https://breakingdefense.com/2021/10/the ... -industry/
J'aime bien le résumé
Les promesses du programme F-35The takeaway from the last 20 years, according to aerospace analyst Richard Aboulafia, might well be, “You succeeded, but please don’t try that again.”
La réalitéF-35 development and production was valued at about $200 billion at the time, with at least 3,000 aircraft purchased over the program of record. Roche projected that each aircraft would cost anywhere from $40 million to $50 million depending on the variant, in 2001 dollars (about $62 million to $77 million today). The first production model F-35 would be delivered in 2008, Lockheed stated.
Twenty years after its initial contract award, the Defense Department predicts that it will cost $398 billion to acquire the planned F-35 fleet, with the total lifecycle cost of the program pegged at $1.7 trillion — overruns that have led the F-35 to became the poster example of what current Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall termed “acquisition malpractice” in 2012.
And though sustainment costs remain a threat to the program’s health, the cost of producing the most widely used variant, the F-35A, has fallen to about $78 million per copy — short of the Pentagon’s goal, but still on par with a high-end fourth generation fighter.
If anything, the F-35s long development timeline has taken its toll on the program itself. Although none of the US services have formally reduced their planned buy, the Air Force is now considering whether it should buy fewer F-35s and replace a portion of its F-16 fleet with a lower cost fourth-generation fighter. Meanwhile, the Marine Corps is evaluating changes to its fighter squadrons that could result in the service buying 54 fewer F-35Bs.