Sunday, April 26, 2026

Breaking: U.S. Navy’s MQ-25 Stingray Completes First Flight - The Aviationist


Breaking: U.S. Navy’s MQ-25 Stingray Completes First Flight - The Aviationist

MQ-25 Finally Flies — But At What Cost, And What Was The Alternative?

Stephen L. Pendergast April 26, 2026

 BLUF

Boeing's first production-representative MQ-25A Stingray made its maiden flight from MidAmerica St. Louis Airport on April 25, 2026 — nearly seven years after the company-funded T1 demonstrator first flew, four years behind the original Initial Operational Capability (IOC) date of 2024, and on the back of more than $900 million in fixed-price losses Boeing has already absorbed on the program. The pattern fits standard prime-contractor behavior: lock out a non-traditional intruder (General Atomics) on established turf (carrier-based fixed-wing aviation, a near-century Boeing/McDonnell Douglas franchise) by lowballing the fixed-price development bid, then recover margin through engineering change proposals and production-phase scope expansion against an unstable requirements baseline — a baseline that, in CBARS, was actively descoped from stealthy strike to tanker between 2014 and 2018 and is now visibly evolving in the opposite direction, with publicly displayed LRASM anti-ship hardpoints, a retractable EO/IR turret with laser-designation provisions, and BLOS-linked manned-unmanned teaming software all added since contract award. The Navy now plans an IOC of FY2027 against a program-of-record of 76 aircraft, with the latest Selected Acquisition Report and FY2027 budget justification pegging flyaway unit cost at $181.6 million — up from $136.2 million in the FY2024 estimate and $166 million one year ago. Total program cost has migrated from a December 2022 SAR estimate of $16.5 billion toward the GAO's mid-2025 figure of approximately $15.9 billion in then-year dollars at a 4 percent acquisition-unit-cost increase to $209 million, even as the Navy delivered no aircraft against the original schedule. The DOD Inspector General (DODIG-2024-026) and the GAO have both flagged the Navy's plan to begin Low-Rate Initial Production before completing developmental and operational test as a concurrency risk likely to drive further cost growth. Meanwhile, the unsuccessful 2018 CBARS bidder — General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. (GA-ASI) — has, in roughly the same calendar interval, designed, built, and flown the YFQ-42A Collaborative Combat Aircraft for the Air Force in 16 months from contract award; demonstrated the company-funded Mojave STOL UAS landing on and taking off from HMS Prince of Wales — a non-CATOBAR Royal Navy carrier — in November 2023 without ski-jump assist, catapult, or arresting gear; and logged more than five years of jet-CCA autonomy work on the company-funded MQ-20 Avenger that the Navy itself now uses as its UMCS surrogate. The counterfactual is no longer hypothetical: GA-ASI's actual delivery cadence on adjacent Navy and Air Force unmanned-jet programs, combined with demonstrated carrier deck operations, strongly suggests that a Sea Avenger–derived MQ-25 would have flown earlier, cost the taxpayer less, and avoided the fixed-price contracting trap that has cratered Boeing Defense, Space & Security earnings for four straight years. The MQ-25 program is best understood as the last hurrah of an industrial-base structure — five primes inherited from the 1990s "Last Supper" consolidation, controlling roughly 65 percent of DOD procurement — that the Pentagon (through its 2022 State of Competition report and 2024 National Defense Industrial Strategy) and Congress (through the FoRGED Act) are now consciously trying to dismantle.

A Long-Delayed First Flight

The MQ-25A took off at MidAmerica St. Louis Airport in Mascoutah, Illinois — co-located with Scott Air Force Base — accompanied by a Boeing-owned TA-4J Skyhawk and a U.S. Navy UC-12M Huron acting as chase aircraft. A first attempt on April 22 was aborted on the takeoff roll for undisclosed reasons before the successful sortie three days later. The aircraft is one of nine production-representative airframes Boeing is building for static, fatigue, and flight test under the Engineering and Manufacturing Development (EMD) and System Demonstration Test Article (SDTA) phases of the program. Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 23 (VX-23) and Unmanned Aviation Test Squadron 24 (UX-24) jointly conducted the preceding low- and high-speed taxi trials and will continue the flight-test campaign.

The new airframe differs materially from the T1 demonstrator that first flew on September 19, 2019 and accumulated approximately 125 flight hours conducting unmanned aerial refueling demonstrations with an F/A-18F Super Hornet (June 4, 2021), an E-2D Hawkeye (August 19, 2021), and an F-35C Lightning II (September 14, 2021). The production configuration introduces a retractable electro-optical/infrared (EO/IR) sensor turret under the chin, a redesigned exhaust, structural and avionics changes for fleet airworthiness certification, and integration with the Navy/Lockheed Martin Unmanned Carrier Aviation Mission Control System (UMCS) and its MD-5 Ground Control Station family.

Vice Adm. Daniel Cheever, Commander, Naval Air Forces, told reporters in January 2025 that "we will fly MQ-25 in '25 — you can quote me on that." The aircraft did not fly in 2025. Then–NAVAIR commander Vice Adm. Carl Chebi acknowledged in April 2025 that meeting that schedule would require "a ton of work," noting that "70 percent of the capability that industry delivers to us is late." After a federal government shutdown and what the Navy described as a need to "complete deliberate systems-level testing and review and approve the final airworthiness artifacts needed for a flight clearance," the milestone slipped formally into early 2026.

The Cost Trajectory

Three independent figures tell the story of MQ-25 cost growth.

1.      First, the flyaway unit cost has migrated from $136.2 million in the Navy's FY2024 budget estimate to $166 million in FY2026 and $181.6 million in the FY2027 budget justification documents. The FY2027 request totals $852 million for three Low-Rate Initial Production (LRIP) aircraft plus advance procurement of long-lead materials for a five-aircraft LRIP Lot 3, following $1.04 billion in combined procurement and RDT&E funding in FY2026.

2.      Second, the total program cost stood at $16.5 billion in the December 2022 Selected Acquisition Report — the most recent SAR publicly released — against an acquisition unit cost (AUC) of $209 million, itself a 4 percent increase from the prior estimate. The GAO's 2025 Weapon Systems Annual Assessment, published June 11, 2025, found total cost of approximately $15.9 billion in then-year dollars across the 76-aircraft program of record. Procurement quantity restructuring across President's Budget cycles has masked some of the unit-cost growth — PB2024 alone shifted four aircraft out of the first two production lots into a new third lot.

3.      Third, Boeing's contractor losses on the fixed-price MQ-25 EMD contract — originally an $805 million award for four aircraft in August 2018, later expanded to seven aircraft for $890 million in April 2020 — now exceed $900 million in cumulative pre-tax charges. Boeing logged a $147 million MQ-25 charge in Q2 2022 (its first), a $217 million charge in Q3 2024, and an additional $339 million across 2024 calendar-year reporting, with further losses booked through 2025. The MQ-25 is one of five fixed-price Boeing Defense programs — alongside KC-46A, T-7A, VC-25B, and Commercial Crew (Starliner) — that have together driven Boeing Defense, Space & Security to record annual losses, including $4.9 billion in 2024.

The pattern is the one Hudson Institute analyst Bryan Clark identified bluntly in early 2024: "Boeing wanted to win the work, so they went for these fixed-price R&D contracts and lowballed it, and now they're suffering." Lockheed Martin's then-CEO Marillyn Hewson told investors that matching Boeing's 2018 MQ-25, T-7A, and VC-25B bids would have cost Lockheed more than $5 billion in losses.

The Capability — When It Arrives

The MQ-25's primary mission remains aerial refueling using the same Cobham Aerial Refueling Store (ARS) pod carried by the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet. The Navy told Congress in its August 2025 update that the aircraft is designed to deliver 14,000 to 16,000 pounds of fuel at 500 nautical miles. That capability would relieve the Super Hornet fleet of the buddy-tanker mission, which the service estimates accounts for between 20 and 30 percent of F/A-18E/F sorties — wear-and-tear that has accelerated airframe fatigue across an aging strike-fighter inventory.

Secondary missions include intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) via the new EO/IR turret, plus signals intelligence (SIGINT) and Automatic Identification System (AIS) receivers for organic maritime surveillance. Boeing has separately demonstrated software allowing an F/A-18F backseat operator to command the MQ-25 directly during refueling — an early manned-unmanned teaming (MUM-T) capability the Navy regards as a building block for its broader vision of a carrier air wing in which 60 percent or more of the aircraft are uncrewed.

The UMCS — the Navy/Lockheed Martin "system-of-systems" that will command not only the MQ-25 but also future carrier-based unmanned aircraft — is further along than the air vehicle itself. The first operational MD-5E Ground Control Station was installed aboard USS George H.W. Bush (CVN-77) in August 2024, with installations on USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70), USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71), and USS Ronald Reagan (CVN-76) phased through FY2025–FY2026. In November 2024, Navy Air Vehicle Pilots at NAS Patuxent River used the UMCS to command a GA-ASI MQ-20 Avenger flying from California — over a proliferated low-Earth-orbit satellite link — establishing that the architecture can control air vehicles other than the MQ-25, a critical proof point for future Collaborative Combat Aircraft on carriers. Unmanned Carrier-Launched Multi-Role Squadron 10 (VUQ-10), the Fleet Replacement Squadron, was established at NAS Patuxent River on October 1, 2022; operational squadrons VUQ-11 and VUQ-12 are planned.

The Lowball-And-Recover Thesis

The pattern of cost growth, requirements instability, and Boeing's own public posture suggests something more deliberate than execution failure. The CBARS program was, by the Navy's own admission, a program in flux at the time of the 2018 award. Originating as the Unmanned Carrier Launched Airborne Surveillance and Strike (UCLASS) program in the early 2010s — itself an outgrowth of the X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System Demonstration (UCAS-D) — it was descoped in February 2016 from a stealthy strike/ISR platform to a tanker "with a little ISR," then formally redesignated MQ-25A in July 2016. The Joint Requirements Oversight Council did not validate the two primary requirements (carrier-capable, refuels other carrier aircraft) until July 2017, and the final RFP did not drop until October 2017. Northrop Grumman's CEO Wes Bush withdrew the X-47B in October 2017 specifically citing the requirements set, telling investors that "if you can't really execute on it and deliver on it to your customer and your shareholders, then you've done the wrong thing." Boeing's own design — secretly completed in 2014 during the UCLASS pause as a stealthy strike platform — was, in the words of one observer, faced with "an unpleasant choice" of either redesigning a clean-sheet tanker or "keep their UCLASS design and just de-emphasize stealth in the construction process." Boeing chose the latter, betting that "the potential to restore LO features later will be worth something." That bet has aged poorly for Boeing's shareholders. It may yet pay off through the production-phase revenue stream.

