​US to deliver F-35 jets to Israel to maintain military edge

Navy variant of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. (Flickr/U.S. Navy photo courtesy Lockheed Martin/Released)

Navy variant of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. (Flickr/U.S. Navy photo courtesy Lockheed Martin/Released)

US Vice President Joe Biden said that Israel will be getting a shipment of the United States’ new F-35 fighter jet so that its military can retain its “qualitative edge” in the Middle East.

Biden made the
announcement in Washington, DC while giving a speech during a
celebration of Israel’s Independence Day, Reuters reported. The
relationship between Israel and the US has been strained over the
past few years due to disagreements about Jewish settlements in
Palestinian territories and Iran’s nuclear program, but the two
nations continue to maintain strong military ties.

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F-35

“Next year we will deliver to Israel the F-35 Joint Strike
Fighter, our finest, making Israel the only country in the Middle
East to have this fifth-generation aircraft,”
Biden said.

According to Haaretz, the deal involves Israel purchasing 14 F-35
jets for $110 million each. That is in addition to a previous
agreement in 2010 that saw Israel agree to buy 19 jets. The first
two planes are set to arrive in Israel in 2016, with the others
making their way into the country by 2021.

While the US has invested a lot of time and money into the
high-tech, high-powered F-35, questions remain about its
effectiveness. The trillion-dollar program has suffered numerous
setbacks over the years and issues continue to crop up.

Earlier this month, the House of Representatives’ Armed Services
Committee learned that the jet’s software maintenance system
gives false-positive readings 80 percent of the time. The
Autonomic Logistics Information System (ALIS) is meant to flag
issues with the plane so that maintenance teams can repair them,
but Air Force Lt. Gen. Christopher Bogdan told lawmakers it still
“has a long way to go.”

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has a ‘brain’ problem

“We have taken steps in the last two years to change
fundamentally the way we develop ALIS, but it takes time to
realize those results,”
Bogdan said, though he added that
the software is not a central part of the plane. A smaller
version is being developed that should be ready in July.

Before that, news reports stated that a computer glitch kept the aircraft’s four-barreled
rotary cannon from firing, potentially delaying the jet from
being fully operational until 2019.

Last year, the vice president of the Super Hornet and Growler
programs at Boeing – a rival of Lockheed Martin, which
manufactures the F-35 – questioned the stealth capabilities of the jet,
arguing that it’s not as effective against Chinese and Russian
air defense systems as other aircraft are.

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