The Amazing, Nearly Disappearing, ABL: The news of the Airborne Laser’s demise, to paraphrase Mark Twain, has been greatly exaggerated—at least according to the man who leads the effort for the Missile Defense Agency. Air Force Col. John Daniels, director of the Airborne Laser office at Kirtland AFB, N.M., told a Marshall Institute roundtable at the National Press Club that the ABL is alive and very well. He pointed out that the program has completed two critical milestones during testing at Edwards AFB, Calif. Since April 2005, there were two major achievements in the program—a low-power battle management systems integration test without the lasers and the systems integration ground test of the laser. Power and duration were significant in all tests to kill all classes of ballistic missiles, Daniels said.
It'll take up to 18 months for Lockheed Martin to deliver the 100 or so F-35s that went directly from production line to storage, awaiting the completion of Tech Refresh 3 testing. Customers haven't complained about the order in which the backlog is being delivered.