With the JSF two full years behind schedule and the F-22 program dead, the USAF’s fleet projections for the next 7-8 years are pretty ugly. Fortunately, the Obama administration will be retaining the Navy’s robust fighter force to meet our air defense demands. Or… not:
At a discussion this week on the Navy’s “fighter gap” at the Center for National Policy in Washington, one of the defense world’s most knowledgeable sources on all things Navy, CRS’ Ron O’Rourke, tried to put a definitive number on that “gap.” From the Navy’s public statements, O’Rourke calculated the number at anywhere between 125 and 243 aircraft, although some in industry contend it’s 300 or more. The peak of this shortfall is projected to occur around 2015; the Navy contends a shortage of strike-fighters could reduce the number of available carriers from 11 to seven around that time.