Collectively, these ten indicators support the assessment of the late Senator John McCain that the F-35 is destined to be “the greatest combat aircraft in history.”
October 26 of this year marks the 23th anniversary of the day in 2001 when the development contract for the F-35 fighter was awarded to an industry team led by Lockheed Martin.
Called the Joint Strike Fighter at the time, it was an improbable project: a family of tactical aircraft that could do everything for everybody, in the process replacing most of the nation’s Cold War fighter fleet.
Today that project has come to fruition. Now designated F-35, the fighter really can execute all of the missions it was conceived to perform for the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps—not to mention a growing fraternity of users in allied nations.
However, despite the delivery of over 600 F-35s, there remains a community of skeptics ready to seize on any indication the program might be flawed. That has less to do with the performance of the fighters than with the scale of the program, the secrecy of some features, and the way in which popular culture regards weapons spending.
So for the sake of those who want a simple explanation of what the program has accomplished, here are ten unambiguous signs that the F-35 fighter is a success. Collectively, these ten indicators support the assessment of the late Senator John McCain that the F-35 is destined to be “the greatest combat aircraft in history.”