The Ministry of Defence has downplayed reports that several F-35B Lightning II jets are currently “unaccounted for” on the flight line at a base.

The Ministry of Defence is reviewing the status of several F-35B Lightning II aircraft after routine checks at RAF Marham revealed that a number of jets were not immediately locatable. Officials stressed there is no indication of foul play and that the situation is “well understood given the nature of the platform.”

A defence official familiar with the matter explained: “These are fifth-generation stealth fighters. If anything, this proves they’re working perfectly.”

According to sources familiar with the matter, base personnel noticed discrepancies between expected and observed aircraft positions during a standard flight line inspection earlier this week. An internal review was launched shortly thereafter. Base personnel reportedly initiated a “focused visual reacquisition procedure,” which involved walking slowly around the apron, double-checking each parking bay, and asking colleagues to “have another look.”

Despite initial confusion, officials insist that all aircraft are accounted for on paper and that the inability to physically see them is not necessarily a problem. “This actually aligns with the intended operational profile,” a defence analyst told UK Defence Journal. “If you can’t find them, that’s kind of the point.”

When asked if measures would be taken to make the aircraft more visible during routine maintenance, the MOD said it was “reviewing procedures” but added: “We have full confidence in the platform’s low observability.”

RAF engineers reportedly initiated the base’s standard search protocol—walking around the flight line slowly, squinting slightly, and gently tapping the tarmac with a boot in case of contact.

“We now believe all aircraft are within a few hundred metres of their last known coordinates,” said the source. “They may have just needed a little more squinting.”

This isn’t the first time the aircraft’s advanced low-observable coating has raised questions. In 2022, a similar incident during a training exercise led to a jet being “lost” for nearly 40 minutes—only to be discovered precisely where it was parked, under a tarpaulin labelled “not an F-35.”

When asked whether any additional measures would be taken to improve accountability, an MOD spokesperson said: “We are confident the aircraft are present and operating as expected. Visibility remains a matter of perspective.”


Congratulations, and thank you for reading the whole article; this is just an April Fools Day joke. The article above is not true, and if anyone is sharing it after April 1st, please remind them of that fact. The purpose of this article, aside from our usual April Fool’s Day joke, is to make the point that reading beyond the headline should be the norm every day, not just on the 1st of April. There’s a large volume of misinformation online. Make sure you don’t add to it by sharing articles without reading them. Finally, be careful of the person sharing this article after the 1st of April as they very clearly don’t read what they share.

30 COMMENTS

  1. My Mrs once parked her car on our second driveway and forgot, Next morning she walked onto the main driveway and it took her a moment to remember where it was, This story reminded me of that 🙂 But her car is bright green not stealthy grey. Going to try the tarpaulin trick next see how she reacts.

  2. We had a similar problem on Shadow MK2. We had commenced ground testing of the stealth mode, haven’t seen the three aircraft since !

    • Audience funded independent journalism.

      No public funding for Defence was wasted in producing this article. That’s Ministry of Defence responsibility…

  3. Happy April, and thoughtful journalism too.

    Not an Aptil Fool, the #47 War of Choice is not our illegal war and no European blood and treasure will be wasted on that.

    Presumably the increased energy and commodity costs caused by USA will be counted in the European 5% GDP Defence spending agreement contributions. I would have preferred that was spent on modernisation of GBAD in the face of UAV threats.

    Anyone paying attention to the RF terrorist state illegal war in Ukraine has provided clarity that command and control integration must include UAVs, missiles, rotary, and fast air so the combined arms view has peak situational awareness and lethality. I’m confident that European NATO countries investment in Ukrainian weapons innovation will ensure AFU victory and deliver the improvement that European NATO needs.

  4. Started to read it thinking I’ve heard this happening before, then realised it’s an old April’s fools joke

  5. Makes you appreciate how good and indispensable the ground crew are. They constantly have to find and work on these invisible jets to keep them flying then lead the pilots to them when they are let out to break them again!

  6. Such a layered joke too. It wasn’t until I’d read through the whole page then scrolled back up to notice the Avril Fuller name and tag line. A gift that kept on giving.

    High end job well done!

  7. Does AI and the algorithm understand the idea of April fools. I wonder how far this might travel as just a headline. Weird and interesting times we are living in.

  8. Not April fools: 2 US warplanes downed over Iran. Analysts worry that Bei Dou GPS has helped. But the Pentagon has a 1.5 trillion budget to replace them ( not a joke). And Pres Trump may not worry about the pilot, suckers and losers? After all, 100% of MAGA agrees with the war.

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