The A-10 Thunderbolt II refuses to die. In a decision that reverses years of retirement planning, the United States Air Force has confirmed it will keep three squadrons of A-10 Warthogs operational through at least 2030 — each maintaining 18 aircraft. The move, reported by Defense News on April 20, 2026, effectively shelves a retirement timeline that was supposed to conclude by 2029 and acknowledges a hard truth: the defense industrial base simply cannot produce enough replacement capability fast enough to let the Warthog go.
Quick Facts
- Decision: 3 A-10 squadrons retained through 2030
- Squadron strength: 18 aircraft each (54 total)
- Previous plan: Full retirement by 2029
- Rationale: Preserve combat power while industrial base catches up
- Reported: Defense News, April 20, 2026
- Primary role: Close air support (CAS)

Why the Warthog Survived — Again
The A-10 has been slated for retirement more times than any other aircraft in the Air Force inventory. Budget proposals from the Pentagon have repeatedly tried to divest the fleet since 2014, arguing that newer multirole platforms like the F-35A Lightning II can absorb the close air support mission. Each time, Congress has intervened, ground commanders have protested, and the Warthog has survived.
This latest reprieve, however, comes not from Congressional override but from the Air Force itself. The service acknowledged that retiring all A-10s by 2029 would create an unacceptable gap in close air support capacity. The F-35 production line, while ramping up, has not delivered enough aircraft to fully replace the CAS hours the Warthog provides. Meanwhile, the defense industrial base is stretched thin across multiple modernization programs — from B-21 bombers to next-generation fighters to hypersonic weapons.
Keeping three squadrons of 18 aircraft each preserves 54 combat-ready Warthogs. These are not museum pieces. They are fully mission-capable airframes with upgraded wings, modern targeting pods, and precision munitions capability that make them lethal well beyond their original 1970s design intent.
The Irreplaceable Close Air Support Machine
What makes the A-10 so difficult to replace is not any single capability — it is the combination of attributes that no other aircraft replicates. The airframe was designed from the ground up around the GAU-8/A Avenger 30mm rotary cannon, a weapon that can destroy armored vehicles, fortifications, and troop concentrations with devastating precision at close range. The aircraft carries 1,174 rounds and can deliver them with surgical accuracy while loitering over the battlefield for hours.

But the gun is only part of the story. The A-10 was engineered for survivability. Its titanium armor bathtub protects the pilot from ground fire up to 23mm. The engines are mounted high to reduce infrared signature and vulnerability to ground-launched missiles. The aircraft can fly with one engine, one tail fin, and massive battle damage to the fuselage and still bring its pilot home. No stealth fighter in the inventory offers that kind of rugged, low-altitude survivability.
In an era of near-peer competition, critics argue the A-10 cannot survive in contested airspace defended by advanced surface-to-air missile systems. This is true — and it was never the Warthog’s mission. The A-10 excels in permissive and semi-permissive environments where air superiority has been established and ground forces need persistent, responsive firepower overhead. In counterinsurgency operations, humanitarian missions, and conventional ground wars after air dominance is achieved, nothing else in the inventory does what the Warthog does.
The Industrial Base Reality
The deeper story behind the A-10 extension is the state of the American defense industrial base. The Air Force is simultaneously trying to ramp up F-35 production, begin low-rate initial production of the B-21 Raider, develop the Next Generation Air Dominance fighter, field the Collaborative Combat Aircraft drone program, and modernize its nuclear triad. Each of these programs competes for the same engineering talent, manufacturing capacity, and supply chain resources.
Retiring the A-10 on the original timeline would have freed up some maintenance funding and personnel, but at the cost of combat capability that could not be immediately replaced. The Air Force’s decision to retain three squadrons is an implicit admission that the transition plan was too aggressive — that paper capability does not equal real-world readiness.
The retained squadrons will likely be based at existing A-10 installations where maintenance infrastructure, spare parts inventories, and experienced crews are already in place. This minimizes the cost of extension while maximizing operational availability.
What Comes Next
The 2030 deadline is not necessarily the end of the story. If industrial base constraints persist — and most defense analysts expect they will — the A-10 could see yet another extension. The upgraded wings installed under the Enhanced Wing Assembly program give the airframe structural life well into the 2030s, and the aircraft’s avionics and weapons integration have been steadily modernized.
For the soldiers, marines, and special operators who have relied on the distinctive sound of the Warthog’s cannon overhead, the decision is welcome news. The A-10 community has a saying: the Hog always finds a way. In 2026, it has found a way once again.
Sources: Defense News (April 20, 2026), U.S. Air Force, Congressional Research Service A-10 fleet status report, Air Force Magazine.

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