By December, Singapore will have its first F-35s. Four F-35B short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing variants are scheduled for delivery before year’s end, making the Republic of Singapore Air Force the fourth Asia-Pacific operator of the world’s most advanced production fighter — after Australia, Japan, and South Korea.
It is a milestone that has been a long time coming. Singapore first expressed interest in the F-35 in 2019. The deal was approved, deferred, debated, and finally confirmed. Now, with over 300 F-35s projected to be operating across the Asia-Pacific by 2030, Singapore’s entry into the club reshapes the region’s air combat calculus in ways that extend well beyond the island nation’s borders.
Quick Facts
• First delivery: 4 × F-35B (STOVL variant), late 2026
• Total order: 20 F-35s (8 × F-35B + 12 later, mix of A and B variants)
• Full delivery timeline: F-35Bs by 2028, F-35As by 2030
• Asia-Pacific F-35 operators: Australia, Japan, South Korea, Singapore
• Regional F-35 fleet by 2030: 300+ aircraft
• Replaces: Augments existing F-16 and F-15SG fleet
Why the F-35B
Singapore chose the F-35B — the variant designed for short runways and vertical landing — for a reason that has everything to do with geography. The island is 50 kilometres long and 27 kilometres wide. Its air bases are among the most space-constrained in any modern air force. In a conflict, those runways would be high-priority targets for cruise and ballistic missiles.
The F-35B can operate from damaged runways, highway strips, and — in theory — from the decks of amphibious ships. For a small nation whose entire territory is within range of multiple adversaries’ missile arsenals, that capability is not a luxury. It is an insurance policy against the most dangerous opening minutes of a war.
The later addition of F-35A conventional variants will give the RSAF a mixed fleet: the B for survivability and dispersal, the A for longer range and heavier payload. Together, they will operate alongside Singapore’s existing F-15SGs and upgraded F-16s in a force structure designed for quality over quantity.
F-35B Lightning II variants in flight. Singapore will be the fourth Asia-Pacific nation to operate the type. US Marine Corps / Wikimedia Commons
The Indo-Pacific Mosaic
Singapore’s F-35 acquisition does not happen in isolation. Japan is building the largest F-35 fleet outside the United States — 147 aircraft. Australia operates 72. South Korea has 40. By 2030, allied and partner F-35 fleets in the Western Pacific will number over 300, creating an interoperable stealth network that no adversary in the region can match.
The F-35’s greatest advantage is not speed or payload — it is data. The aircraft’s sensor fusion architecture allows every F-35 in the air to share a common picture of the battlespace in real time. Four Singaporean F-35s flying alongside Japanese and Australian jets would see the same targets, the same threats, and the same opportunities simultaneously. That level of interoperability has never existed in Asian airspace before.
For Beijing, the arithmetic is uncomfortable. China’s J-20 is a capable stealth fighter, but it operates in isolation — no allied network, no coalition data-sharing, no interoperable partners. The F-35 mosaic across the Indo-Pacific is designed to make that isolation a strategic disadvantage.
Singapore’s four jets arriving in December are a small piece of a very large puzzle. But every piece makes the picture clearer.
Sources: Defense News, Lockheed Martin, The Diplomat, Asian Military Review, Simple Flying
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