Photos: F-35A Tests Dropping Nuclear Bombs in Trove of Images Released by Pentagon

© F-35 Joint Program OfficeAn F-35A releases ordnance during a dual capable aircraft (DCA) test flight in the skies above Edwards Air Force Base, California, on February 6, 2020.
An F-35A releases ordnance during a dual capable aircraft (DCA) test flight in the skies above Edwards Air Force Base, California, on February 6, 2020. - Sputnik International
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Photos recently released by the Pentagon show the F-35A Lightning II stealth aircraft testing its ability to drop the B61-12 thermonuclear gravity bomb. The plane’s next phase of upgrades will enable it to deploy the variable-yield weapon.

In nearly a dozen photos published by the F-35 Joint Program Office earlier this month, the Pentagon’s newest stealth fighter can be seen testing its ability to deploy the latest iteration of the B61 nuclear bomb. The weapon, with a maximum explosive yield of 50 kilotons, is small enough to fit inside the F-35’s internal bomb bay.

© F-35 Joint Program OfficeAn F-35A releases ordnance during a dual capable aircraft (DCA) test flight in the skies above Edwards Air Force Base, California, on June 27, 2019.
Photos: F-35A Tests Dropping Nuclear Bombs in Trove of Images Released by Pentagon - Sputnik International
An F-35A releases ordnance during a dual capable aircraft (DCA) test flight in the skies above Edwards Air Force Base, California, on June 27, 2019.
The photos show tests going back to June 2019, which were all carried out at Edwards Air Force Base in California and used inert munitions. The Air Force’s version of the stealth aircraft, the F-35A, will be the only one of the three types built by Lockheed Martin to be certified as a Dual Capable Aircraft (DCA), enabling it to carry both nuclear and conventional bombs.

However, the Joint Strike Fighter’s ability to deploy the B61-12 is dependent on the sweeping upgrades in the Block 4 software release, which a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report recently revealed had been pushed back by at least nine months. However, the F-35A’s DCA certification isn’t expected to be complete until January 2023, according to the Office of the Secretary of Defense.

© F-35 Joint Program OfficeAn F-35A releases ordnance during a dual capable aircraft (DCA) test flight in the skies above Edwards Air Force Base, California, on October 22, 2019.
Photos: F-35A Tests Dropping Nuclear Bombs in Trove of Images Released by Pentagon - Sputnik International
An F-35A releases ordnance during a dual capable aircraft (DCA) test flight in the skies above Edwards Air Force Base, California, on October 22, 2019.

Block 4 will give the F-35 other weapons options, too, such as the Naval Strike Missile, the Meteor and SPEAR missiles and several laser-guided bombs. 

Another bomb the F-35 was already certified to use, the GBU-53 StormBreaker “small diameter bomb,” recently suffered a year’s delay thanks to a faulty fin design. Weapons that can fit inside the F-35’s bomb bay are scarce but valuable, since if they are mounted on hardpoints on the aircraft’s exterior, they will inhibit its stealthiness.

As Sputnik reported, the F-35 is due to replace several nuclear-certified aircraft for NATO members, meaning that their ability to deploy US-owned nuclear weapons would be hampered if their air forces fly no other capable aircraft.
© F-35 Joint Program OfficeAn F-35A releases ordnance during a dual capable aircraft (DCA) test flight in the skies above Edwards Air Force Base, California, on February 6, 2020.
Photos: F-35A Tests Dropping Nuclear Bombs in Trove of Images Released by Pentagon - Sputnik International
An F-35A releases ordnance during a dual capable aircraft (DCA) test flight in the skies above Edwards Air Force Base, California, on February 6, 2020.

“The iconic nuclear fighter role, performed in the past by the F-15E and F-16, is being passed to the F-35A to play a future role in national security,” reads a photo caption on the Defense Visual Information Distribution Service (DVIDS), which carried the photos.

“The F-35 is the premier multi-mission, 5th generation weapon system. Its ability to collect, analyze and share data is a force multiplier that enhances all assets in the battle-space: with stealth technology, advanced sensors, weapons capacity and range, the F-35 is the most lethal, survivable, and interoperable fighter aircraft ever built,” the caption notes.

The F-35E Strike Eagle was the first US aircraft to be certified to drop the B61-12, which was developed in 2015, though production of usable bombs only began in March 2020. Strike Eagles tested dropping inert bombs at the Tonopah Test Range in Nevada in March, according to Sandia National Laboratories, which operates the site.

Meanwhile, at the remote Eielson Air Force Base in central Alaska, munitions support personnel began the intricate process of assembling bombs for the base’s first squadron of F-35s - the first for US Pacific Air Forces. The first Joint Strike Fighters began arriving in April.

Photos published by Eielson show munitions crews assembling GBU-12 Paveway II laser-guided bombs.
© Airman 1st Class Aaron Larue GueU.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Daelyn Mayer, a 354th Maintenance Squadron conventional maintenance inspector, tightens a GBU-12 forward adapter at Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, June 16, 2020.
Photos: F-35A Tests Dropping Nuclear Bombs in Trove of Images Released by Pentagon - Sputnik International
U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Daelyn Mayer, a 354th Maintenance Squadron conventional maintenance inspector, tightens a GBU-12 forward adapter at Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, June 16, 2020.

“We’re going to be building a total of 70 bombs over the course of the week,” Master Sgt. Jason P. Brackins, the 354th Maintenance Squadron’s head non-commissioned officer, said in a base news release.

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