this post was submitted on 10 Feb 2026
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Here's the source that previous poster failed to include for this part: https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/german-policymakers-concerned-american-kill-switch-disable-f35
That article is largely a pile of meaningless sensationalism with very little in the way of meaningful claims. All of it more or less boils down to this;
This is a claim that's been repeated a bunch in the armchair general circuit, but without any of the actual context, and mangled beyond recognition from what the original sources say. ALIS cannot "ground" a plane in the sense of "Prevent it from taking off at the press of a button." It's a logistics management system. All it does is track parts orders. The US could shut people out of it, which would be a massive pain in the ass, but it wouldn't actually prevent planes from flying.
Here's a source that actually digs into a little better: https://www.defensenews.com/air/2016/04/27/could-connectivity-failure-ground-f-35-it-s-complicated/
First, some context (from the article) on what ALIS actually is:
When the previous poster's quote source talks about the mission planning system, this is what they're referring to (I'm going to skip right past their assertion that the kill switch "is more than just a rumour" because the article presents this claim with absolutely zero evidence, context, or expansion; it's just thrown out there and treated as gospel truth. Extraordinary claims need extraordinary evidence).
Anyway, from the article I cited;
Emphasis mine. ALIS cannot "ground" planes, it can only make it harder to maintain them. And only to the extent that it's already hard to maintain existing planes like our CF-18s. This is a solved problem. We know how to do this. It's not a magic kill switch, it can't shut anything off. It's just an inventory management system.
You claim this is a "ground-based system", but that is not true according to this description:
"the Autonomic Logistics Information System (ALIS) ... is a router designed to fit inside of an F-35’s travel pod that has the capability to connect to a hardline network or satellite internet, which allows them to transmit the F-35's data simultaneously to many remote bands and regions"
https://www.dvidshub.net/image/7342014/autonomic-logistics-information-system
So while the analysis of the data happens on the ground, ALIS is also very much inside the plane and monitors its systems in real-time:
"ALIS receives Health Reporting Codes while the F-35 is still in flight"
https://www.lockheedmartin.com/content/dam/lockheed-martin/rms/documents/alis/CS00086-55%20(ALIS%20Product%20Card).pdf
Yet you claim "all it does is track parts orders."
Care to explain why you have omitted these basic facts while defending Canada's purchase of the F-35s?