The mechanism is the engineering change proposal (ECP). Under firm-fixed-price development contracts, the contractor absorbs cost overruns within the original scope of work — but any change in scope, requirements, or specifications triggers a contract modification, billed at cost-plus margins back to the government. The thinner the original requirements baseline, the larger the ECP funnel. The MQ-25 baseline, as Boeing won it, included only the two JROC-validated primary requirements plus a "limited" ISR capability for "permissive" environments. Almost everything else — secondary mission systems, integration with the Navy's evolving UMCS architecture, manned-unmanned teaming software, signals intelligence and Automatic Identification System payloads, and ultimately combat capability — was either undefined or designated for future increments at the time of the 2018 fixed-price award.

The trajectory since shows the funnel filling. Boeing publicly displayed an MQ-25 model in April 2024 with AGM-158C LRASM anti-ship missiles on underwing hardpoints — a stealthy long-range strike weapon, currently fielded on the F/A-18E/F and B-1B and being integrated on F-35B/C, P-8A, F-15E, and F-15EX, that has reportedly seen first combat use against Houthi targets in 2025. A subsonic long-range anti-ship missile bolted under the wings of a "tanker with limited ISR" represents a substantial expansion of the original mission set, almost certainly handled through engineering changes or follow-on contract action rather than the original EMD scope. The retractable EO/IR sensor turret confirmed in January 2026 taxi-trial photography — including the option for laser rangefinders, designators, and trackers consistent with weapons employment — is the same story. So is the BLOS satellite link integration with UMCS demonstrated in November 2024. So is the manned-unmanned teaming software allowing F/A-18 backseaters to command the MQ-25 directly during refueling. None of these capabilities was fully scoped in the 2018 baseline.

The Navy's FY2026 budget submission language is telling: it describes "implementing an evolutionary acquisition strategy to develop, fly, deploy, and evolve" the MQ-25. "Evolve" is the key word. An evolutionary acquisition strategy on a fixed-price baseline is, in practice, a contracting structure that converts every evolution into a billable change order. The DOD Office of Inspector General's audit (DODIG-2024-026, released November 20, 2023) identified the most concrete near-term risk: the Navy's plan to begin Low-Rate Initial Production before completing developmental and operational test of the production-representative aircraft. The DODIG recommended either delaying the LRIP decision "until the Program Office conducts sufficient tests and evaluations" or updating the program's risk management documentation to reflect the concurrency exposure. The Navy chose option two, updated its risk assessment, and proceeded toward LRIP regardless. The GAO's June 2025 Weapon Systems Annual Assessment repeated the warning, citing the LRIP-before-test decision as a potential driver of "cost increases and further delays." The April 2025 Senate Appropriations Committee–reported version of the FY2025 defense bill (S. 4921) would have eliminated the first three LRIP aircraft entirely — a $473.4 million reduction. Congress ultimately funded the program through a continuing resolution and the One Beautiful Bill Act ($100 million in FY2025 reconciliation funding), with the FY2026 request restoring the LRIP buy.

This is the textbook environment for ECP-driven cost recovery: an unstable requirements baseline, a contractor with $900 million in pre-tax losses to amortize, a Navy customer publicly committed to evolving the platform's capabilities, an LRIP decision being made before flight test maturity, and a program of record (76 aircraft) large enough to absorb substantial per-unit cost growth across full-rate production lots. Bryan Clark of the Hudson Institute identified the dynamic in early 2024 in plain language: Boeing "lowballed it" on a fixed-price R&D contract assuming "they would take a financial hit during development but make up profits later in the production and sustainment phases of the program." That is the playbook. The question is no longer whether it is being executed on MQ-25, but what the final acquisition unit cost will be when Boeing's production-and-sustainment recovery has run its course. The current $209 million AUC figure in the 2025 GAO assessment — already a 4 percent increase from the prior estimate, against a 76-aircraft program — is unlikely to be the last word.

The GA-ASI Counterfactual

When the Navy released the final CBARS RFP in October 2017 to Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and General Atomics, the latter offered a Sea Avenger derivative — an enlarged, navalized variant of its company-funded MQ-20 Avenger that had first flown in April 2009. Northrop Grumman withdrew its X-47B-derived offering in October 2017, citing inability to execute under the RFP terms. Boeing won on August 30, 2018 with a fixed-price bid that — as Lockheed's Hewson later acknowledged — implied losses for any competitor pricing to actual cost.

The intervening eight years are instructive.

GA-ASI flew the company-funded MQ-20 Avenger in 2009 and has continuously matured it as a jet-powered autonomy testbed. By 2025, the Avenger had served as the surrogate platform for more than five years of CCA-relevant autonomy development, hosting both GA-ASI's TacACE software and Shield AI's Hivemind — switching between AI pilots in flight — and demonstrating manned-unmanned teaming with a Lockheed Martin/L3Harris-equipped F-22 Raptor. In 2024 the company first flew the XQ-67A Off-Board Sensing Station for AFRL, validating the "genus/species" common-core airframe concept under the Low-Cost Attritable Aircraft Platform Sharing program.

Most pointedly: GA-ASI's YFQ-42A Collaborative Combat Aircraft, derived from the XQ-67A baseline under the Air Force's Increment 1 CCA contract awarded in early 2024, flew on August 27, 2025 — 16 months after contract award, and only 18 months after its XQ-67A predecessor. Air Force Secretary Troy Meink stated that the aircraft "went from concept to flight in just 16 months — proving that we can deliver combat capability at speed." By February 2026, GA-ASI had built and flown multiple YFQ-42As, integrated push-button autonomous takeoff and landing, and conducted a four-hour semi-autonomous mission flight using Collins Aerospace's Sidekick autonomy software via the Autonomy Government Reference Architecture standard.

The contrast with the MQ-25 timeline is stark. Boeing took 13 months from August 2018 contract award to T1 first flight in September 2019 — a respectable showing for the demonstrator. But it then took an additional six years and seven months to fly the first production-representative aircraft. GA-ASI, by comparison, took 16 months from CCA contract award to flight of a production-representative jet-powered uncrewed fighter, and the company has delivered more than 1,200 unmanned aircraft to customers worldwide and accumulated nearly 9 million flight hours across the Predator/Reaper/Avenger/SkyGuardian family.

GA-ASI's Poway, California, facility produces more than 100 aircraft per year — a production rate Boeing's MidAmerica MQ-25 line, which opened a $200 million expansion in 2024, has yet to demonstrate at any meaningful tempo.

The counterfactual would still have required real navalization work — salt-fog hardening, deck-handling integration, catapult and arresting-gear hardpoints, folding wings — that Boeing's wing-body-tail design, secretly completed during the UCLASS pause in 2014 and revived for CBARS, already incorporated. But the assumption that GA-ASI lacked carrier credentials does not survive contact with the record. On November 15, 2023, GA-ASI's company-funded Mojave short-takeoff-and-landing UAS — a STOL-winged derivative sharing systems and components with the MQ-1C Gray Eagle line — took off from, conducted circuits and approaches around, and landed back aboard HMS Prince of Wales (R09) underway off the U.S. East Coast. The Royal Navy carrier is fitted with neither catapults nor arresting gear; Mojave used neither the ski-jump nor the standard launch axis, instead running at an angle from the stern toward the port side of the deck. Royal Navy Director Develop Rear Adm. James Parkin called it "a European first… the first time a Remotely Piloted Air System of this size has operated to and from an aircraft carrier outside of the United States." The demonstration was followed by GA-ASI's planned MQ-9B STOL — a STOL wing set on the larger SkyGuardian/SeaGuardian/Protector airframe — pitched directly at navies operating large flat-deck warships without cats and traps.

Add to this Northrop Grumman's X-47B, which demonstrated full CATOBAR launch and recovery aboard USS Theodore Roosevelt in 2013. The engineering pathway to a navalized Avenger or Sea Avenger derivative was not speculative — it was, by 2018, a well-understood problem with company-funded flight test data on the books. GA-ASI's broader contracting posture is also worth noting: the company has consistently built company-funded prototypes (Avenger 2009, Mojave 2021, XQ-67A 2024) and competed for production with mature hardware, avoiding the fixed-price-development trap that has now cost Boeing more than $7 billion on KC-46, $2 billion on Starliner, $1.77 billion on T-7A, and approaching $1 billion on MQ-25.

The Bigger Pattern: Incumbent Moats On Established Turf

Stepping back, the MQ-25 story is not a one-off contracting failure. It is a textbook example of standard prime-contractor behavior: lock out intruders on established turf. Carrier-based fixed-wing aviation has been Boeing/McDonnell Douglas territory for nearly a century — F4F Wildcat, F4U Corsair, F-4 Phantom II, F/A-18 Hornet, F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, EA-18G Growler. The MQ-25 was, from the prime's perspective, the next iteration of a franchise. A General Atomics win in 2018 would have planted a non-traditional flag on the carrier deck for the first time in living memory and opened the door — through UMCS architecture commonality and demonstrated production rates — to General Atomics taking the lead on every subsequent carrier-based unmanned program, including the CCAs the Navy intends to populate "60 percent or more" of the future air wing with. The fixed-price lowball was not just about winning one program; it was about preventing that beachhead.

The DOD's own State of Competition Within the Defense Industrial Base report, issued February 2022, documents the structural problem in plain language: between roughly 1990 and 2022, the U.S. aerospace and defense prime contractor base shrank from 51 firms to five — Lockheed Martin, RTX (Raytheon), General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman, and Boeing. The top ten contractors have retained approximately 65 percent of total defense procurement and RDT&E spending across key segments for the past decade despite significant private capital investment in new entrants. The report explicitly warns that this concentration "raises barriers for new entrants" and creates conditions where "existing dominant suppliers… leverage their market position to charge more." The Pentagon's January 2024 National Defense Industrial Strategy made supplier-base diversification an explicit priority. The FoRGED Act, advancing through Congress in 2025, expands the definition of "nontraditional contractor" specifically to give companies like General Atomics, Anduril, Saronic, and Shield AI a structural advantage when competing against the legacy primes.

