I wonder how much fight they will put up, in some respects, they are probably more concerned about the Amphibious vehicle, and the Osprey. This article is interesting, because while the pilots praise the F35b, and say it is needed, the more senior officer is a bit softer in his comments, a "realistic cheerleader":
That would be the same General Amos who said:-
"There’s not a backup for this. There’s no Plan B,” he said. “To do the things this nation requires of its Marine Corps, we need this airplane.”
Doesn't quite reconcile with his other description of his position.
I can't see why the F35b would be a 'failure' as a weapon system, it already flies, lands and performs according to script. It will use known weapons for the most part, if they can't get them to work then the fan will get a work-out.
The F35 will eventually be made more reliable and robust over the term of its production run as all new planes are. The 'B' had better be most of way there by now, as time/money is short and the critics are sharpening their blades which is a little sad IMO.
Having a supersonic fighter bomber with all the [published] advanced functions it has, able to operate off nearby mini flat tops brings a lot of flexibility to the battlespace. This should ease a lot of pressure on the CVNs and the even more distant USAF. Think of the extra transit fuel and wear and tear costs. All in all, as conceptualised, it's a special capability well worth having, not just for the Corps but to the US force structure overall.
If it really is now as robust as is claimed and the bagmen need to save $41bn then reduce the F35a buy for a time, close a few tax loopholes and streamline a few expense accounts. They could pickup quite a few bucks that way.
Cutting the 'B' wouldn't save $41b anyway, not unless one cancelled the USMC air arm entirely, they would have to replace those 311 airframes with rotary attack and surveillance platforms wouldn't they?
Those units may not cost as much as an F35B but they won't be free and they're not cheap to run. Forgot to mention above, if there are no 'B's, how much would it cost to bring CBG to a small USMC show requiring some Tacair for, say, a week?
I hope the F35B hasn't got any secret terminal defects and survives any ill thought out cost cutting, it promises a unique capability and would provide a powerful force multiplier even if it only ever operated from the mini-flattops.
Please note, I am not defending Lock-Mart, the US pollies or anyone else of influence involved in this program, just the unique potential of the F35B.
Cheers,
Mac