Pentagon Withholds F‑35 Report: Transparency and Cost Crisis

The Pentagon classified the GAO's annual F‑35 Lightning II report as Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI), effectively keeping it from public view—a move unprecedented in the past two decades.
A Test of Defense Budget Transparency
Congress mandates the yearly report to cover production and modernization of roughly 1,300 globally deployed F‑35s, a key tool for scrutinizing program costs. By withholding it, the Pentagon weakens oversight mechanisms that are essential for fiscal accountability.
Operational Readiness Gaps and Cost Overruns
The aircraft fleet shows a 44% mission‑ready rate and a 25% fully mission‑capable rate, far below expectations, while the program’s projected $1.7 trillion life‑cycle cost makes it one of the largest line items in the U.S. defense budget.
Congressional Push for Oversight
Both Democratic and Republican senators are demanding at least a redacted version of the report, arguing that the CUI designation is being used to shield embarrassing data and could set a dangerous precedent for future defense projects.
Markets will view the Pentagon's decision to withhold the report as an added layer of uncertainty around defense spending. Lockheed Martin shares, in particular, may experience heightened volatility as investors seek greater transparency; the lack of public oversight could push risk premiums higher across the defense sector.