Palantir co-founder and Anduril chairman's brother Shyam Sankar has described the prime defense of established turf as a "first breakfast" phenomenon — established defense contractors habitually devouring smaller innovative competitors through acquisitions or by exploiting incumbent advantages, "effectively stifling true innovation." The mechanism Boeing applied to MQ-25 is one face of this: aggressive fixed-price bids that price-out competitors with cleaner cost structures, compensated for through engineering changes against unstable requirements baselines. Other faces include vertical integration of subsystem suppliers, sole-source teaming arrangements that lock up component industries (the MQ-25 RFP's October 2017 "studies and analysis" sole-source provision is one example — it was issued only to the four PDR-completed firms under FAR 6.302-1(a)(2), explicitly preventing new entrants), and post-award acquisition of any disruptor that achieves meaningful scale. The pattern is institutional, not incidental.

The disruption is now happening anyway, but on adjacent turf. Anduril won, alongside GA-ASI, the Air Force CCA Increment 1 contract that produced the YFQ-44A (still pre-flight as of late 2025) and YFQ-42A (flying since August 2025). SpaceX has displaced United Launch Alliance — a Boeing/Lockheed joint venture — across the majority of national security launch missions, and is a frontrunner alongside Palantir and Anduril for major elements of the Trump administration's Golden Dome missile defense architecture. Palantir described its own trajectory in 2022 SEC filings as "a fundamental shift in our business, from insurgent outsider to incumbent, particularly in the U.S. market." In March 2026, Anduril signed a five-to-ten-year, up-to-$20 billion enterprise agreement with the U.S. Army for counter-drone capabilities — a contract structure that, as Fortune noted, "lets them compete directly with the old guard" by combining hardware, software, and services under a single prime-like umbrella.

GA-ASI sits in a unique position within this disruption pattern. It is older than the post-2010 venture-backed defense tech wave (Avenger first flew in 2009, Predator dates to 1995) but has avoided being absorbed into one of the five primes. As a family-owned, privately held company for more than three decades, it has been able to fund its own jet-UAS prototypes — Avenger 2009, Mojave 2021, XQ-67A 2024, YFQ-42A 2025 — with company money rather than chasing fixed-price-development contracts. The result is a company that had already flown the next generation of unmanned combat jets, on its own dime, before Boeing flew the production-representative MQ-25 it had been paid to deliver in 2024. That is not a failure of execution by Boeing; it is a working illustration of why GA-ASI, Anduril, SpaceX, and Palantir are increasingly seen by Pentagon reformers as the model rather than the exception.

The MQ-25 first flight, in this frame, is best understood not as a milestone in unmanned carrier aviation but as the last hurrah of an industrial-base structure that DOD is now consciously trying to dismantle. Boeing won the program by playing the prime-contractor playbook — lowball the development phase, lock out the disruptor, recover through ECPs and production-phase scope expansion. Eight years later, the disruptor (GA-ASI) is producing more advanced unmanned jets faster, the customer (Navy) is using the disruptor's aircraft as the surrogate to wring out its own ground control system, and Pentagon reformers (and Congress, through FoRGED) are actively rewriting the acquisition rules to make this kind of incumbent moat-building harder to execute on the next program. The next carrier-based unmanned aircraft after MQ-25 — whether CCA, F/A-XX wingman, or successor strike platform — will be procured under different rules, and the legacy primes know it.

What Comes Next

The MQ-25 program now enters envelope-expansion flight testing, leading to carrier suitability work that the Navy attempted in non-flight form aboard USS George H.W. Bush during the December 2021 Unmanned Carrier Aviation Demonstration. The Pentagon's DOT&E and the GAO have both warned that beginning LRIP before flight test maturity creates concurrency risk; the GAO specifically flagged in 2025 that "the program's potential inability to maintain its schedule commitments may require modifications to the contract that would impact the fixed-price terms." Translation: further Boeing losses, or a Navy concession that converts portions of the LRIP scope to cost-plus.

Three EMD aircraft are designated to support the first MQ-25 deployment. The FY2027 budget covers three additional LRIP aircraft, with five funded in FY2028 and seven per year planned in FY2029–FY2031 toward the 76-aircraft program of record. Vice Adm. Cheever continues to describe the MQ-25 as a "trailblazer" for unmanned carrier aviation — the platform that "unlocks the future for manned-unmanned teaming on the aircraft carrier." Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Daryl Caudle has linked MQ-25 directly to the F/A-XX program, citing its potential for "clandestine refueling and organic refueling from the carrier" alongside the next-generation strike fighter.

That future may yet arrive. But it is arriving four years late, at a flyaway unit cost 33 percent above the FY2024 estimate, on the back of a contracting structure that Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg and his predecessors have publicly disavowed for any future development bid. And it is arriving while the unsuccessful 2018 bidder is delivering uncrewed jet fighters in 16 months and providing the autonomy surrogate the Navy uses to wring out its own ground control station.

The MQ-25's first flight is a milestone worth marking. The path to it is a cautionary tale worth studying — particularly as the Navy prepares to source the carrier-based CCAs that will follow.

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Decker, Audrey. "Boeing to log $1.7B in defense program losses in fourth quarter." Breaking Defense, January 2025. https://breakingdefense.com/2025/01/boeing-to-log-1-7b-in-defense-program-losses-in-fourth-quarter/

Decker, Audrey. "Boeing's defense unit logs massive $2 billion in losses for third quarter." Breaking Defense, October 2024. https://breakingdefense.com/2024/10/boeings-defense-unit-logs-massive-2-billion-in-losses-for-third-quarter/

Mehta, Aaron, and Stephen Losey. "Strike, fixed-price contracts leave Boeing defense bleeding cash." Defense News, October 23, 2024. https://www.defensenews.com/air/2024/10/23/strike-fixed-price-contracts-leave-boeing-defense-bleeding-cash/

Losey, Stephen. "'Cautionary tale': How Boeing won a US Air Force program and lost $7B." Defense News, January 9, 2024. https://www.defensenews.com/industry/2024/01/09/cautionary-tale-how-boeing-won-a-us-air-force-program-and-lost-7b/

Smith, Marcia. "Boeing's Starliner Losses Reach $2 Billion." SpacePolicyOnline, January 2025. https://spacepolicyonline.com/news/boeings-starliner-losses-reach-2-billion/

Mehta, Aaron. "Boeing defense programs hit with $400M in cost overruns." Breaking Defense, July 27, 2022. https://breakingdefense.com/2022/07/boeing-defense-programs-hit-with-400m-in-cost-overruns/

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. "GA-ASI Marks Another Aviation First With YFQ-42A CCA Flight Testing." Press release, August 27, 2025. https://www.ga-asi.com/ga-asi-marks-another-aviation-first-with-yfq-42a-cca-flight-testing

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. "GA-ASI Achieves New Milestone With Semi-Autonomous CCA Flight." Press release, February 12, 2026. https://www.ga.com/ga-asi-achieves-new-milestone-with-semi-autonomous-cca-flight

D'Urso, Stefano. "General Atomics' YFQ-42A Collaborative Combat Aircraft Takes Flight." The Aviationist, August 27, 2025. https://theaviationist.com/2025/08/27/yfq-42a-cca-takes-flight/

Hemmerdinger, Jon. "General Atomics YFQ-42A First CCA Forerunner to Fly." Aviation Today, September 4, 2025. https://www.aviationtoday.com/2025/09/04/general-atomics-yfq-42a-first-cca-forerunner-to-fly/

General Atomics. "A New Transatlantic Partnership for European CCA." Press release, July 17, 2025. https://www.ga.com/a-new-transatlantic-partnership-for-european-cca

McGarry, Brendan. "Despite Delays, Navy to Accelerate Delivery of Unmanned Tanker." National Defense Magazine, January 26, 2024. https://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/articles/2024/1/26/despite-delays-navy-to-accelerate-delivery-of-unmanned-tanker

Naval Air Systems Command. "Navy completes initial carrier demo for MQ-25 program." December 15, 2021. https://www.navair.navy.mil/news/Navy-completes-initial-carrier-demo-MQ-25-program/Wed-12152021-1336

Boeing MQ-25 Stingray, Wikipedia. (Reference for CBARS competition history; Northrop Grumman X-47B withdrawal, October 25, 2017; Lockheed Martin Sea Ghost; General Atomics Sea Avenger.) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_MQ-25_Stingray

General Atomics MQ-20 Avenger, Wikipedia. (Reference for Avenger first flight, April 4, 2009; Lynx SAR and EOTS integration history.) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Atomics_MQ-20_Avenger

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. "GA-ASI Demonstrates Short Takeoff/Landing of UAS on UK Carrier." Press release, November 17, 2023. https://www.ga-asi.com/ga-asi-demonstrates-short-takeoff-landing-of-uas-on-uk-carrier

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. "GA-ASI Redefines Maritime Operations with Mojave." November 29, 2023. https://www.ga-asi.com/mojave-uas-carrier-takeoff-and-landing-demo

Martin, Tim. "UK Royal Navy completes Mojave UAS flight and recovery from Prince of Wales aircraft carrier." Breaking Defense, November 17, 2023. https://breakingdefense.com/2023/11/uk-royal-navy-completes-mojave-uas-flight-and-recovery-from-prince-of-wales-aircraft-carrier/

HMS Prince of Wales (R09), Wikipedia. (Reference for non-CATOBAR configuration; Mojave November 15, 2023 carrier operations; angled deck launch.) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Prince_of_Wales_(R09)

Department of Defense, Office of Inspector General. Audit of the Navy's Management of the MQ-25 Stingray Program. DODIG-2024-026, November 20, 2023. https://www.dodig.mil/reports.html/Article/3594541/audit-of-the-navys-management-of-the-mq25-stingray-program-dodig-2024-026/ and press release: https://www.dodig.mil/In-the-Spotlight/Article/3594576/press-release-audit-of-the-navys-management-of-the-mq-25-stingray-program-dodig/

Trevithick, Joseph. "MQ-25 Stingray Tanker Delays, Risks Come Into View." The War Zone, November 21, 2023. https://www.twz.com/mq-25-stingray-tanker-delays-risks-come-into-view

