The US DOT&E's charter is to point out issues and successes with programs. Not to identify each and every step that has or needs to be taken to achieve success.A few weeks ago there was an article in Sydney Morning Herald.
The Chief of the Air Force, Air Marshal Leo Davies, was being interviewed and was talking about the future of female combat pilots in the RAAF, one particular paragraph in the article stood out:
"Australia expects to start operating the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter from 2020. The latest Pentagon report points to continuing problems with the project but Air Marshal Davies said nothing in the report suggested the RAAF would need to changes its schedule."
If the Chief of the Air Force says that nothing in the report suggested the RAAF would need to change its schedule, well that's good enough for me!
In Australian terms, he is a person right at the very top of the food chain when it comes to information and knowledge about the F-35 program, and lets not forget too, it was only a few days ago that Australia released the new DWP, and it reaffirmed the commitment to 72 F-35A's to replace the Classic Hornets.
It comes out once a year... So any fix nearing completion won't be featured in the report for another 12 months.
By which time the naysayers will well and truly have moved on to other 'critical issues' just like the 'critical' tailhook issue. How many discuss that success now, or mention how vehemently they claimed that would be the end of the F-35C, if not the entire program?
It's great for naysayers to take a short term and easy jab at the program. But as Gen Bogdan himself had to point out (a disgrace given the obviousness of this stuff and truly demonstrating the ludicrous media bias that exists on this program) most of the 'issues' are perfectly well known and are well on the way to being fixed, or already have.
Everybody who follows the program knows ALIS needs more work. Everyone KNOWS the HMS needs work, but has steadily improved and so on. The program is still only at 80% completion of it's development. The fixes are coming but the program, as Congressionally mandated has to deliver new capability whilst still working out the bugs in earlier development. That whole concurrency thing...
The bugs will be worked out and the F-35 will be a perfectly excellent combat aircraft. Undoubtedly the best all-rounder we will see for many years yet.