The F-35 has hit the latest obstacle in its years-long, multibillion-dollar slog towards combat-readiness, Bloomberg reports, citing a not-yet-public congressional report.
Software flaws pose the latest round of problems for Lockheed Martin's fifth-generation joint strike fighter. Michael Gilmore, the Pentagon's director of combat testing, reportedly said in the congressional report that the F-35 "will finish with deficiencies remaining that will affect operational units."
Gilmore notes that serious software flaws within the plane's computers could hamper the F-35's ability to identify enemy radar, which is "essential to conducting effective combat operations against advanced enemy air defenses."
The software deficiencies were also “identified in fusion, radar, passive sensors, identification of friend-or-foe,” and the plane's electro-optical targeting, according to Bloomberg.
These deficiencies will have the real-world effect of limiting the plane's ability to track and target enemy aircraft and radar, while also hampering its ability to carry out airstrikes.
Despite the latest software flaws discovered in the F-35, Lockheed Martin spokesman Mark Johnson told Bloomberg that "2014 was a year of great momentum for the [joint strike fighter] program on all fronts.”
The Marine Corps plans on announcing that the F-35B, the F-35 variant developed for the Marines, will be ready for combat operations by July. The F-35C model for the Navy is expected to be declared combat-ready by the end of the decade.
However, the F-35A variant that was developed for the Air Force and US allies has also run into software problems. In December 2014 it was announced that the because of software issues, the plane would not be able to fire its onboard cannon until 2019.
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