AGM-158C LRASM, Wikipedia. (Reference for LRASM derivation from JASSM-ER, range, seeker, B-1B and F/A-18E/F early operational capability, and integration on F-35B/C, P-8A, F-15E, and F-15EX.) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AGM-158C_LRASM

D'Urso, Stefano. "First Images of F-35 Carrying AGM-158C Long-Range Anti-Ship Missile Released." The Aviationist, September 25, 2024. https://theaviationist.com/2024/09/25/first-images-of-f-35-carrying-agm-158c-long-range-anti-ship-missile-released/

Trevithick, Joseph. "Has The U.S. Been Firing AGM-158C Long-Range Anti-Ship Missiles In The Middle East?" The War Zone, May–July 2025. https://www.twz.com/air/has-the-u-s-been-firing-agm-158c-long-range-anti-ship-missiles-in-the-middle-east

"MQ-25 Stingray: CBARS program dramatically shifts its orientation." Asia-Pacific Defence Reporter, March 20, 2024. https://asiapacificdefencereporter.com/mq-25-stingray-cbars-program-dramatically-shifts-its-orientation/

Tigner, Brooks. "GAO: Pentagon Confirms Requirements for Navy's MQ-25." Aviation International News (AIN), September 13, 2017. https://www.ainonline.com/aviation-news/defense/2017-09-13/gao-pentagon-confirms-requirements-navys-mq-25

Allison, George. "USN expects more development of MQ-25 'CBARS' timeline this year." Flight Global, May 2016. https://www.flightglobal.com/civil-uavs/usn-expects-more-development-of-mq-25-cbars-timeline-this-year/120476.article

"MQ-25 Stingray." GlobalSecurity.org. (Reference for CBARS descope from stealth in March 2016; risk-reduction contract awards October 2016; sole-source basis for studies and analysis solicitation.) https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/aircraft/mq-25.htm

Skove, Sam. "Farnborough 2024: Boeing anticipates MQ-25 LRIP contract in early 2025." Janes, July 22, 2024. https://www.janes.com/osint-insights/defence-news/air/farnborough-2024-boeing-anticipates-mq-25-lrip-contract-in-early-2025

U.S. Department of Defense. State of Competition Within the Defense Industrial Base. February 2022. https://media.defense.gov/2022/feb/15/2002939087/-1/-1/1/state-of-competition-within-the-defense-industrial-base.pdf

U.S. Department of Defense. National Defense Industrial Strategy. January 2024.

Bain & Company. "Rethinking Defense: The Role of Private Capital." (Reference for top-10 contractor 65 percent share retention; nontraditional entrant traction.) https://www.bain.com/insights/rethinking-defense-the-role-of-private-capital/

Liu, Lily. "Another Last Supper and a New Era of Defense Giants." War on the Rocks, May 5, 2025. (Reference for "first breakfast" framing attributed to Shyam Sankar; 1990s consolidation history; current acquisition wave.) https://warontherocks.com/2025/05/another-last-supper-and-a-new-era-of-defense-giants

"Anduril, Palantir and SpaceX are changing how America wages war." The Economist, April 2026. (Reference for "neo-prime" framing; legacy prime concerns.)

Pabst, Stavroula. "New monopoly? Inside VC tech's overthrow of the primes." Responsible Statecraft, January 10, 2025. https://responsiblestatecraft.org/defense-tech-partnership/

Hughes, Christopher. "Forging a Stronger Defense Industrial Base." American Affairs Journal, September 2025. (Reference for FoRGED Act provisions on nontraditional contractors and commercial-first acquisition.) https://americanaffairsjournal.org/2025/09/forging-a-stronger-defense-industrial-base/

Anduril/Fortune. "Anduril's new mega-deal rewrites the rules for Silicon Valley—and raises new risks." Fortune, March 22, 2026. (Reference for $20 billion Army enterprise contract; prime-like contracting structure.) https://fortune.com/2026/03/22/anduril-pentagon-contract-turning-point/

Palantir Technologies Inc. Form 8-K, Q3 2022. (Reference for Palantir self-description: "fundamental shift in our business, from insurgent outsider to incumbent.") https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0001321655/000132165522000029/a2022q3exhibit992ceoletter.htm

 

Stephen L. Pendergast is a retired senior radar and signal-processing engineer with more than two decades at General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, CACI International, and Raytheon, and earlier service with the U.S. Navy. He is an IEEE Senior Life Member and has taught at UCSD Extension.

 

The Spectrum Mobile Trap:


Cord Cutting 2.0 Is Hitting Comcast & Spectrum Hard in 2026 As Customers Cancel Internet & TV | Cord Cutters News

Independent Consumer Analysis April 2026
Telecommunications · Consumer Investigation

What Bundled Customers Should Do When the Promo Ends

Bottom Line Up Front

A free year of cellular service drew millions into Charter's bundle. As those promotional periods expire and 382,000 cable subscribers walked away last quarter alone, here is an evidence-based look at whether the Spectrum bundle still makes sense — and what the alternatives actually deliver.

For most current Spectrum bundle customers, the best deal is no longer Spectrum. The "free mobile line for a year" promotion that hooked many subscribers reverts to standard rates of roughly $30 to $40 per line per month, while internet promotional pricing expires after 12 to 36 months — typically producing a $20 to $48 monthly increase that Charter does not proactively notify customers about.

The math now favors switching. If fiber is available at your address (AT&T Fiber, Verizon Fios, Frontier Fiber, or Google Fiber), it delivers symmetrical gigabit speeds at competitive prices with multi-year price locks. If fiber is unavailable, T-Mobile or Verizon 5G Home Internet typically costs $35 to $50 with mobile bundling — often half the post-promo Spectrum bill — though both can be deprioritized during peak congestion.

The cellular service is portable. Spectrum Mobile rides on Verizon's network as a Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO). Comparable MVNO service from Visible, US Mobile, Mint Mobile, or Cricket runs $15 to $35 per line without requiring you to keep Spectrum internet. Before switching, document your current bill, port your numbers, and run a 30-day overlap test on any new home internet provider — none of the wireless or fiber alternatives charge early termination fees.

How We Got Here

Charter Communications, which markets cable service under the Spectrum brand, reported on April 24, 2026 that it lost 120,000 broadband internet customers and 60,000 video subscribers in the first quarter — a steeper decline than the 59,000 internet loss in the same period a year earlier. Comcast, the nation's largest cable operator, separately reported losing 322,000 cable television subscribers and 65,000 broadband customers in the quarter. Combined, the two companies shed 382,000 television subscribers and 185,000 internet customers in three months.

The exodus has a name in the industry: "Cord Cutting 2.0." The first wave, beginning more than a decade ago, saw households abandon cable television for streaming services. The second wave now targets the broadband connection itself, as fiber overbuilders and 5G fixed-wireless operators offer faster speeds at lower prices with multi-year price guarantees that cable providers have not historically matched.

Charter's response has been to lean hard on Spectrum Mobile. The company added 368,000 mobile lines in the first quarter, bringing the total to 12.1 million — a 17 percent year-over-year growth rate. Chief Executive Chris Winfrey told investors that mobile bundling now functions as the company's "primary growth engine to drive broadband retention." In plain English: Charter's strategy is to make leaving Spectrum internet painful by tying it to your cellular service.

"Every mobile line Charter adds is essentially insurance against future broadband churn." — Industry analysis of Charter's Q1 2026 earnings

The Promotion That Hooked Subscribers

The deal that brought many readers into Spectrum Mobile was straightforward: existing Spectrum internet customers could add one Unlimited mobile line at no extra cost for 12 months. New customers who added two Spectrum Mobile lines to a 500 Mbps internet plan were promised savings of up to $1,000 in the first year. Spectrum also offered to pay off up to $2,500 in remaining phone balances across up to five lines for switchers who brought at least three lines.

What the marketing materials emphasized less prominently:

  • The "free year" reverts to standard rates. After 12 months, that promotional line bills at the standard rate — currently around $30 per month for the basic Unlimited plan and $40 for Unlimited Plus, plus a $5 Auto Pay requirement and per-line activation fees.
  • Internet promotional pricing also expires — at 12 months for internet alone, 24 months when bundled with two mobile lines, or 36 months with internet, mobile, and TV. Industry tracking puts the post-promo increase at roughly $20 to $48 per month, with some plans seeing the base rate climb 45 percent or more.
  • Spectrum Mobile requires Spectrum Internet. If you cancel the internet, the mobile pricing increases or service becomes unavailable. This is the lock-in mechanism Charter's chief executive openly described to Wall Street.
  • Spectrum Mobile is an MVNO on Verizon's network, meaning Spectrum customers are deprioritized during network congestion. Reviews and carrier comparisons indicate noticeable speed reductions in dense urban areas and at major events compared with Verizon's direct postpaid customers.
  • Throttling thresholds apply after roughly 30 GB on the standard Unlimited plan and 50 GB on Unlimited Plus, with an additional 10 GB hotspot cap on the Plus tier.

Verdict on the Original Bundle

Year One: Good Value Year Two Onward: Reassess

The free-line promotion delivered genuine savings during its 12-month run. The strategic question is whether to renew the relationship or use the lock-in expiration as the moment to comparison shop. For most households, the answer is the latter.

Active Litigation Against Charter

Several active legal actions inform the picture for Spectrum customers in 2026:

  • Broadcast TV Surcharge class action. Filed in June 2025 in Kentucky federal court, this case alleges Spectrum's roughly $28-per-month "Broadcast TV Surcharge" is mischaracterized as a pass-through fee when it is in fact a discretionary profit center. A federal court denied Charter's motion to dismiss on March 17, 2026, though the case has been moved to arbitration at Charter's request.
  • Securities class action over the Affordable Connectivity Program. Filed in late 2025, this suit alleges Charter executives misled investors about the impact of the May 2024 ACP termination, after which Charter — the nation's largest ACP provider with more than 5 million enrolled subscribers — reported a loss of 117,000 broadband subscribers in Q2 2025 that triggered a roughly 20 percent stock drop.
  • Internet speed marketing case. Jimenez v. Charter Communications, recently removed to federal court, alleges the "Extreme" and "Ultra" tiers advertise speeds rarely achievable over Wi-Fi due to equipment and infrastructure limitations.
  • TCPA robocall class action. Filed in Ohio federal court in 2025, this case alleges Spectrum places automated marketing calls to consumers — including those on do-not-call lists — without consent.

