seems to be focusing on the Air Force conventional takeoff and landing version once again. The CTOL variant was squarely in the QDR crosshairs until Pentagon officials acknowledged late last year that cutting it would not bring great savings. Now the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reports that Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England says the Pentagon will reduce the JSF buy. That’s not all. The Texas newspaper also quotes the Lexington Institute’s well-informed Loren Thompson, who says an Air Force “internal plan” cuts the number of F-35s from 1,763 to perhaps 1,200 or fewer. We do know that USAF probably will not pursue a short takeoff and vertical landing variant, but it was considering buying only a couple hundred of the STOVL version.
The Air Force Association's Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies will host USAFA Superintendent Lt. Gen. Richard M. Clark on an installment of its “Aerospace Nation” series. Clark will share his insights into how the Academy is preparing cadets to face today's global challenges, the implications of the creation of the…