Noting that Congress has reduced funding for the F-35 program, Adm. Michael Mullen, Chief of Naval Operations, told reporters in St. Louis Tuesday at the rollout of the Navy’s EA-18G Growler jamming aircraft, said he has not yet started working on “contingency planning” on how to bridge a gap between F/A-18E/F Super Hornet production and F-35 production. Mullen prefers to wait until the House-Senate conference reports out to start worrying, but he said he hopes the JSF is restored. “The JSF is a critical program,” Mullen said. “We need its stealth, range, and payload.” He acknowledged that being on the verge of low-rate production, the F-35 is at a “critical point … but we will support it.”
The National Guard Bureau is working with states to drawdown “close to 15,000” of the nearly 26,000 troops still in the nation's capital following President Joe Biden’s Jan. 20 inauguration. Of that total, about 10,600 were still on duty as of the evening of Jan. 21, NGB wrote in a…