These suits do not by themselves prove wrongdoing, but they signal patterns that consumer advocates and several plaintiffs' firms are actively investigating. Customers who experienced unexpected mid-promotion price increases or who paid the Broadcast TV Surcharge during the relevant periods may be eligible class members.

How the Alternatives Actually Perform

Fiber: The Performance Benchmark

Where fiber-to-the-home is available — and as of early 2026 fiber serves an estimated 60.3 percent of U.S. households per FCC Broadband Data Collection data, with actual subscription penetration around 38 percent — it is the dominant choice on every measurable axis: download speed, upload speed, latency, reliability, and per-megabit price. Median download speeds in 2026 measurement put Google Fiber at 938 Mbps, AT&T Fiber at 897 Mbps, and Verizon Fios at 868 Mbps. Cable lags meaningfully on uploads in particular, where AT&T Fiber's 1 Gbps tier delivers symmetrical 1,000 Mbps up versus Spectrum's 35 Mbps cable upload at the same download tier.

AT&T announced in 2025 it would acquire substantially all of Lumen's Mass Markets fiber business — about 1 million customers across 4 million locations — in a $5.75 billion deal expected to close in the first half of 2026, expanding fiber to additional metros and pushing the company toward 60 million fiber locations by 2030. The federal $42.5 billion Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program has allocated approximately $28 billion across 48 states, accelerating fiber deployment in underserved areas.

5G Fixed Wireless: The Rapidly Expanding Alternative

5G Fixed Wireless Access (FWA) now serves approximately 12.5 million U.S. households, up from 4 million in 2023. T-Mobile leads with about 6 million subscribers, Verizon follows with 4 million. Both providers offer no-contract, no-equipment-fee, no-data-cap service that installs in about 15 minutes.

2026 Home Internet Comparison: Spectrum vs. Major Alternatives
Service Typical Price Speeds Key Considerations
Spectrum Internet (cable) $50 promo → $80–$127 standard 100 Mbps–2 Gbps down; 10–35 Mbps up No data cap; promo ends 12–36 mo; cable upload limits
AT&T Fiber $55–$255 300 Mbps–5 Gbps symmetrical Symmetrical speeds; no data cap; limited footprint
Verizon Fios $50–$110 300 Mbps–2 Gbps symmetrical Multi-year price lock; East Coast only
T-Mobile 5G Home $50–$70 ($35 with mobile bundle) 87–415 Mbps typical No contract; deprioritization at peak hours
Verizon 5G Home $50–$70 ($35–$45 with mobile) 25–300 Mbps typical, up to 1 Gbps Smaller footprint; faster max speeds where available
Cox (cable) $30–$165 100 Mbps–2 Gbps 1.25 TB data cap; $10 per 50 GB overage

Cellular Replacement Options

Customers who hold the Spectrum Mobile line strictly to keep the bundle discount and would otherwise leave have multiple lower-cost MVNO alternatives. Visible (owned by Verizon, runs on Verizon's network with similar deprioritization to Spectrum Mobile) starts around $25 per month. US Mobile offers plans on Verizon, T-Mobile, or AT&T networks. Mint Mobile (now owned by T-Mobile) starts at $15 per month. Cricket Wireless runs on AT&T. None of these require a home internet subscription.

For San Diego Readers Specifically

San Diego is well-served. AT&T Fiber's footprint covers neighborhoods north and east of Balboa Park with particularly strong coverage in Mission Hills, North Park, and Burlingame — the 1 Gbps symmetrical plan starts around $80. Cox provides cable service in much of the rest of the county (with a 1.25 TB data cap to watch). T-Mobile and Verizon 5G Home Internet are both available as wireless backup or primary options across most of the metro area. Spectrum's footprint in San Diego is limited; many local readers' "Spectrum" bundle is in fact Cox, which has its own contract terms and ongoing federal antitrust scrutiny.

What Current Spectrum Bundle Customers Should Do

Based on the assembled evidence, a methodical decision process produces the best outcome:

  1. Pull your last three Spectrum bills and identify the actual rate. The advertised promotional price, the standard rate, and the post-promo rate are three different numbers. The standard rate is the one you will pay long-term.
  2. Check fiber availability at your address. The FCC's National Broadband Map (broadbandmap.fcc.gov) lists every provider serving each address, including fiber overbuilders that may not advertise locally. Run the address against AT&T, Verizon Fios, Frontier Fiber, Google Fiber, Ziply, and any regional fiber operators.
  3. Check 5G Home availability. T-Mobile and Verizon both offer address-level qualification tools. If either qualifies, the no-contract, equipment-included pricing is straightforward to compare.
  4. Decouple the cellular decision. The Spectrum Mobile lines port to other carriers in days. Visible, US Mobile, Mint, and Cricket all support number portability. Bring-your-own-device works on all of them. The "saves money on the bundle" calculation only holds if the bundle is actually competitive — verify that math against standalone alternatives.
  5. Run a 30-day overlap if switching home internet. Order the new service before canceling Spectrum. None of the major alternatives charge early termination fees, and the overlap protects against the small but real risk that fixed wireless underperforms at your specific address.
  6. Document grounds for any potential class action claim. Save bills showing mid-promotion price increases, Broadcast TV Surcharge line items, and any unexplained equipment fees. Filings remain free at consumercomplaints.fcc.gov.
  7. Negotiate before canceling. Spectrum's retention department has documented authority to extend promotional rates by an additional 12 months. The lever is a credible alternative — having the AT&T or T-Mobile quote in hand is what produces the discount.

The Larger Picture

Charter's mobile-bundle strategy is a sophisticated retention play, not a customer-value innovation. The 17 percent annual mobile growth rate is impressive — and Charter is now among the fastest-growing wireless carriers in the United States by line additions — but the broadband subscriber losses that triggered a 14 to 24 percent single-day stock decline on the Q1 2026 earnings release indicate that the strategy is slowing, not stopping, the underlying erosion. Charter's pending Cox Communications acquisition, announced in May 2025, will fold an additional 6.2 million customers into the company and is expected to close in 2026, but it does not change the fundamental competitive dynamics.

For consumers, the moment matters. The end of the Affordable Connectivity Program in May 2024 stripped a $30 monthly subsidy from over 23 million low-income households, including more than 5 million Charter customers. Federal BEAD funding is accelerating fiber deployment at exactly the moment cable's pricing power is weakest. Two well-funded mobile carriers are aggressively cross-selling home internet at prices cable cannot match without sacrificing margin. The competitive structure has shifted, and customers who priced their service two or three years ago are almost certainly overpaying now.

The original cord-cutting movement gave consumers permission to question whether their cable television subscription served them. Cord Cutting 2.0 extends the same question to the broadband connection itself — and, increasingly, to the bundled cellular line that was supposed to be the lock-in.

Sources and Citations

  1. Charter Communications, Inc. Form 8-K, First Quarter 2026 Earnings Release (April 24, 2026). U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Available at: https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0001091667/000109166726000027/chtrex991earningsrelease33.htm
  2. Federal Communications Commission. Internet Access Services: Status as of June 30, 2024. Available at: https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-411463A1.pdf
  3. Federal Communications Commission. National Broadband Map and Broadband Data Collection. Available at: https://broadbandmap.fcc.gov and https://www.fcc.gov/BroadbandData
  4. Federal Communications Commission. Measuring Fixed Broadband — Thirteenth Report. Available at: https://www.fcc.gov/reports-research/reports/measuring-broadband-america/measuring-fixed-broadband-thirteenth-report
  5. FCC Consumer Complaint Center. Available at: https://consumercomplaints.fcc.gov/hc/en-us
  6. Cord Cutters News, Bouma, L. "Cord Cutting 2.0 Is Hitting Comcast & Spectrum Hard in 2026." Available at: https://cordcuttersnews.com
  7. Fierce Network. "Charter loses 120,000 broadband subs in Q1 2026." Available at: https://www.fierce-network.com/broadband/charter-loses-120000-broadband-subs-q1-2026
  8. The Desk. "Charter sees less TV, broadband churn during Q1 2026." Available at: https://thedesk.net/2026/04/charter-spectrum-q1-2026-earnings-report/
  9. Deadline. "Charter Shares Plummet After Broadband Losses And Q1 Earnings Disappoint Wall Street." Available at: https://deadline.com/2026/04/charter-q1-2026-earnings-shares-plummet-1236867922/
  10. BroadbandBreakfast. "Charter Broadband Losses Less Than Expected" (Q4 2025 results, January 30, 2026). Available at: https://broadbandbreakfast.com/charter-broadband-losses-less-than-expected/
  11. HighSpeedInternet.com. "Is Bundling Spectrum Internet and Mobile Worth It?" Available at: https://www.highspeedinternet.com/resources/spectrum-internet-mobile-bundles
  12. HighSpeedInternet.com. "What Do You Actually Pay for Spectrum Internet?" Available at: https://www.highspeedinternet.com/resources/spectrum-real-costs
  13. HighSpeedInternet.com. "Spectrum Internet Review: Plans, Pricing, and Deals 2026." Available at: https://www.highspeedinternet.com/providers/spectrum/internet
  14. HighSpeedInternet.com. "Verizon 5G Home Internet vs. T-Mobile 5G Home Internet." Available at: https://www.highspeedinternet.com/resources/verizon-vs-t-mobile-5g-home-internet
  15. SatelliteInternet.com. "T-Mobile vs. Verizon 5G Home Internet: Which Wireless Provider Wins?" Available at: https://www.satelliteinternet.com/resources/t-mobile-vs-verizon-home-internet/
  16. Reviews.org. "Verizon vs. T-Mobile: Which 5G Home Internet Is Better?" Available at: https://www.reviews.org/internet-service/t-mobile-5g-home-internet-vs-verizon-5g-home-internet/
  17. Reviews.org. "Spectrum Internet Hidden Costs: How Much Do You Really Pay?" Available at: https://www.reviews.org/internet-service/spectrum-hidden-costs/
  18. BroadbandNow. "Top Internet Providers in San Diego, CA (April 2026)." Available at: https://broadbandnow.com/California/San-Diego
  19. BroadbandNow. "AT&T vs Cox Internet: Which Internet Provider Is Better?" Available at: https://broadbandnow.com/compare/ATT-vs-Cox-Communications
  20. CableTV.com. "Spectrum Mobile Review 2026: 9 Months of Hands-On Testing." Available at: https://www.cabletv.com/spectrum/mobile-review
  21. CableTV.com. "Spectrum Hidden Costs: How to Avoid Unexpected Fees." Available at: https://www.cabletv.com/spectrum/hidden-costs
  22. Bill Jones Law. "Spectrum Lawsuit 2025 / 2026 Updates" (Broadcast TV Surcharge, ACP securities class action, Jimenez v. Charter). Available at: https://billjoneslaw.com/spectrum-lawsuit-2025/
  23. Top Class Actions. "Spectrum class action claims company places unsolicited calls" (TCPA case, Hicks v. Charter Communications). Available at: https://topclassactions.com/lawsuit-settlements/lawsuit-news/spectrum-class-action-alleges-company-places-unsolicited-robocalls/
  24. Top Class Actions. "Spectrum Internet and TV — Fixed-rate price increase investigation." Available at: https://topclassactions.com/lawsuit-settlements/investigations/spectrum-internet-and-tv-price-increase-investigation/
  25. Pong.com. "Internet Speed Statistics 2026: Average Speeds, Fastest ISPs, and Broadband Trends" (drawing on Ookla Speedtest Global Index Q1 2026 and FCC BDC December 2025). Available at: https://www.pong.com/blog/internet-speed-statistics-2026
  26. CostQuest Associates. "Broadband in America: Analysis of Broadband Coverage" (February 2026 edition). Available at: https://www.costquest.com/resources/articles/broadband-in-america-report-analysis-broadband-coverage-changes-2026-02/
  27. NTIA. Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) Program. Available at: https://www.internetforall.gov
  28. Spectrum Official Pricing and Terms. Available at: https://www.spectrum.com/packages/best-deals and https://www.spectrum.com/mobile/plans
  29. AT&T Fiber San Diego. Available at: https://www.att.com/local/fiber/california/san-diego
  30. Verizon 5G Home Internet vs. T-Mobile Comparison. Available at: https://www.verizon.com/home/internet/verizon-vs-t-mobile/

