F-35 Hope and Gory: There are reasons to be optimistic about the F-35 program—and plenty to worry about, F-35 deputy program manager Maj. Gen. Christopher Bogdan said Monday. In his more than 20 years in acquisition, Bogdan said the relationship between Lockheed Martin and F-35 stakeholders “is the worst I’ve ever seen,” and “I guarantee …we will not succeed in this program until we get past that.” He continued, “It should not take 10 … to 12 months to negotiate a contract with someone you’ve been doing business with for 12 years.” Bogdan plans to streamline low-rate initial production lot negotiations and make sure that they focus on information that is meaningful. Moreover, after billions in extra funds and a multi-year extension, “There is no more money or time for development of this program,” Bogdan said, vowing he won’t go back to Congress asking for more of either. Instead, “we will have to make trades in a disciplined way.” All that being said, Bogdan said he’s glad to see that flight testing is ahead of schedule for this year, though he’s not sure that racking up sorties and test points is necessarily the right way to go about testing. He’d like to emphasize “things that are important,” particularly toward getting the first Marine Corps aircraft operational in 2015.
NORTHCOM’s Budget Priority: Longer Warning Time
April 14, 2021
Gen. Glen D. VanHerck's top priorities in the upcoming budget are domain awareness in the form of farther-seeing over-the-horizon radars, followed by submarine detection capabilities and joint all-domain command and control, the commander of U.S. Northern Command told members of the House Armed Services Committee on April 14. Before building…