Amends title 10 to increase the Air Force's fighter aircraft inventory, allows temporary reductions during recapitalization, mandates quarterly reports on inventory, requires delivery prioritization to existing squadrons, and implements a recapitalization plan for the Air National Guard through 2030.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding federal statute (H.R.1851) enacted by the United States Congress that amends title 10 of the United States Code, establishing mandatory requirements with enforcement mechanisms including funding restrictions for non-compliance.
This document does not address AI risks. It is a military aviation procurement and force structure bill focused on fighter aircraft inventory requirements, recapitalization timelines, and reporting obligations for the U.S. Air Force. No AI-related risks from the MIT taxonomy are mentioned or covered.
This document exclusively governs the National Security sector, specifically the U.S. Air Force and its reserve components (Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard). It establishes requirements for fighter aircraft inventory, procurement, and force structure management.
This document does not govern AI systems or the AI lifecycle. It is military aviation legislation focused on fighter aircraft procurement, inventory management, and force structure requirements for the U.S. Air Force through 2030.
This document does not mention or cover AI models, AI systems, or any AI-related technical concepts. It is exclusively focused on conventional fighter aircraft procurement and force structure. The only reference to automation is a brief mention of uncrewed aircraft operating semi-autonomously in proximity to manned fighters.
United States Congress (Senate and House of Representatives)
The document is a bill enacted by the United States Congress, as indicated by the standard legislative enactment clause and the bill designation H.R.1851.
Congressional defense committees, United States Congress
The congressional defense committees enforce compliance through reporting requirements and budgetary controls, including the power to restrict funding for the Secretary's travel if reports are not submitted.
Congressional defense committees, Secretary of the Air Force (self-monitoring through reporting)
The congressional defense committees monitor implementation through mandatory quarterly reports that detail aircraft inventory, assignments, retirements, and recapitalization progress. The Secretary of the Air Force is required to track and report detailed metrics.
Secretary of the Air Force, Secretary of Defense, Air Force (including Regular Air Force, Air Force Reserve, and Air National Guard), Director of the Air National Guard
The legislation applies to and regulates the actions of the Secretary of the Air Force and Secretary of Defense regarding fighter aircraft inventory management, with specific requirements for the Air Force and its components.