Perhaps the problem is too many auditors, reviewers and assessors chasing too few programs As the F-35 fighter program continues to make successful progress, critics of the joint strike fighter procurement are unrelenting in their attacks. In a recent commentary, Dr. Daniel Goure—a Vice President with the Lexington Institute, a nonprofit public-policy research organization headquartered in Arlington, Virginia—takes issue with the hysteria and injects some realism and balanced perspective back into the debate: Somewhere along the way, government auditors and the Washington press corps got the mistaken idea that the program to design and develop the most complex fighter aircraft...