The F-35’s Mystery Buyer: 11 Jets, No Name

by | Jun 16, 2026 | Military Aviation, News | 0 comments

Somebody just ordered eleven F-35 stealth fighters. The Pentagon won’t say who.

On June 9, 2026, the U.S. Navy awarded Lockheed Martin a $154 million contract to begin buying long-lead components for eleven F-35 Lightning IIs destined for a foreign military customer — a customer the announcement pointedly declined to name. It didn’t even reveal which version of the jet they’re buying.

In a program with more than a thousand jets flying across two dozen nations, an anonymous order is unusual enough to set off a guessing game.

Quick Facts

  • Contract: $154 million, awarded June 9, 2026
  • For: Long-lead parts for 11 F-35 Lightning II fighters
  • Customer: Undisclosed Foreign Military Sales buyer
  • Variant: Not specified (A, B or C)
  • Work: Fort Worth, Texas, with UK and Italy sites
  • Completion: Expected December 2030

Why Order Parts Before You Order the Jets?

Long-lead procurement sounds dull, but it’s the tell here. Certain F-35 components — advanced electronics, engine parts, specialised composites — take years to build. So buyers commit money for those parts well before the main production contract is signed, to keep their delivery slot. An order like this means a deal is essentially locked, even if it isn’t public.

F-35A Lightning II
A U.S. Air Force F-35A Lightning II. The contract did not specify which F-35 variant the mystery customer is buying. (U.S. Air Force photo)

So Who Is It?

The Pentagon’s silence is doing the marketing. Countries that have recently selected the F-35 or are expanding existing plans — Greece, Romania, Singapore and the Czech Republic among them — are the obvious suspects. The choice of variant would narrow it further: the F-35B jump-jet points to a very different buyer than the conventional F-35A.

Whoever it is, eleven jets is a meaningful squadron-sized commitment, and another data point in the F-35’s relentless export march. The name will surface eventually. For now, it’s the most expensive secret on the production line.

Sources: U.S. Navy / Department of Defense contract announcement; Defense Blog; FlightGlobal; Air Data News.

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