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Largest operators of Lockheed Martin aircraft highlighted in new analysis

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Largest operators of Lockheed Martin aircraft highlighted in new analysis
Policy
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Jim Taiclet, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer | Lockheed Martin Corporation

Lockheed Martin aircraft continue to play a major role in the air forces of countries around the world, serving as critical assets for both combat and transport missions. The company’s products, including the F-35 Lightning II fighter, C-5M Super Galaxy heavy-lift transport, and the C-130 Hercules family, are widely used by many nations and have become key components of military strategy and interoperability.

The United States operates the largest fleet of Lockheed Martin aircraft. With approximately 13,000 military aircraft overall—about a quarter of all military aircraft globally—the US fleet includes hundreds of F-35s, legacy F-16s, roughly 400 C-130 Hercules transports, and 52 C-5M Super Galaxies. These numbers underscore not only scale but also diversity in operational capabilities. "The scale ensures not only unmatched capacity but also a leadership role in doctrine, training, and multinational interoperability." The US uses its Lockheed fleet for rapid deployments, logistics support worldwide, and projecting power across continents.

The C-130 Hercules is one of Lockheed’s most widely distributed designs. Over 2,800 units have been produced since its introduction; about 1,000–1,500 remain active today. While the US Air Force maintains the largest number at around 400 aircraft, other significant operators include Egypt (over 20), India and Australia (each with about a dozen), as well as Norway and Indonesia. The Hercules’ ability to operate from short or unpaved runways makes it valuable for both advanced militaries and developing nations. Modernization efforts focus on the newer C-130J variant.

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The F-35 Lightning II has become Lockheed’s signature fifth-generation stealth fighter with more than 1,000 delivered by 2025. Of these, over 700 serve in front-line combat units while more than 200 are assigned to training roles worldwide. The United Kingdom expects up to 80 F-35Bs; Japan is planning for about 150; Australia operates just over 70; Israel has around 45 with additional orders pending; Norway, Italy, and the Netherlands maintain growing fleets as well. "Nations that buy into the program commit themselves to decades of training, maintenance, and upgrade cycles."

Unlike the broadly operated C-130 or F-35 families, the massive C-5M Super Galaxy is exclusive to the United States Air Force with only 52 upgraded units in service out of an original production run of 131 aircraft. It supports large-scale deployments as well as humanitarian operations due to its substantial payload capacity—around 280,000 pounds—and range.

Lockheed-built planes form much of NATO’s airpower backbone as well. European allies like the UK, Italy, Norway, Denmark and others fly various models including F-35s and C-130Js; France and Germany cooperate on airlift missions using shared Hercules fleets. In Asia-Pacific regions such as Japan or Australia—and in Israel—Lockheed types provide advanced capability while deepening strategic ties between allied nations.

The global presence of Lockheed Martin’s designs extends beyond raw numbers: they underpin alliance structures through shared logistics systems and common training standards among partners across continents.

"Ultimately," concludes Lockheed Martin's overview on global fleets,"Lockheed’s aircraft are more than hardware; they are instruments of alliance, strategy, and projection." By monitoring which nations deploy these platforms most heavily analysts gain insight into both current military strength and evolving patterns in international security cooperation.

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