 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

The Documentation Hostage

 

Why Prime Contractors Withhold Technical Data

What Fifty Years of Failed Reform Tell Us About the Lunar Base

AEROSPACE & DEFENSE INDUSTRY ANALYSIS / PROCUREMENT POLICY

By Pseudo Publius   |   Aerospace & Defense Procurement Analysis   |   25 April 2026

Companion piece to “The Apollo Knowledge Trap” (Pseudo Publius, 25 April 2026)

 BLUF — BOTTOM LINE UP FRONT

The institutional knowledge problem documented in the companion piece is not solely a function of retired craftsmen and lost notebooks. It is structurally aggravated by a procurement dynamic that has persisted across five decades: prime contractors deliver technical data packages that meet the letter of contract requirements while withholding the manufacturing and process knowledge that would permit second-source production or organic government repair. The Government Accountability Office documented this pattern again in September 2025 across the F-35, F/A-18, Littoral Combat Ship, Stryker, and Virginia-class Submarine programs, finding that all five face vendor lock and that DoD lacks the policy framework to plan adequately for sustainment data rights. The Federal Trade Commission's January 2025 antitrust suit against John Deere — joined by five state attorneys general and now followed by a $99 million class-action settlement in April 2026 — demonstrates that the same business model operates in commercial agriculture, consumer electronics, and medical equipment. The FY 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, signed December 2025, dropped the right-to-repair provisions both chambers had initially passed and substituted a data-rights inventory requirement. For a sustained lunar architecture being built right now under the same procurement dynamics, the implications are unambiguous: without structural reform of how the government acquires manufacturing-process data, the next generation of programs will repeat the F-1 and Avcoat capability losses with industrial efficiency.

The Univac Pattern, Documented

In the 1970s and 1980s, NAVSEA technical representatives watched Univac — later Sperry, then Unisys — defend its monopoly on the Navy's standard tactical computer line through a combination of contract compliance and documentation insufficiency. The AN/UYK-7 and successor AN/UYK-43, which formed the computational backbone of the Naval Tactical Data System and early Aegis configurations, were produced under contracts that required technical data deliverables. The data was delivered. The data was insufficient for second-source manufacturing. Critical timing diagrams were omitted. Test procedures referenced proprietary test equipment. Component selection rationales went undocumented. The Navy's repeated attempts to develop the AN/UYK-44 as a competitive alternative, and the eventual transition to commercial off-the-shelf computing in the 1990s, both encountered systematic contractor resistance that took the form of compliance with the letter while withholding the spirit of the data rights clauses.

This pattern was not unique to Univac and was not a Cold War aberration. It was — and remains — the dominant business model among major defense prime contractors. The economic logic is unchanged across five decades: prime contractors bid hardware development at thin margins or losses to win the program, then capture the actual profit through sustainment over the operational life of the system. For a Navy ship class with a 40-year service life, sustainment revenue typically exceeds initial procurement revenue by a factor of three to five. Maintaining that sustainment monopoly requires controlling the technical data, and the marginal cost of obfuscating documentation is trivial relative to the revenue that obfuscation preserves.

GAO-25-107468: Five Programs, One Pattern

The Government Accountability Office's September 2025 report on weapon system sustainment, GAO-25-107468, examined five major programs in detail: the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the F/A-18 Super Hornet, the Littoral Combat Ship, the Stryker Combat Vehicle, and the Virginia-class submarine. The findings constitute the most comprehensive contemporary documentation of the pattern your generation of NAVSEA representatives identified in the 1970s, and they are damning.

All five selected programs experienced what GAO terms "vendor lock" — reliance on a single supplier driven by data-rights shortfalls. According to officials interviewed, this approach drives up costs and lengthens repair timeframes. Once a program enters sustainment without adequate data rights, the options to address vendor lock are extremely limited. The structural mistake is made early in the acquisition cycle and compounds across the operational life.

The F-35 case is particularly instructive. GAO had reported in 2014 that the F-35 program lacked an intellectual property strategy. The program did not release its IP strategy until July 2025 — eleven years later. By that point, the program had accumulated a sustainment cost trajectory that GAO has separately characterized as requiring billions in cuts to achieve affordability. The relationship between data-rights inadequacy and sustainment cost is direct: when the government cannot compete sustainment work, the prime sets the price.

The Littoral Combat Ship case illustrates the operational consequence in stark terms. GAO documented an instance in which Navy maintainers attempted to leverage a Master Ship Repair Agreement contractor — a private firm with general ship-repair expertise — to replace a broken hydraulic motor in a crane on an LCS. The MSRA contractor would not complete the repair without the Original Equipment Manufacturer present. The maintainers waited two and a half weeks for the OEM to be available, which shipyard officials characterized as a fast turnaround. When repairs are sequenced through the OEM, ships compete on a first-come-first-served basis with no ability to redirect contract work based on operational priority. The LCS absorbed the delay because the data rights structure left the Navy no alternative.

The Stryker case is the most candid admission in the report. According to program officials, the Army has tried unsuccessfully over time to acquire unlimited data rights for the base vehicle. As a result, in 2024, the Army established a technical support contract with the prime contractor — institutionalizing the contractor lock-in rather than overcoming it. After more than two decades of fielding and multiple reform attempts, the Army gave up trying to break the data-rights monopoly and contracted around it instead.

"All five selected programs experienced vendor lock — reliance on a single supplier — due to data rights shortfalls."

The Statutory Loophole

GAO identifies a specific statutory gap that Congress could close but has not. Federal statute affords DoD unlimited rights in operation, maintenance, installation, and training (OMIT) data. However, the same statute excludes detailed manufacturing or process data from the OMIT category. This is the loophole through which sustainment monopolies persist.

In practical terms: the Navy is entitled to the technical data needed to operate, maintain, install, and train on Aegis. The Navy is not entitled, by statute, to the detailed manufacturing data needed to actually fabricate Aegis components or to compete production with a second source. The contractor delivers the OMIT data and withholds the manufacturing process data, and the contractor is fully within statutory and contractual rights. The result is exactly the institutional outcome the companion piece documented at NASA: the artifacts can be operated and maintained at the surface level, but the underlying manufacturing capability remains the contractor's proprietary asset.

GAO's recommendation in the September 2025 report is that Congress clarify the treatment of detailed manufacturing or process data needed for OMIT — broadening the government's statutory entitlement so that personnel can make repairs themselves or compete maintenance work to different vendors. The recommendation has been on the table, in various forms, for decades. It has not been adopted because the contractor lobbying against it is sustained and well-organized, and the political constituency for reform is diffuse.

The Aegis Case in the Contract Record

The Aegis Combat System provides the contemporary worked example of how this pattern operates in practice on the most important surface combatant capability in the U.S. Navy. The contract record itself articulates the lock-in in formal procurement language.

In January 2026, Lockheed Martin secured a five-year, $99.9 million Aegis Weapon System core sustainment support contract from Naval Sea Systems Command, covering engineering, logistics, and technical support for all in-service or post-production Aegis platforms — Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, Constellation-class frigates, Coast Guard cutters, the Aegis Training and Readiness Center, the Integrated Warfare Systems Laboratory, and the Surface Combat Systems Center. The award is one in a continuing series stretching back decades. A 2023 contract action was characterized as a $853 million seven-year fielding-and-sustainment award; a 2024 modification added $141.5 million; a 2025 modification added $92.2 million; subsequent modifications in mid- and late-2025 added further hundreds of millions. The pattern is continuous: NAVSEA awards Lockheed Martin Rotary and Mission Systems modification after modification, sole-source, for the system Lockheed Martin built and continues to control.

The formal procurement justification on a $140 million Aegis fielding and sustainment award stated the structural reality directly:

“LM RMS is the only responsible source, and no other supplies or services could fulfill the AEGIS F&S requirements without causing unacceptable schedule delays and substantial duplication of costs that is not expected to be recovered through competition.”

— Naval Sea Systems Command, sole-source justification, AEGIS F&S contract

This is the operational consequence of the Univac pattern your peers watched in the 1970s, expressed in the procurement record of 2024. The Navy cannot compete the work because the data rights, the proprietary software environment, the configuration management infrastructure, and the human expertise are all controlled by a single contractor. "Substantial duplication of costs that is not expected to be recovered through competition" is the contracting officer's polite formulation for: we are locked in, the contractor knows we are locked in, and the price reflects that.

The Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense system — Lockheed's Combat Systems Engineering Agent role — is supported through a sole-source indefinite-delivery contract worth up to $2.97 billion over ten years, awarded by the Missile Defense Agency. The same structural logic operates: no alternative source exists because the data rights and the operational expertise are concentrated in a single industrial location in Moorestown, New Jersey, where roughly 96 percent of contract work is performed. If that location, that workforce, or that corporate organization were disrupted by labor action, financial difficulty, or kinetic attack, the Navy's entire surface combatant air-defense capability would be operationally degraded with no organic backup.

The Right-to-Repair Parallel

The connection between defense TDP resistance and commercial right-to-repair resistance is structural, not analogical. The same business model operates in both domains, modified by the regulatory environment in which it functions. The Federal Trade Commission's January 2025 antitrust suit against John Deere makes the parallel explicit and actionable.

The FTC, joined by the attorneys general of Illinois, Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Arizona, alleged that Deere created and maintained a repair services monopoly through control of its Service ADVISOR diagnostic and calibration tool, available in fully functional form only to Deere-authorized dealers. A nominally consumer-facing version called Customer Service ADVISOR exists, but the FTC complaint alleges it cannot diagnose, test, or calibrate "restricted" repairs — the category that requires access to the underlying software and coding. The complaint cites internal Deere documentation indicating the practices were intentional and strategic, approved by company executives, designed to steer service and parts revenue to Deere's authorized dealer network.

In April 2026, Deere agreed to a $99 million class-action settlement filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. Under the settlement, Deere will reimburse class plaintiffs for repairs made by authorized dealers since January 2018, and will make available for ten years the digital tools required for maintenance, diagnosis, and repair of large agricultural equipment, including reprogramming and diagnostic functions through John Deere Operations Center PRO Service in offline mode. The FTC's separate antitrust case continues. In June 2025, the federal court denied Deere's motion to dismiss, finding the FTC's claims legally sufficient to proceed.

The pattern Deere represents is not isolated. As of January 1, 2026, enacted right-to-repair laws in California, Colorado, Minnesota, New York, Oregon, and Washington require manufacturers of consumer electronics and other covered products to make parts, tools, documentation, and diagnostic software available to independent repair providers and product owners on fair and reasonable terms. Connecticut and Texas laws are scheduled to take effect later in 2026. More than 33 right-to-repair bills were introduced in the first weeks of January 2026 alone. H.R. 5857, the FARM ACT, was introduced in October 2025 to extend right-to-repair principles specifically to farm equipment.

The legislative and litigation momentum reflects what the courts and state attorneys general are increasingly willing to articulate: the business model of controlling sustainment through documentation restriction is anticompetitive, and antitrust law provides actionable remedy when manufacturers exploit aftermarket monopoly positions. Apple, John Deere, and the major medical equipment manufacturers have all been forced to make partial accommodations under regulatory pressure. The accommodations remain partial. The underlying business model has not been abandoned voluntarily.

The FY 2026 NDAA: Reform Deferred Again

The Fiscal Year 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, signed into law December 18, 2025 (Public Law 119-60), illustrates how defense reform on this question proceeds. Both the House and Senate versions of the FY 2026 NDAA initially included significant right-to-repair provisions that would have extended commercial right-to-repair principles to DoD weapon systems. The final compromise legislation dropped these provisions.

In their place, the FY 2026 NDAA requires DoD to inventory its existing data rights and data rights contractual requirements, including requirements that DoD may not always invoke. The provision is useful — knowing what data rights the government has, contractually, is a prerequisite to exercising those rights — but it is a substantial retreat from the operational reform the original legislation contemplated. The pattern is familiar: bold reform language is introduced, contractor lobbying mobilizes, the conference committee negotiates the substance away, and the enacted statute requires reporting and inventory in lieu of structural change.

The same FY 2026 NDAA expanded the Expedited Acceptance and Qualification process under Section 832 to allow accelerated approval of secondary sources for critical readiness items, and required Expedited Qualification Panels in each military department. These are useful incremental reforms. They do not address the underlying problem, which is that primes deliver insufficient data and the government accepts the deliverable because contracting officers lack the technical expertise and institutional authority to verify that the delivered TDP would actually support second-source manufacturing.

DoD's Intellectual Property Cadre, established under Section 838 of the FY 2020 NDAA, was supposed to address the expertise gap. GAO has reported that the Cadre operates as an advisory function rather than a verification function, and that none of the five programs examined in GAO-25-107468 included all required elements in their IP strategies. The institutional reform was made; the institutional behavior was not changed. This is the iron pattern of defense acquisition reform across five decades: regulatory frameworks improve incrementally, contractor compliance becomes more sophisticated, and the underlying lock-in persists.

The Operational Vulnerability

Concern about Navy operational availability under contractor lock-in is now documented in GAO findings, congressional testimony, and the procurement record itself. The strategic implications extend beyond cost.

A Navy combat system that cannot be repaired by Navy sailors at sea, whose depot-level maintenance requires contractor field service representatives flown from CONUS to forward-deployed locations, is a system whose operational availability depends on commercial logistics chains that may not survive contested wartime conditions. The Pacific scenario that defense planners now openly discuss makes this a strategic vulnerability of the first order. If the supply lines from CONUS to forward-deployed naval forces are interrupted in a Taiwan contingency, contractor field service cannot reach the ships. Combat systems that fail in operational use cannot be restored to service through organic Navy capability. The fleet degrades.

Chinese strategic planners understand this. Open-source PLA writing on the U.S. military's contractor dependence has been consistent for at least a decade in identifying it as a critical vulnerability of American power projection. The PLA does not need to defeat the U.S. Navy in fleet engagement. It needs to interdict the maintenance pipeline that keeps the U.S. Navy operating. A six-month interruption of the Aegis sustainment pipeline would degrade U.S. surface combatant capability faster than combat attrition. The contractor lock-in pattern that began as a 1970s procurement convenience has become, in the 2020s, a wartime vulnerability.

Naval Reactors stands as the institutional counterexample. Admiral Rickover's organization preserved organic Navy capability for nuclear propulsion across 70 years specifically because Rickover refused to accept the contractor-lock-in business model. Naval Reactors maintains its own technical authority, its own training pipeline, its own engineering standards, and substantial organic capability for components and sustainment that other Navy programs outsource entirely to primes. The result is a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines and carriers whose operational availability does not depend on contractor goodwill or commercial logistics under contested conditions. The model is institutionally expensive. It works. The Navy has chosen, repeatedly, not to apply the model to combat systems.

"The contractor lock-in pattern that began as a 1970s procurement convenience has become, in the 2020s, a wartime vulnerability."

What Real Reform Would Require

The reforms that would actually break the documentation-hostage pattern are known. They have been recommended in GAO reports across decades. They have not been implemented because the political coalition required to overcome contractor lobbying has not coalesced. Listed in approximate order of difficulty:

Closing the OMIT loophole. Congress could amend the relevant statute to extend government unlimited rights to detailed manufacturing or process data needed to repair, maintain, or competitively procure systems acquired with substantial government funding. GAO has effectively recommended this in the September 2025 report. The contractor lobbying against it would be intense, but the legal framework is straightforward.

Mandatory escrow with independent verification. TDP deliverables should be escrowed with an independent third party empowered to verify, through actual second-source manufacturing trials, that the delivered data is sufficient. Primes would have to deliver actually-sufficient data because verification testing would expose inadequacy before contract closeout. The model exists in some classified weapons programs and could be extended.

Organic capability funding for critical systems. The Naval Reactors model applied to surface combat systems would require sustained congressional investment in organic Navy expertise for Aegis, SPY-6, CEC, and other critical capabilities. The political resistance from contractor districts would be severe but not insurmountable, particularly under sustained external pressure.

Right-to-repair extension to defense procurement. The legal framework being developed in commercial right-to-repair litigation translates directly to defense contexts. Antitrust principles applicable to John Deere are equally applicable to Lockheed Martin and Raytheon when those companies use data-rights restriction to capture sustainment monopolies on government-funded systems.

False Claims Act enforcement on TDP inadequacy. Existing legal authority permits treating verifiably insufficient TDP delivery as fraud rather than as routine contract dispute. The institutional willingness to use this authority has been minimal. A few high-profile cases would change contractor behavior across the industry.

Multi-source procurement architecture from program inception. New programs should be structured with multiple competing primes from initial development, each required to deliver complete TDP, with the government as the integrator. The model has been used successfully on some engine and missile programs. It costs more initially and produces vastly lower lifecycle cost through preserved competition.

The Lunar Base Implication

The companion piece to this article identified the lunar base as a forcing function for institutional knowledge preservation. The same institutional analysis applies, with greater urgency, to procurement reform. The lunar base will not be built by NASA or the DoD directly. It will be built by prime contractors operating under exactly the procurement dynamics documented above.

SpaceX, Blue Origin, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Northrop Grumman, and the second-tier primes that will build lunar transport, surface infrastructure, ISRU systems, habitat modules, and surface mobility have every commercial incentive to control sustainment through documentation restriction. The lunar economy that NASA and DoD planners describe — sustained presence, regular logistics, eventual commercial expansion — will be operationally captive to whichever primes establish lock-in early. The Avcoat case documented in the companion piece is a preview: Lockheed Martin holds the manufacturing process knowledge for the heat shield, and NASA flies what Lockheed delivers. Multiply that across every critical lunar-system component and the resulting architecture is a sustained American lunar presence whose operational availability is contractor-dependent in exactly the same way Navy surface combatants are now contractor-dependent.

If the Pacific deterrent depends on Aegis, and Aegis sustainment depends on a single contractor, the contractor's organizational health and commercial decisions become matters of national security. If lunar logistics depend on a single transport provider, and lunar surface operations depend on a single habitat provider, and lunar communications depend on a single sensor and relay provider, then the lunar architecture is operationally captured before it is built. The fact that the primes building the lunar architecture are commercially dynamic and currently performing well does not change the structural vulnerability. Organizations change. Leadership changes. Strategic priorities change. The institutional structure that locks the government into single-source dependence persists across those changes, with effects measured in decades.

