Some House lawmakers want to stop the Air Force from retiring older F-22A Raptor fighters and keep the F-15EX Eagle II jets in production a yr longer than the service had planned.
The House Armed Services Committee’s proposed fiscal 2025 National Defense Authorization Act would also allow the service to chop 56 A-10 Warthogs.
The Air Force originally planned to retire 250 aircraft in FY25 as a part of its budget request with a view to save greater than $2 billion. Those retirements would come with 32 of its Block 20 F-22 jets the service says would cost an excessive amount of to organize for combat.
The service had also planned to stop buying the Boeing-made F-15EX after FY25, capping all the Eagle II program at 98. That might be six fewer than the overall 104 the service had most recently planned to purchase.
However the committee’s proposed NDAA, released Monday, would reverse those two decisions.
The FY23 NDAA stopped the Air Force from retiring those Block 20 F-22s through FY27. A congressional staffer told Defense News on Tuesday the newest proposed bill would keep the enacted provision in place, blocking the Air Force’s F-22 retirement plans.
The congressional staffer noted that lawmakers felt those F-22s — despite the associated fee related to preparations for combat — are still relevant for a future fight.
“They’re still the very best air superiority jets we have now on the earth today,” the staffer said.
The NDAA also would temporarily pause the Air Force’s plans to retire 26 of its F-15E Strike Eagles with less effective engines. Those jets couldn’t be retired until six months after the Pentagon submits a study showing what number of fighters the Air Force will need to satisfy geographical combatant commanders’ requirements. The staffer said F-15Es can be needed if a fight against China erupted later this decade.
The Air Force’s other requested retirements — including plans to retire 56 A-10 Warthogs, 65 F-15C and F-15D Eagle fighters, and 11 F-16 Fighting Falcons — can be granted within the NDAA, the staffer said. The Air Force says the A-10 attack plane can be too vulnerable in a fight against a sophisticated adversary and needs to retire all the fleet by 2029. Congress long fought the Air Force’s A-10 retirement plans, but lawmakers’ opposition has thawed in recent times.
The NDAA would also add $271 million back into the budget to purchase an extra 24 F-15EXs in 2026, and keep Boeing’s production line for the updated fourth-generation jet energetic.
The extra jets would depart the Air Force with a complete F-15EX fleet of 122 fighters. That might still be fewer than the 144 Eagle IIs the service originally planned to purchase, but greater than essentially the most recent program of record of 98.
“We don’t need to limit options on the market for us to proceed the F-15EX line” in 2026, the staffer said.
Stephen Losey is the air warfare reporter for Defense News. He previously covered leadership and personnel issues at Air Force Times, and the Pentagon, special operations and air warfare at Military.com. He has traveled to the Middle East to cover U.S. Air Force operations.