Defense News on MSN
Lockheed still paid $1.7 billion despite poor readiness rate of F-35s
An audit found that the defense department paid the aerospace company $1.7 billion by July in spite of poor performance.
The National Interest on MSNOpinion
How the Pentagon let the F-35 fail—but kept paying for it anyway
Two recent Pentagon reports illustrate the myriad deficiencies of Lockheed Martin’s F-35 program—but the company has never ...
FLYING Magazine on MSN
Lockheed Shows Off Finland’s First F-35
Lockheed Martin on Tuesday debuted its first F-35A fighter jet bound for Finland. The aerospace and defense conglomerate staged a rollout ceremony at its F-35 production facility in Fort Worth, Texas, ...
Lockheed secured a $3.63B Navy contract modification to provide F‑35 logistics, maintenance, training and supply chain ...
According to report, Pentagon paid Lockheed Martin $1.7 billion without any economic adjustment, although jets 'did not meet ...
The report, issued by the Defense Department’s Office of the Inspector General on December 19, found that the Pentagon did ...
F-35 fighter jets were available to fly only about half the time in 2024 due to maintenance shortcomings by Lockheed ...
U.S. F-35 fighter jets were available to fly only half the time in 2024 due to maintenance shortcomings by Lockheed Martin , ...
The US fleet of F-35s, the most sophisticated stealth fighter jet in the world, was only available to fly half of the time ...
Lockheed Martin Corp. finalized a federal contract to produce nearly 300 more F-35 Lightning II fighter jets, which will be assembled in Fort Worth. The U.S. Department of War announced the contract, ...
A new contract update funds an extensive list of maintenance, support, and training activities for the Joint Strike Fighter ...
The principal takeaway here is that the F-15 Eagle is objectively faster, but that the F-35 Lightning II is the smarter ...
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