The reform window, as the companion piece argued, is the present moment when the commitments are being made and the contracts are being structured. Once the lunar architecture is locked into prime-controlled sustainment with inadequate government data rights, the lunar base will exhibit the same operational and cost pathologies that GAO has documented in F-35, F/A-18, LCS, Stryker, and Virginia-class. The pathologies are not failures of execution. They are predictable consequences of a procurement structure that allows primes to capture sustainment through documentation control. The Univac pattern your generation watched at NAVSEA in the 1970s will be the lunar pattern of the 2030s and 2040s, unless the structural reforms outlined above are implemented during the architecture-definition phase.

Apollo lost the manufacturing knowledge through institutional decay and contractor reorganization. Artemis is losing it through the same mechanisms, in real time. A lunar base built under current procurement structures will not lose it — it will simply never have it, because the primes will retain it as a proprietary commercial asset and the government will not require otherwise. The fifty-year pattern of failed reform is not a reason for fatalism. It is a description of what happens when external pressure for reform is insufficient. The China factor, the Pacific deterrent vulnerability, and the lunar-base architecture decision are all converging into the same forcing function. Whether the resulting reform is real or another round of inventory requirements and Cadre advisories is the open question for the next two years of defense and space policy.

"The Univac pattern your generation watched at NAVSEA in the 1970s will be the lunar pattern of the 2030s and 2040s, unless the structural reforms are implemented during the architecture-definition phase."

Sources

All sources accessed 25 April 2026. URLs verified at time of publication. Sources are organized by category. Citation numbering continues independently from the companion piece.

Government Accountability Office Reports

[1]  U.S. Government Accountability Office. "Weapon System Sustainment: DOD Can Improve Planning and Management of Data Rights." GAO-25-107468, reissued with revisions 29 September 2025. Examines F-35, F/A-18, LCS, Stryker, and Virginia-class submarine programs.  https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-25-107468

[2]  GAO-25-107468 full report (Highlights and full text).  https://files.gao.gov/reports/GAO-25-107468/index.html

[3]  U.S. Government Accountability Office. "Defense Acquisitions: DOD Should Take Additional Actions to Improve How It Approaches Intellectual Property." GAO-22-104752, November 2021.  https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-22-104752.pdf

[4]  U.S. Government Accountability Office. "Weapon System Sustainment: DOD Needs to Better Capture and Report Software Sustainment Costs." GAO-19-173, February 2019.  https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-19-173.pdf

[5]  U.S. Government Accountability Office. "Defense Acquisition: DOD Should Clarify Requirements for Assessing and Documenting Technical-Data Needs." GAO-11-469, May 2011.  https://www.gao.gov/assets/a318192.html

Federal Acquisition Regulation & Statute

[6]  DFARS 252.227-7013, Rights in Technical Data — Other Than Commercial Products and Commercial Services; DFARS 252.227-7014, Rights in Noncommercial Computer Software; DFARS subparts 227.71 and 227.72.  https://www.acquisition.gov/dfars/252.204-7012-safeguarding-covered-defense-information-and-cyber-incident-reporting.

[7]  Defense Pricing and Contracting. "Open DFARS Cases as of 4/10/2026." Tracking document for pending DFARS rulemaking, including section 804 (NDAA FY 2012) on technical data rights for modular system interfaces and section 809 on items developed at private expense.  https://www.acq.osd.mil/dpap/dars/opencases/dfarscasenum/dfars.pdf

FY 2026 National Defense Authorization Act Analysis

[8]  Crowell & Moring LLP. "The FY 2026 National Defense Authorization Act." Client alert, 23 December 2025. Notes that final compromise NDAA dropped right-to-repair provisions both chambers had initially passed; substituted data-rights inventory requirement.  https://www.crowell.com/en/insights/client-alerts/the-fy-2026-national-defense-authorization-act

[9]  Crowell & Moring / Government Contracts Legal Forum. "The FY 2026 National Defense Authorization Act." Government Contracts Legal Forum analysis, 29 December 2025.  https://www.governmentcontractslegalforum.com/2025/12/articles/dod/the-fy-2026-national-defense-authorization-act/

[10]  Public Law 119-60, Fiscal Year 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, signed 18 December 2025. Sections 832 (Expedited Acceptance and Qualification), 875 (DFARS contract-stay procedures), 1846 (advanced manufacturing process approval).

DoD Small Business Innovation Research / Technical Data Rights Rulemaking

[11]  Crowell & Moring. "Final DoD Rule Codifies 20-Year SBIR Data Protection Period and Other SBIR Program Protections." Government Contracts Legal Forum, 28 January 2025. DFARS amendment finalized 17 December 2024, effective 17 January 2025.  https://www.governmentcontractslegalforum.com/2025/01/articles/cybersecurity/final-dod-rule-codifies-20-year-sbir-data-protection-period-and-other-sbir-program-protections-while-punting-potential-changes-to-marking-requirements/

Aegis Combat System Sustainment Contracts

[12]  ExecutiveBiz. "Lockheed RMS Wins Navy Aegis Logistics Support Contract." 22 January 2026. Five-year, $99.9 million Aegis Weapon System core sustainment support contract from NAVSEA.  https://www.executivebiz.com/articles/lockheed-rms-navy-aegis-logistics-support-contract

[13]  GovCon Wire. "Lockheed Secures $853M Navy Contract to Support Aegis Combat System Fielding, Sustainment." 6 January 2023. Sole-source seven-year fielding-and-sustainment award.  https://www.govconwire.com/articles/lockheed-secures-853m-navy-aegis-fielding-and-sustainment-support-contract

[14]  Executive Gov. "Lockheed Secures $142M Navy Contract Modification for AEGIS Combat System Services." December 2023.  https://executivegov.com/2023/12/lockheed-secures-142m-navy-contract-modification-for-aegis-combat-system-services/

[15]  OrangeSlices AI. "Contract Award: $140M Navy AEGIS Fielding & Sustainment." Documents NAVSEA sole-source justification: "LM RMS is the only responsible source."  https://orangeslices.ai/contract-award-140m-navy-aegis-fielding-sustainment/

[16]  GovCon Wire. "Lockheed Books Navy, MDA Contracts for Aegis BMD Support." Includes ten-year, $2.97 billion Combat Systems Engineering Agent indefinite-delivery contract.  https://www.govconwire.com/articles/lockheed-aegis-ballistic-missile-defense-system-csea-contract-award

[17]  ExecutiveBiz. "Lockheed Secures Navy Contract Modification for Aegis System Fielding, Sustainment Support." 14 March 2023.  https://www.executivebiz.com/articles/lockheed-secures-navy-contract-modification-for-aegis-sustainment-support

[18]  Investing.com. "Lockheed Martin Secures $81 Million in Defense Contracts for Aegis Systems." 24 September 2025.  https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/lockheed-martin-secures-81-million-in-defense-contracts-for-aegis-systems-93CH-4254410

Right-to-Repair: FTC v. Deere & Company

[19]  Federal Trade Commission. "FTC, States Sue Deere & Company to Protect Farmers from Unfair Corporate Tactics, High Repair Costs." Press release, 15 January 2025.  https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2025/01/ftc-states-sue-deere-company-protect-farmers-unfair-corporate-tactics-high-repair-costs

[20]  Troutman Pepper Locke. "FTC, States Sue John Deere in Right to Repair Lawsuit." Regulatory Oversight blog, 10 March 2025. Notes 3-2 FTC vote along party lines, joining of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Arizona AGs.  https://www.regulatoryoversight.com/2025/03/ftc-states-sue-john-deere-in-right-to-repair-lawsuit/

[21]  National Agricultural Law Center. "FTC Files Suit Against John Deere." Legal analysis covering Sherman Act § 2, FTC Act § 5(a), and state antitrust claims.  https://nationalaglawcenter.org/ftc-files-suit-against-john-deere/

Right-to-Repair: Class Action Settlement & State Laws

[22]  The Register. "John Deere Agrees $99m Right-to-Repair Settlement." 9 April 2026. Settlement filed in U.S. District Court Northern District of Illinois.  https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/09/john_deere_repair_settlement/

[23]  Farm Policy News (University of Illinois). "Deere Settles Class Action Right-to-Repair Lawsuit." April 2026. Reports settlement requires ten years of digital tool availability.  https://farmpolicynews.illinois.edu/2026/04/deere-settles-class-action-right-to-repair-lawsuit/

[24]  University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture. "Deere Settles Right-to-Repair Suit, but Federal Trade Commission Case Still Looms." 15 April 2026.  https://uaex.uada.edu/media-resources/news/2026/april/04-15-2026-ark-nalc-right-to-repair.aspx

[25]  Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP. "John Deere's $99 Million Settlement and the Accelerating State Right-to-Repair Landscape." April 2026. Documents enacted state laws in California, Colorado, Minnesota, New York, Oregon, and Washington effective 1 January 2026; Connecticut and Texas pending; H.R. 5857 (FARM ACT) introduced October 2025.  https://www.arnoldporter.com/en/perspectives/blogs/consumer-products-and-retail-navigator/2026/04/john-deeres-99-million-settlement-and-the-right-to-repair-landscape

[26]  AgTech Navigator. "John Deere to Pay $99m in Right-to-Repair Settlement, Amid Ongoing FTC Litigation." April 2026.  https://www.agtechnavigator.com/Article/2026/04/07/john-deere-settles-right-to-repair-case-with-99m-faces-other-lawsuit/

[27]  SlashGear. "John Deere Lawsuit Ends in $99M Payout for Farmers." April 2026. Cites Reuters and AP News reporting on settlement terms.  https://www.slashgear.com/2153345/john-deere-right-to-repair-lawsuit-settlement/

Companion Piece

[28]  Pseudo Publius. "The Apollo Knowledge Trap: Why America Keeps Forgetting How to Build Its Greatest Machines — And Why Video May Be the Cure." 25 April 2026. Companion piece on institutional knowledge loss, Avcoat reformulation, F-1 reconstruction, and video documentation as preservation standard.

 

 

ABOUT THE BYLINE  Pseudo Publius is the byline used for civic and industrial-policy analysis directed at general aerospace and defense readership. The byline preserves the nonpartisan posture of affiliated nonprofit publications. This piece is the second of a two-part series on institutional capability preservation in U.S. aerospace and defense.

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