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The Air Force is advancing two major F-16 upgrade efforts with dedicated funding that create near‑term contracting activity for defense suppliers. The reconciliation package provides $187 million for IVEWS electronic warfare system production plus $30 million for additional flight tests, and the…
Breaking analysis of what happened and who is affected.
The Air Force is advancing two major F-16 upgrade efforts with dedicated funding that create near‑term contracting activity for defense suppliers. The reconciliation package provides $187 million for IVEWS electronic warfare system production plus $30 million for additional flight tests, and the…
Read full report →Segment ImpactDeep dive into how this impacts each market segment.
The Air Force is advancing two major F-16 upgrade efforts with notable budget support: $187 million from the reconciliation package for production of the IVEWS electronic warfare system (including $30 million for additional flight tests), and a $438 million FY2027 budget request to ramp…
Read full report →Action KitActionable checklists and implementation guidance.
Northrop Grumman reports progress on two major F-16 modernization efforts focused on electronic warfare and targeting, creating near-term and multi-year contracting opportunities across the defense and aerospace supply base.…
Read full report →The Air Force is advancing two major F-16 upgrade efforts with dedicated funding that create near‑term contracting activity for defense suppliers. The reconciliation package provides $187 million for IVEWS electronic warfare system production plus $30 million for additional flight tests, and the FY2027 budget requests $438 million to ramp production. Northrop Grumman and its supply chain stand to capture a substantial portion of these work packages as the service modernizes fourth‑generation fighters to address evolving threats. This action signals increased procurement and testing activity across electronic warfare, avionics, and targeting systems, and elevates requirements across ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations), DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement), CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification), and NIST 800-171 (NIST Special Publication 800-171) compliance surfaces. Contractors should immediately validate qualifications against the listed NAICS sectors, refresh capture strategies, and start preparing compliant proposal artifacts. Monitor Air Force solicitations and funding implementation closely to convert these budget lines into actionable opportunities.
Affected segments at a general level:
Specific NAICS codes, agencies, and compliance regimes named in segmentation:
Contract vehicles: Specific contract vehicles pending source review.
A: The Summary reports $187 million from the reconciliation package for IVEWS production, $30 million for additional flight tests, and $438 million requested in the FY2027 budget for production ramp‑up.
A: The Summary identifies the Air Force as advancing the programs and notes Northrop Grumman and its supply chain as primary actors; specific contracting offices, solicitation vehicles, and award authorities are pending source review.
A: FY2027 is the budget year requested for production ramp‑up; other execution dates for reconciliation package funds and flight tests are not specified in the Summary — timeline details are pending source review.
Cabrillo Signals War Room has already detected this event and delivered this briefing. For this program movement, leverage the following Cabrillo Suite products to operationalize monitoring, capture, and proposal activity:
Who to notify:
First 48‑hour response playbook:
Key references and playbooks: